Privacy Policy
Contact Details
The Data Protection officer is John Hughes, who can be contacted about anything to do with your personal data and data protection, including to make a subject access request, using the following details:
Email address: john.hughes@heriothughes.co.uk
Postal address: Heriot Hughes Limited, 42 Crosby Road North, Liverpool, Merseyside, L22 4QQ
Telephone number: 0151 928 4629
Introduction
The Data Protection Act 2018 (DPA) and the General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) requires organisations that process personal data to meet certain legal obligations. We are a data controller within the meaning of the Act and we process personal data.
We are committed to complying with the requirements of the DPA and GDPR. As a result we confirm that personal information we process will only be held (or otherwise processed) to the extent necessary in order to provide the agreed professional services and for any other purpose specifically agreed.
Information Collected
We are entering into a contract with you and will be processing data in order to fulfil our contractual obligations. In order to provide the agreed services we need to collect, retain and process personal data about you. This data is needed in order to:
- Take you on and retain you as a client according to the provisions of UK laws and professional regulations (eg anti-money laundering requirements).
- Prepare and file accounts and tax returns
- Provide advice on tax and national insurance liabilities
- Provide ad hoc advice.
If the information required is not provided, we may not be able to provide the required services which would trigger the disengagement provisions in the terms and conditions.
The personal data that we will collect and process will include:
- Names and addresses
- Email addresses
- Telephone numbers
- Information held by HMRC
- Information required to prepare tax returns
- Information required to prepare your accounts
- Correspondence between us
How Information is Collected
- You
- A spouse/partner
- HMRC
- Your organisation
- Electronic ID verification providers
- Other third parties (eg banks, investment managers etc) as authorised by you.
How Your Information is Used
- to provide services under the contract in force between us.
- to contact you about other services we provide which may be of interest to you if you have consented to us doing so.
- to meet other legal and regulatory requirements.
- for other legitimate interests.
We will retain records based on our retention policy so that we can defend ourselves against potential legal claims or disciplinary action which can be brought within statutory time limits.
We may also use information from other people or organisations when carrying out these activities.
There is no automated decision-making involved in the use of your information and therefore no automatic data portability.
Where we use subcontractors they will comply with General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) requirements.
Lawful basis for processing personal data
Personal data may be processed on a contract basis under the engagement letter and provision of services agreements.
Personal data may be processed on a consent basis when meeting clients’ wider expectations of my/our professional relationship.
Personal data may be processed on the legal obligations and/or public interest bases in order to comply with legal requirements.
Personal data may be processed in order to further our legitimate interests.
Transferring Personal Data Outside the United Kingdom (UK)
We may transfer personal data we collect about you to the following countries; , in order to perform our contract with you.
Before agreeing to transfer data outside the UK we check to ensure that there are adequacy regulations under the Data Protection Act 2018 in relation to each country which ensures that their regulations will be deemed to provide an adequate level of protection for your personal information for the purpose of the UK Data Protection Legislation.
Where there are no adequacy regulations we have binding contractual agreement with the relevant third parties to ensure that your personal data is treated by those third parties in a way that is consistent with and which respects the UK Data Protection Legislation.
Information Which May be Given to Others
- HMRC
- other third parties you require us to correspond with (for example, finance providers, pension providers (including auto-enrolment) and investment brokers.
- subcontractors who are bound by the same professional and ethical obligations as the principals and employees of the practice
- an alternate appointed by us in the event of incapacity or death. Details of the name and address of this individual will be provided on request.
- tax insurance providers
- professional indemnity insurers
- our professional body Institute of Chartered Accountants in England and Wales (ICAEW) or an external reviewer in relation to quality assurance.
We need to give information to these other parties in order to fulfil our contractual obligations to you and therefore it is not possible to opt out of the provision of information to these parties. If you ask us not to provide information we may need to cease to act.
If the law allows or requires during the period of our contractual arrangements or after we have ceased to act we may give information about you to:
- the police and law enforcement agencies
- courts and tribunals
- the Information Commissioner's Office (ICO).
- our professional indemnity insurers or legal advisers where we need to defend ourselves against a claim
- our professional disciplinary body where a complaint has been made against us in order to defend ourselves against a claim.
- your new advisers or other third parties you ask us to give information to
Data Security
We have put in place appropriate and proportionate security measures to address the risk of personal data being lost, used, altered or accessed in an unauthorised way. We limit access to personal data to those who have a business need to access it, and who will only process the personal data on our instructions.
Nevertheless, no data transmission over the internet, or any other network, can ever be regarded as wholly secure, and we have in place measures to deal with any suspected breach of data security. Those measures include policies and procedures, which are periodically reviewed to ensure they are effective and fit for purpose.
Retention of Information
- Where tax returns and accounts have been prepared it is our policy to retain information for seven years from the end of the tax year to which the information relates.
- Where ad hoc advisory work has been undertaken it is our policy to retain information for seven years from the date the business relationship ceased.
- Where we have an ongoing client relationship permanent information (the data supplied by you and others which is needed for more than one year's tax and accounts compliance) including, for example, capital gains base costs and claims and elections submitted to HMRC, are retained throughout the period of the relationship but will be deleted seven years after the end of the business relationship unless we are asked to retain it for a longer period by our clients.
- Under the Money Laundering Regulations (MLR 2017) personal data must normally be destroyed within specified time limits but where contractual agreement is in place this is taken as agreement under Regulation 40 (5) MLR 2017 to retain records for the longer period of seven years.
Requesting Information Held About You (the Right to Access)
Requests in Writing
Please provide all requests in writing to the individual at the top of this notice.
To help provide the information on a timely basis you may need to provide copies of ID and proof of address.
Asking someone else to make a subject access request on your behalf
When We Won't Release Information
The law allows us to refuse your request for information in certain circumstances – for example, if you have previously made a similar request and there has been little or no change to the data since the original request.
The law also allows us to withhold information where, for example, release would be likely to:
- prejudice the prevention or detection of crime
- prejudice the apprehension (arrest) or prosecution of offenders
- prejudice the assessment or collection of any tax or duty
- reveal the identity of another person, or information about them.
Putting Things Right (the Right to Rectification)
Deleting your Records (the Right to Erasure)
In certain circumstances it is possible for you to request us to erase your records and further information is available on the ICO website (www.ico.org.uk). If you would like your records to be erased, please inform us immediately and we will consider your request. In certain circumstances we have the right to refuse to comply with a request for erasure and if applicable we will supply you with the reasons for refusing your request.
Restrictions on Processing (the Right to Restrict Processing and the Right to Object)
Withdrawal of Consent
Obtaining and Reusing Personal Data (the Right to Data Portability)
- to personal data an individual has provided to a controller;
- where the processing is based on the individual's consent or for the performance of a contract; and
- when processing is carried out by automated means
Complaints
If you have any questions or concerns regarding our processing of personal data, you can complain to us as set out in the terms and conditions. If you are dissatisfied with the response, then you can refer to the ICO.
Information Commissioner’s Office
Wycliffe House
Water Lane
Wilmslow
Cheshire
SK9 5AF
You can also complain to our professional body – Institute of Chartered Accountants in England and Wales (ICAEW) as set out in the terms and conditions.