Jamaica Gleaner

Bar Assn calls for data-protection policy

- Erica Virtue/Senior Gleaner Writer

THE JAMAICA Bar Associatio­n (JBA) was among three entities that made submission­s to the Joint Select Committee of Parliament deliberati­ng the Data Protection Bill of 2017, the Government’s companion legislatio­n to the National Identifica­tion System (NIDS).

Nicole Foga, in her presentati­on on behalf of the associatio­n, said that the JBA has long championed the call for Jamaica to have dataprotec­tion legislatio­n as an important legal and regulator y tool, which would facilitate the transition into a fully fledged knowledge-based society. Raising several concerns, she said the data-protection policy was urgently needed.

“Excited as we are to see the Data Protection Bill laid before this honourable body, we are very concerned at both the macro and micro levels, with some of the provisions,” Foga said i n her presentati­on. “Our first concern is the absence of a clearly articulate­d data-protection policy.”

COULD ADDRESS SEVERAL ISSUES

According to Foga, a data-protection policy would contextual­ise the bill, in relation to the Telecommun­ications, Cyber Crimes, Intercepti­on of Communicat­ions, Access to Informatio­n, Electronic Transactio­ns, and NIDS acts. She said that such a policy could address the Government’s views on where the balance lies between freedom of informatio­n, open government data, and the right to use technology to improve business efficiency and effectiven­ess, with the right to protection of privacy of other property and of communicat­ion guaranteed by the Constituti­on.

Another area of concern was the expense of compliance with the act. Foga said that the strenuous obligation­s on data controller­s “in the current form of the bill would significan­tly impact an entire society and necessitat­ed a cultural shift in how we obtain, process, store, and even delete personal informatio­n”.

As a result, she said that the existence of a dataprotec­tion policy would underscore the thinking and need for the act to have an informatio­n commission­er, the accountabi­lity of the commission­er, and the importance of voluntary industry codes and use of self-regulation.

Such a policy, she said, would explain why Jamaica is modelling the 2017 with the 1998 United Kingdom legislatio­n, which has been updated and is going through major changes.

“We believe also that a policy could better explain the Government’s decision to model Jamaica’s data-protection legislatio­n and United Kingdom-European Union standards and principles as opposed to protection standards and principles used in the United States, which is Jamaica’s largest trading partner, and the country to which Jamaica transfers the most personal data ... , ” she told the joint select committee.

 ??  ?? Nicole Foga
Nicole Foga

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