ICO fines for practices who do not pay their registration fees
From 25 May 2018, the Data Protection (Charges and Information) Regulations 2018 required every organisation or sole trader who processes personal information to pay a data protection fee to the Information Commissioners Office (ICO), unless they are exempt. The new data protection fee replaces the previous requirement to ‘notify’ (or register) with the ICO. For most organisations the fee remains unchanged at £35 a year if paid by direct debit.
Make sure you pay your fee to the ICO when it becomes due, as since September 2018, the ICO (Information Commissioners Office) has issued 900 notices of intent to fine to organisations, including GP practices, for non-payment of their registration fee and last month, the ICO also issued the first 100 penalty notices.
If you do not pay then the ICO fine can range from £400 to £4,350. ICO fines are tiered to reflect the size of individual organisations, ie, organisations in the lowest tier (turnover of up to £630,000 or up to 10 employees) can be fined £400 for failing to pay their annual fee. Organisations in the next tier up (turnover of up to £36m or up to 250 employees) can face a £600 fine for failing to pay their annual fee.
The ICO has taken a strong line on non compliance by organisations, stating: “You are breaking the law if you process personal data or are responsible for processing it and do not pay the data protection fee to the ICO”.
It is also worth noting that at the time of paying your registration fee you will need to provide details of your DPO (Data Protection Officer).
Further information is available on the ICO website.
Last updated : 17 Dec 2018LMC satisfaction survey February 2019 (19 Feb 2019)
All GPs, practice managers and nurses should have received a link to complete our LMC satisfaction survey. If you have not yet filled it in, the link to complete it...Pensions: what you need to check before the end of March (19 Feb 2019)
Pensions advisor, Ian McNicholl of ISM Pension Services, shares his top tips on what you need to do to prepare for the end of the financial year. Ian will be...December 2018 workforce survey results (19 Feb 2019)
Thank you for supporting our December 2018 Workforce Survey. We had a fantastic response from 397 unique practices across the 1,227 practices we represent in the Capital. That is the...EU Exit Planning: Non-Clinical Goods and Services (19 Feb 2019)
Thank you for responding to our recent survey on practice needs in the event of a no-deal Brexit. We rely on your input.Following a discussion at our Annual General...Londonwide LMCs' general practice nurse training programme (18 Feb 2019)
...GPC regional elections 2019 (14 Feb 2019)
Nominations are open for the round of GPC regional elections to cover terms from 2019-22. In London the constituency covering Barking & Havering, Redbridge & Waltham Forest, City & East London...Type 2 opt-outs replaced by the national data opt-out (07 Feb 2019)
Type 2 opt-outs have been replaced by the national data opt-out so practices must no longer use the type 2 opt-out code to record a patient's opt-out choice as it...QOF business rules coding issues – update for practice teams (06 Feb 2019)
Please note that no action is currently needed by practices on this matter, but you should read the information carefully. Following the introduction of the SNOMED-CT coding in 2018/19, NHS...Mword - Issue 36 (31 Jan 2019)
Guidance
We provide expert guidance for practices in our guidance section, as well as an archive of other materials you may find useful.
GP Support
Contact our GP Support team if you need help or advice.
The team provide professional and pastoral support to GPs and practice teams on a broad range of issues.