| If ever a piece of legislation can be described
as a “sledgehammer to crack a nut,” this is it. Variously
described as “draconian,” or “interface with justice,”
The Data Protection Act 1998 is the first statute to directly affect
the use and management of CCTV. This new law affects every CCTV system
and it is the first of three pieces of legislation to be implemented
this year that will have a major impact on CCTV.¹ This article
seeks to provide you with a guide to the legislation, notify you
of the implications that this may have for your business, and provide
you with some solutions to the demands made of your business. The
article is aimed at those who use CCTV to monitor public spaces
or places to which members of the public have access. This includes
visitors, salesmen etc. to sites that have CCTV inside their perimeter
or offices.
At the time of writing this article there are still issues that
the Data Protection Registrar, now known as the Data Protection
Commissioner, has to clarify. However the information is the very
latest interpretation we can give of the legislation.
Scope of the Act
The Data Protection Act 1998 has superseded the 1984 Act and now
covers a number of other “data” storage and retrieval
systems. For the first time in the United Kingdom there is now a
statutory regulation which covers the use and management of CCTV
systems that record the camera output. The Act was introduced as
part of the UK Government’s response to the growing un-ease
by the House of Lords and some sections of the public, on the use
and abuse of CCTV generated material². It is also a part of
the Government’s response to the European Directive on Privacy
Issues3 and will be complimented in October 2000 by the incorporation
into UK law of the Human Rights Act 1998 (A glossary of some terms
and definitions is included at the end of this document).
The Data Protection Act was passed in 1998 and came into effect
from 1 March 2000. From that date any member of the public or staff
or an organisation, has the right to request access to any CCTV
data that they believe a CCTV “owner” holds, and in
which they appear. It is important to note that they do not have
to give a reason for the request and Data Controllers are not entitled
to ask for one. There are some exceptions to this principle but
the watchword now for those using CCTV has to be “consider
the privacy of those who you view.” Whilst the protection
of personal privacy is the main aim of few systems, European law
places a high value on privacy and this is something which CCTV
Managers will have to take on board. By definition the Standards
set in the Code associated with this Act apply to those who record
data and so any CCTV system that does not have a recording element
to it, is currently outside many of the standards. However it is
not outside the Act. Viewing personal data for the purposes of crime
prevention, detection or the promotion of pubic safety is regarding
as processing and as such requires the system to be registered.
The owner would then have to meet at least Principle 1+ 2 + 3 +
7.
How does this impact on CCTV users?
The Act currently applies to all systems irrespective of size or
purpose of use. There is no minimum limit to the number of cameras
in a system etc. 1 camera to 1 video recorder or indeed a camcorder
if used for crime prevention and detection or the promotion of public
safety falls within the scope of the Act and so the owner needs
to notify the commissioner. The Act serves to tighten up poor practice
that has dogged the industry and so bring all CCTV users to a minimum
standard of administration and data use.
What criteria should be applied to determine if a system
should be registered?
There are two elements to consider in determining how the Act applies
to your system. Firstly the date it was installed. Secondly, how
you record your system output. Remember the Act requires you to
comply to the Data Protection Principles even if you are now required
to register or “notify” as it is now called. If your
system was installed before 24 October 1998 and uses videotape based
recording systems which require you to manually find the images
by using the fast forward or rewind buttons then you benefit from
the 1st transitional period. If you have not registered under the
1984 legislation you have until October 2001 to register and comply
with the current Act. If you have registered under the 1984 legislation
then you will move to the 1998 legislation when you first register
after 24th October 2001. Whilst technically you do not need to comply
with the legislation until you are required to register, it is strongly
advised that you operate your system as if you are complying. This
is for the reason given above and because the Law courts will have
to operate with the legislation in place from the 1 March. Challenges
to the admissibility of CCTV evidence in the Courts can be expected
from 1 March 2000.
³ Directive 95/46/EC
If your system was installed after 24 October 1998 irrespective
of what method of recording you are using the whole of the Act INCLUDING
the right to access applies from 1 March 2000. You must register
your system as soon as possible after that date.
As an “owner” of a CCTV system, you will almost certainly
be required to notify your system to the Data Protection Commissioner.
You will need to give details of who owns the system and for what
purpose the data is being recorded. Statements of purpose might
include phrases such as “for the prevention and detection
of criminal activity,” or “the promotion of a safer
environment in which to live and work.” These statements should
also be reflected in your company ‘s Code of Practice and
Operator Procedural Manual. It is important that the purposes of
your system are clearly specified and adhered to. These two documents
are crucial to effective compliance with the Data Protection Act
1998. If your system operates without either or both of these documents,
this will also seriously weaken the evidential value of any material
gleaned from CCTV footage.
As a company you will need a “Data Controller”, this
is “a person who (either jointly or in common with other persons)
determines the purpose for which and the manner in which any personal
data are, or are to be, processed.” The Data Controller will
be required to take all steps to ensure that the data recorded by
the company is within the terms of the Act and in accordance with
the “Principles” laid down by the legislation. The Data
Controller can appoint a Manager to oversee the compliance to the
Act, however if that manager of the scheme is an employee of one
or more of the Data Controllers, then they will not have data protection
responsibilities. However, the manager should be aware that if he
or she acts outside the instructions of the data controller(s) in
relation to obtaining or disclosing the images, they may commit
a criminal offence contrary to Section 55 of the 1998 Act, as well
as breach their contract of employment.”4
If the management is devolved to a third party such as a security
company employed by the Data Controller to run the scheme, then
the security company manager will be deemed a “data processor”.
As such they process data on behalf of the Data Controller and are
not themselves Data Controllers. Consideration must be given to
the Seventh Data Protection Principle in terms of the contractual
relationship between Controller and Processor. The Controller will
have to satisfy themselves of the adequacy of the Processor’s
security arrangements.
Data Protection Principles
The Act lays down eight “Principles” by which the system
must comply. In practice, the vast majority of users will only be
concerned with the first seven, the eighth deals with transporting
data outside the UK.
The Principles
- Personal data must be processed fairly and lawfully. E.g. with
the subject’s consent or because it is necessary to do so,
i.e. for the administration of justice.
- Data should be processed for one or more lawful purposes and
not further processed for incompatible purposes.
- Data shall be adequate, relevant and not excessive.
- Data shall be accurate and where necessary kept up to date.
- Data shall not be kept for longer than is necessary
- Data shall be processed in accordance with rights of data subjects
under the Data Protection Act 1998.
- Appropriate technical and organisational measures shall be taken
to prevent unauthorised / unlawful processing of data or accidental
loss of, destruction of or damage to data.
- Personal data shall not be transferred to a country or territory
outside the European Economic Area unless that country or territory
ensures an adequate level or protection for rights and freedoms
of data subjects in relation to the processing of persona data.
As far as managers are concerned Principle seven is of particular
relevance. Appropriate security measures will have to be taken both
to protect the contents of tapes and to ensure that their location
can be identified at all times. Secure storage systems and effective
records of who has had access to tapes, when and why will have to
be implement. Failure to implement these could prejudice legal proceedings
and lead to action from the Data Protection Commissioner. Leaving
all tapes in an unlocked drawer or having a logging system which
nobody adheres to will be insufficient to satisfy the Data Protection
Commissioner if your tape falls into the wrong hands.
Whilst it is not expected that there will be significantly high
levels of demand by the public to view the contents of video recordings,
it will have an impact where video recordings are used to support
criminal proceedings. The defence is almost certain to ask in court
and seek assurances that the system was registered and administered
in accordance with the Data Protection Act 1998 before allowing
the tape to be offered in evidence. Remember even if a system is
exempt from notification, it is not exempt from being run in accordance
with the principles of the Act set out above.
What you could expect
The public must put any requests to access the data you hold in
writing and give enough information for you to be satisfied that
they are who they say they are. They must provide a clear description
of the time, date and location that they are interested in and a
description of themselves to allow you to identify them from the
recording. This request can be made at any time after the event.
The Standards being introduced by the Data Protection Commissioner
indicate that the recording medium should be replaced after 13 uses.
Most systems will operate a 31 day tape rotation system so this
time scale is not too onerous and provides ample opportunity for
someone to request access to the data. A fee may be required to
accompany any request for data; currently the legislation is stipulating
a maximum fee of £10. As can be appreciated, this is not a
large fee. Accordingly, those systems with effective logs and secure
storage will be the least inconvenienced as footage should be must
easier to find.
As a company the Data Controller must reply fully within 40 days
of the receipt of the request or, if later, the first day on which
the Data Controller has both the required fee and the information
referred to in subsection (3).[1] The Data Controller must provide
the enquirer with accompanied access to see the recording or a video
copy and or a hard copy print. It is not acceptable to provide a
copy of a multiplexed image in time lapse mode without first decoding
the relevant camera and slowing the recording down to normal playback
speed. The Data Controller must also make every effort to ensure
that other “data subjects” are not identified from the
showing of the material or that they have given their consent to
the showing of the material. In some cases this may mean that the
pictures provided need to have some faces blanked out.
In order to meet these requirements it is expected that a comprehensive
management system will be in place to record, store and then locate
the relevant data ADT have worked with a number of suppliers to
locate appropriate products to help you meet these meets.
What will it cost?
To register your system with the Data Protection Commissioner will
cost £35 per year. In order to comply with the principles
set out in the Act the following equipment together with appropriate
procedures will provide the minimum requirement:-
| Signage |
Signs indicating the area being
covered by the cameras. A person passing the sign is giving
implied consent (Principle 1) to be recorded. The sign needs
to give details of the “owner” purpose and contact
point or number. |
| Tapes |
A minimum supply of 28 days, with a Home
Office recommendation of 31 days of tapes for each video recorder
in the system. These should be labelled with some unique reference
so that the tape can be easily identified. This will provide
a minimum 28-day period for the public to write to request access. |
| Storage |
Principle 7 states that appropriate technical
and organisational measures should be taken to prevent unauthorised
/ unlawful or accidental loss, damage or destruction of data.
A secure cabinet therefore is recommended to store the tapes
in. In very vulnerable areas it may be that the video recorder
also needs to operate inside a secure cabinet. In addition,
access to the tapes must be restricted and effectively controlled. |
| Log book |
Following on from the storage issue, data
needs to be carefully tracked and its history followed for legal
purposes. A comprehensive logging system should be in place
for large systems with smaller systems adopting a short form
of the same system. These systems must be regularly checked
to ensure that operators are adhering to them at all times.
Merely having a system is not enough, it must be monitored to
ensure that it is working efficiently and effectively. Any logging
system must also identify any third parties to whom tapes have
been passed and the circumstances surrounding the decision to
release data to a third party. |
Bulk eraser |
THIS IS NOT MANDATORY however it is government
recommended best practice and will be expected in large town
centre or shopping centre schemes. “Simply recording over
old material is not satisfactory, not lease because this will
compromise a tape’s acceptability for evidential purposes”.5
This together with principle 5 of the Data Protection Act means
that a bulk eraser is a necessary investment. |
You will also need to consider how you will playback, copy or provide
the information that any data subject requesting access.
Managers will need to give careful consideration to their systems
ability to meet the purposes for which the system was installed.
If through poor maintenance, badly positioned or operated cameras
the system fails to provide the quality of images that the system
purposes demand then it may be that an offence under Principle 3
of the Act has been committed. E.g. If one of the system purposes
is “for the prevention and detection of criminal activity”
and the images are not capable of identifying the individual in
the picture that may lead to a complaint against the system. The
images will also be useless as evidence in a criminal trial, this
may make the difference between conviction and acquittal. Acquittals
arising out of a failure to spend a few pounds on good quality tapes
for example, would demonstrate the false economy involved.
Managers will also have to pay attention to training matters. Operators
need to be adequately trained to make them aware of their responsibilities
under the Act. Such training needs to be reaffirmed at regular intervals
to ensure that standards do not slip. To take an example, if an
operator habitually completes logbooks the day after because he
needs to get a bus home, one day the tape might be required immediately
for the investigation of a serious criminal offence. The failure
to log the tape properly may lead to its exclusion from a subsequent
court case. If that operator has been given training some months
before which has not been repeated or refreshed and the logbooks
have not been regularly inspected, it is arguable that the Data
Controller is in breach of principle seven.
Offences under the Act
The main offences under the Act revolve around
- Processing without notification
- Failing to notify the Commissioner of changes in your circumstances
- Failing to comply with written requests
- Knowingly or recklessly making false statement in compliance
with an information notice
- Intentional obstruction of, or failure to give reasonable assistance
in, execution of a warrant
It is also an offence for a person without the consent of the Data
Controller, knowingly or recklessly to:-
- Obtain or disclose personal data or the information contained
in personal data.
There are exceptions to this in respect of criminal activity but
they are carefully constructed and need to be fully understood by
the Data Controller.
- Unlawful selling of personal data
All the above offences are triable in either the Magistrate’s
Court or the Crown Court. Upon conviction in the Magistrate’s
Court, an offender is liable to a maximum fine of £5,000 whilst
in the Crown Court an unlimited fine may be imposed.
The Act also provides for separate personal liability for the offences
in the Act for Directors or other officers of the company that have
committed the offence.
Summary
- Automatic processing means automatic registration.
- New systems from 1st March 2000 means automatic registration.
- Systems installed after 24th October 1998 have until October
2001 to register.
- Systems installed before 24th October 1998 must be registered
by 2001.
- All CCTV users now have to comply to the DPA Principles, whether
registered or not.
- The purpose of the system must be registered and can cover
several sites.
- Whoever sets the ‘purpose of the system’ is responsible
for the Data Protection of that scheme.
If you have any further questions contact the Data Protection Office
on 01625 545700 Or http://www.dataprotection.gov.uk/
| Definitions: |
| Personal Data |
Data relating to a living individual
who can be identified from the data |
| Data Subject |
An individual who is the subject of personal
data. |
| Processing |
Obtaining, receiving or holding’ information
or data. This includes recording, storing, disclosing and erasing
such data. |
| Data Controller |
A legal person (or company) who decides
how and what for what purposes the data is to be processed. |
| Data Processor |
A person (not an employee of the data controller)
who processes data on behalf of the controller. |
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