Explicit consent
Many debt advice organisations use consent as their lawful basis and use explicit consent to process special category data. When you are processing data that is special category data, you must have an additional legal basis.
The most common special category data legal basis for debt advice processing are explicit consent and a public interest condition. Explicit consent requires a clear and specific statement of consent which will be understood and signed by the client.
Special category data is data about someone’s:
•health; or
•racial or ethnic origin; or
•sex life; or
•sexual orientation; or
•religious or philosophical beliefs; or
•political opinions; or
•genetic or biometric data; or
•trade union membership.
This data is considered more sensitive and therefore requires additional considerations before processing it.
Each organisation will have different approaches and applicable legal bases. You should refer to your organisation’s data protection policies and procedures for further details.
Explicit consent can only be given if the client understands:
•why the adviser wants the data; and
•what they will do with it; and
•which organisation and any third parties are asking for consent; and
•they can withdraw consent at any time and how they can do that.
You should speak to your data protection officer or refer to internal policies and procedures about sharing data externally for advice. You should only ever share the minimum amount of data necessary to support the client.
Further guidance on data sharing is available on the ICO website.1 The client must actively opt in to give consent and a record must be kept of who consented when, how and what they were told.