Data Disaster Strikes Oakham Council: Confidential Documents Leaked, Resident's Identity Exposed
Data Disaster Strikes Oakham Council: Confidential Documents Leaked, Resident's Identity Exposed
Oakham Town Council is once again facing scrutiny over a serious breach of confidentiality after Councillor Paul Ainsley was accused of publishing exempt, confidential documents on the official Town Council website. The incident, which has since been described as a "serious personal data breach," resulted in the unauthorised publication of a local resident’s full name and location by the local press, who reported on the confidential documents.
Councillor Demands Action After "Incompetence"
The leak has drawn sharp criticism from fellow councillor Martin Brookes, who condemned the event as "another example of the council's incompetence that could have serious consequences for the town council."
In a strongly worded letter addressed to Oakham Town Council, Cllr Brookes highlighted the immediate repercussions of the disclosure, stating, "This unauthorised disclosure has had an immediate and severe consequence: the local press, reporting on the matter, has published information that included a resident’s full name."
This is reportedly not the first confidentiality breach the council has faced over the last year, compounding concerns about its ability to handle sensitive information securely. Only last month Rutland County Councils monitory officer raised significant issues surrounding Data Protection at Oakham Town Council.
GDPR Breach and Significant Risks
Cllr Brookes’ letter specifically identifies the incident as a serious personal data breach under the General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR). He argues that the Council, acting as the Data Controller, "has breached key GDPR principles, specifically those concerning integrity and confidentiality (Article 5(1)(f))" by failing to secure the documents.
The councillor outlined the significant risks now facing the Town Council:
Regulatory Action and Fines: The Council is obligated to assess if the breach must be reported to the Information Commissioner’s Office (ICO), which could lead to an investigation and "substantial financial penalties."
Legal Liability: The affected resident may have grounds to pursue legal action against the Council for damages and distress.
Reputational Damage: The community's trust in the Council's security and management of sensitive data is now "severely compromised."
Immediate Action Requested
To mitigate the damage, the Council Clerk is reportedly liaising with the local press to secure the immediate redaction of the resident’s name from the published article.
However, Cllr Brookes has gone further, formally requesting a disciplinary measure against the councillor responsible. He has demanded the "immediate revocation of Councillor Paul Ainsley’s administrative access and permissions to the Town Council website."
Cllr Brookes noted that Cllr Ainsley was never authorised to act in an administrative website capacity, asserting, "We employ three administrative staff members whose duties should cover website administration."
