The Town and Country Planning (National Planning Framework and Local Development Plan Amendment) (Scotland) Regulations 2024 - Impact Assessments
These impact assessments relate to the proposed procedures for preparing
amendments to National Planning Framework and Local Development Plans. The plans prepared using those procedures will themselves be subject to assessments of the impact of their content.
Data Protection Impact Assessment (DPIA)
Data Protection Impact Assessment (DPIA) Development Plan Amendment Regulations – Consultation Only
1. Introduction
The purpose of this assessment is to consider the privacy implications associated with the consultation arrangements undertaken by the Planning, Architecture and Regeneration Division (PARD) of the Scottish Government.
The Data Protection Impact Assessment (DPIA) was prompted by the development of the consultation on Development Plan Amendment Regulations.
2. Document metadata
Name of Project: Development Plan Amendment Regulations: Consultation
Author of report: Ruairidh Anderson
Date of report: 18 January 2024
Name of Information Asset Owner (IAO) of relevant business unit: Fiona Simpson
Date for review of DPIA: TBC
Review date |
Details of update |
Completion date |
Approval Date |
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3. Description of the project
Section 12 of the Planning (Scotland) Act 2019 inserts new sections 3CC and 20AA into the Town and Country Planning (Scotland) Act 1997 to introduce powers to amend both the National Planning Framework and local development plans. These provisions give Scottish Ministers powers to prepare secondary legislation (regulations) and the consultation will be seeking views on the proposed approach to implementing these provisions.
The National Planning Framework 4 Delivery Programme identifies that National Planning Framework and local development plan amendment regulations are to be prepared. These powers are important to address any emerging policy issues that need to be reflected in the National Planning Framework or in local development plans.
The consultation will ask a series of questions, with a mix of open and closed questions, although all the closed questions will allow the opportunity to provide reasons for their answer. There will be no text limit for the free text responses.
The preferred method of response will be through the online CitizenSpace system. The questionnaire will also be downloadable and hard copies may be posted / e-mailed out to meet specific respondent’s requirements if requested. Hard copies will be returned directly to PARD to ensure confidentiality. Personal data will also be requested to enable acknowledgement of receipt of response or to enable feedback to any queries received.
It is our usual practice to publish the responses as per the preferences that respondents have indicated via Citizen Space, or, where responses arrived by e-mail / post, via the Respondent Information Form (RIF), which asks about data release preferences.
Following the closure of any consultation, we would look to publish responses where approval has been given for this by the respondent. All the responses will be moderated.
PARD will analyse the responses received and provide a clear and concise report for publication, which reflects a robust analysis of the consultation responses, in order to inform the next stages of policy / legislative development.
Consultation Process
Consultations are hosted on Citizen Space, the Scottish Government's digital platform for consultations, and published on the Consultation Hub, enabling people to submit their response online. Citizen Space is managed by the Scottish Government’s Digital Engagement Team.
Consultations are also published on the Scottish Government website, enabling people to email or post a response.
The consultations will run for a minimum of 12 weeks starting February 2024 to May 2024.
Governance
The governance arrangements for consultations broadly involve the following:
- Consultation Manager (Scottish Government): Ruairidh Anderson
- Digital Engagement Manager, Comms (Scottish Government): DigitalEngagement@gov.scot
Reporting
The Consultation Manager will be responsible for the analysis of the consultation responses, as well as the preparation of the final reports. The final consultation analysis report will be published on the Scottish Government’s website. It is the responsibility of the Consultation Manager to ensure that their methods do not contravene the provisions of current Data Protection Laws.
Data Protection Laws means any law, statute, subordinate legislation, regulation, order, mandatory guidance or code of practice, judgement of a relevant court of law, or directives or requirements of any regulatory body which relates to the protection of individuals with regard to the processing of Personal Data to which a Party is subject including the Data Protection Act 2018 and any statutory modification of re-enactment thereof, and the General Data Protection Regulation (EU) 2016/679 of the European Parliament and of the Council of 27 April 2016 on the protection of natural persons with regard to the processing of personal data on the free movement of such data, and repealing Directive 95/46/EC.
4. Data Controller and Data Processor
Data Controller and Data Processor: The Scottish Government.
Information Asset Owner: Fiona Simpson
Data to be processed
Variable: E-mail address
Data Source
Citizen Space (online responses).
Respondent Information Form (e mailed or postal responses).
Variable: Name
Data Source
Citizen Space (online responses).
Respondent Information Form (e mailed or postal responses).
Variable: Whether a person is responding on behalf of an organisation, or issuing a response as an individual. (If respondent is from an organisation, they are asked the type of organisation – developer, public sector, community council etc.).
Data Source
Citizen Space (online responses).
Respondent Information Form (e mailed or postal responses).
Variable: Postal address
Data Source
Respondent Information Form (postal responses).
Variable: Contact telephone number
Data Source
Respondent Information Form (e mailed or postal responses).
Data Subjects
The data subjects are the self-selecting respondents to the consultation. Responses may be submitted by both individual members of the public and by organisations. During the data collection process, all respondents are asked to provide information about themselves, either via the Citizen Space online platform or by completing a Respondent Information Form. This form asks respondents to state their publication preference as follows.
The Scottish Government would like your permission to publish your consultation response. Please indicate your publishing preference:
Publish response with name
Publish response only (without name)
Do not publish response
If individual respondents do not answer this question, the default position is not to publish their response.
If organisation respondents select ‘do not publish’ or do not answer this question, the organisation name may still be listed as having responded to the consultation.
Respondents are also asked to indicate whether they are content to be contacted again in the future by the Scottish Government in relation to this specific consultation exercise.
Data Collection, Storage and Transfer
Data will predominately be collected from data subjects electronically via the Citizen Space online platform. Some respondents may also submit their response via post or email and these are uploaded on to Citizen Space by the Scottish Government. Responses on Citizen Space can either be downloaded individually or automatically entered into a database (downloadable onto Excel).
Data Access
Citizen Space will securely hold the consultation responses submitted online or uploaded as attachments, and it will be possible to download the database of online responses onto Microsoft Excel.
The database will include all or some of the following information about each respondent who replied using the online data form or by email or post and either completed a Respondent Information Form or provided the information within their response:
- Name
- Email address
- Responding as an individual or an organisation (If responding on behalf of an organisation) Organisation’s name and sector (from list of options -e.g. public, private, third).
- Permission to publish consultation response (publish response with name, publish response only, do not publish response).
- Content to be contacted by the Scottish Government in the future in relation to this consultation exercise
- All inputted responses to the consultation questions.
Data Cleaning
Before beginning the analysis, the Consultation Manger will identify any blank or duplicate responses. Blank responses will be removed before analysis. Multiple different responses submitted by the same individual or organisation will be combined into a single composite response.
For audit and quality control purposes, a record will be kept of any exclusions or changes made to responses included in the final database (i.e. any responses that are excluded from the analysis and the reason for exclusion; any identified as campaign responses; and any reclassification of organisation type). This information will be provided in a separate worksheet within the master database and referred to in the final report.
Data Publication
Responses will be published in accordance with respondents’ expressed publication preferences. Where respondents have given permission for their response to be published, with or without their name, and after the Scottish Government has redacted any personal data or defamatory content, consultation responses will be published at http://consult.gov.scot.
Data Purging and Archival
The consultation datasets will be held on a secure, password protected server in the Scottish Government, in a sub-folder which is restricted to a limited number of staff working on the Consultation. It is expected that the data will only be held for as long as the data is required. As soon as possible after the project is completed, a review will take place to determine whether the data needs to be retained or destroyed.
If it is decided that there is
- no rationale to justify continuing to hold the data, then it will be destroyed,
- justification to continue to hold the data then it can be held until a further review 12 months later.
Explain the legal basis for the sharing with internal or external partners:
The legal basis for processing personal data will be public task.
The analysis of the data arising from the consultations provides information that will assist the Scottish Ministers in fulfilling their duties to engage under a range of legislation, including those requiring the preparation of impact assessments under environmental, equalities and islands legislation. The information may form the basis of future discussion with key stakeholders.
5. Stakeholder analysis and consultation
List all the groups involved in the project, and state their interest
Group: Planning authorities
Interest: Statutory role as decision-makers in the planning system
Group: Other public bodies
Interest: May have a role as a key agency / statutory consultee, or use planning to deliver development.
Key Agencies in Development Planning are specified in regulation 25 of The Town and Country Planning (Development Planning) (Scotland) Regulations 2023
Group: Public at large
Interest: Opportunities proposed to consult the public as part of the process of preparing amendments to NPF or LDPs. Planning can impact on the places we live, work or play.
Group: Community Councils
Interest: Statutory role in the planning system
Group: Equality, Amenity and Environmental Interests / Groups
Interest: Provide representations reflecting their particular cultural, environmental, societal interest
Group: Business and developer interests
Interest: Private sector organisations, individual businesses and enterprises use the planning system to deliver investment and development
Group: PARD Team
Interest: Develop and produce the consultation paper for consultation, and analyse responses
Group: Data Protection and Information Asset Team
Interest: Advise on completing the DPIA
Group: Digital Engagement Unit
Interest: Create the consultation in Citizen Space
Method used to consult with these groups when making the DPIA
Respondents will be invited, through the consultation, to comment on the DPIA.
Method used to communicate the outcomes of the DPIA
We will publish the finalised DPIA on the Scottish Government official platform.
6. Questions to identify privacy issues
All staff involved in processing data will be aware of procedures for data security and privacy, to comply with GDPR. All project staff will know how to recognise a personal data breach (PDB) and how to report suspected breaches in line with GDPR requirements.
Anonymity and pseudonymity
Scottish Government will be responsible for ensuring that responses are published in accordance with respondents’ expressed publication preferences.
Individual respondents’ names will be published with their responses only if they have given explicit permission for this. Where an individual respondent selects ‘publish response only’, SG will redact their name and any other potentially identifiable information from their response. Any direct quotations from responses included in the report will not be attributed to identifiable individuals, regardless of their expressed publication preference. There will be no quotations from responses where permission to publish has not been given.
Organisation respondents which select the option 'publish response only (without name)' may still have the organisation name published, but the name of the specific person submitting the response will not be published. Organisations which have given permission for their response to be published could be mentioned by name in the final report, though it is also possible that, rather than being explicitly named, they might be referred to as ‘an organisation from the private/public/third sector’ etc.
We will keep under review whether anything else needs to be redacted from responses should it risk revealing a respondent’s identity.
Technology
Citizen Space is a secure online platform which will hold consultation responses. Where responses are not received via Citizen Space, such as by post / email, these are uploaded on to Citizen Space by the Scottish Government.
Identification methods
Identifiable respondent information is accessible in the dataset created through Citizen Space.
Sensitive/Special Category personal data
It is not anticipated that many of the consultation responses would contain ‘special category data,’ as defined by GDPR. The legal basis for processing this data, under Article 9 of GDPR, will be ‘substantial public interest.’
(g) processing is necessary for reasons of substantial public interest, on the basis of Union or Member State law which shall be proportionate to the aim pursued, respect the essence of the right to data protection and provide for suitable and specific measures to safeguard the fundamental rights and the interests of the data subject’.
However, there is a risk that such data is submitted in free text boxes. Data on text boxes will be reviewed and irrelevant ‘special category’ data removed.
Changes to data handling procedures
There will be no changes to general data handling procedures for consultations.
Statutory exemptions/protection
We don’t believe that there any exemptions from the Data Protection Act will apply to this project. Though exemptions for statistical and research purposes may apply.
Justification
PARD will analyse the responses received and provide a clear and concise report for publication, which reflects a robust analysis of the consultation responses, in order to inform the next stages of policy / legislative development.
Other risks
None Identified
7. General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) Principles
Principle: 6.1 Principle 1 – fair and lawful, and meeting the conditions for processing
Compliant– Yes/No: Yes
Description of how you have complied
The legal basis for processing personal data will be ‘public task’. Planning, Architecture and Regeneration Division has prepared a privacy statement which is available on the Scottish Government website. https://www.transformingplanning.scot/privacy/The Scottish Government would communicate this to consultees before they make their comments in any consultation.
Principle: 6.2 Principle 2 – purpose limitation
Compliant– Yes/No: Yes
Description of how you have complied
The data will be collected for specific purposes and will not be processed in a manner incompatible with those purposes. The purpose will be clearly explained to respondents prior to responding.
Principle: 6.3 Principle 3 – adequacy, relevance and data minimisation
Compliant– Yes/No: Yes
Description of how you have complied
The consultation will only gather necessary information to achieve the project’s objectives.Participants are able to input as much information as they would like to open questions, and are able to skip open questions.
Principle: 6.4 Principle 4 – accurate, kept up to date, deletion
Compliant– Yes/No: Yes
Description of how you have complied
The data from the consultation and analysis does not need to be kept up to date as it represents the participants’ views and circumstances at the point of collection. It will be deleted in accordance with SG retention and disposal strategy (See Principle 5 for deletion).
Principle: 6.5 Principle 5 – kept for no longer than necessary, anonymisation
Compliant– Yes/No: Yes
Description of how you have complied
The data processor will be processing data which is directly identifiable in the dataset. Anonymisation measures are set out in section 5.
Review measures will be in place to ensure that the data will be kept for no longer than is necessary for its lawful purpose by the Scottish Government.
Principle: 6.6 GDPR Articles 12-22 – data subject rights
Compliant– Yes/No: Yes
Description of how you have complied
Data subjects rights are set in the SG privacy policy which is to be found in the RIF linked to the consultation process.
The data controller will process and manage any requests to exercise the rights of the data subject.
Principle: 6.7 Principle 6 - security
Compliant– Yes/No: Yes
Description of how you have complied
Data will be protected from loss or unlawful processing using appropriate methods, including storing electronic data on password protected secure severs.
Principle: 6.8 GDPR Article 44 - Personal data shall not be transferred to a country or territory outside the European Economic Area.
Compliant– Yes/No: Yes
Description of how you have complied
The project is not expected to involve the transfer of data outside the EEA.
For customers in the EU, Rackspace is its Infrastructure as a Service hosting provider. Rackspace provides and manages the UK data centers in which the Citizen Space site is hosted.
8. Risks identified and appropriate solutions or mitigation actions proposed
Is the risk eliminated, reduced or accepted?
Risk: We may not have a lawful basis to process the personal data
Solution or mitigation: We have identified an appropriate lawful basis under Article 6(1)(e) ‘necessary in the performance of a task carried out in the public interest’ to meet our duties under the Planning (Scotland) Act 2019.
Result: Eliminated
Risk: We may fail to keep personal data protected against loss, unauthorised access and accidental damage
Solution or mitigation: Electronic data is securely transferred to the data processor and must be password protected or encrypted.
Any paper copies of documents holding personal information (i.e. posted responses) are kept in locked cabinets when possible.
Data processing staff are required to comply with SG terms and conditions around data security.
Result: Reduced
Risk: We may publish data that may enable the identification of individuals
Solution or mitigation: The data will be reviewed and prepared for redaction to ensure that where an individual has not provided permission for their name to be published it is removed. This responsibility sits with the policy lead.
Result: Reduced
Risk: We may fail to properly inform individuals of the data processing activity
Solution or mitigation: A privacy notice will be in place to fully inform individuals about the processing and will be made available to view in Citizen Space before any data is request. The privacy notice will also be available in hard copy.
Result: Reduced
Risk: We may process special category data without lawful basis
Solution or mitigation: Free text box content will be reviewed and any irrelevant data will be deleted as soon as possible.
Result: Reduced
Risk: We may keep personal data for longer than necessary
Solution or mitigation: There is a process to ensure that personal data is deleted at the end of consultations timeously. (see above under Data Purging and Archival section for timescales)
Result: Reduced
9. Incorporating Privacy Risks into planning
Risk: We may publish data that may enable the identification of individuals
We may fail to properly inform individuals of the data processing activity
We may process special category data without lawful basis
How risk will be incorporated into planning: The data will be reviewed and prepared for redaction to ensure that the appropriate permissions are in place and that information in free text boxes is reviewed. This responsibility sits with the policy lead.
Owner: Information Asset Owner
Risk: We may keep personal data for longer than necessary
How risk will be incorporated into planning: It will be the responsibility to comply with the requirements of removing personal data within the required time limit.
Owner: Information Asset Owner
10. Data Protection Officer (DPO)
The DPO may give additional advice, please indicate how this has been actioned.
Advice from DPO: Confirm the legislative basis for the regulations and associated consultation
Action: Confirmed
11. Authorisation and publication
I confirm that the impact of undertaking the Development Planning Amendment Regulations Consultation has been sufficiently assessed against the needs of the privacy duty:
Name and job title of a IAO or equivalent: Fiona Simpson, Chief Planner
06 February 2024
Contact
Email: AmendmentRegs@gov.scot
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