Debates between Rebecca Long Bailey and Chi Onwurah during the 2019-2024 Parliament

Data Protection and Digital Information (No. 2) Bill (Second sitting)

Debate between Rebecca Long Bailey and Chi Onwurah
Rebecca Long Bailey Portrait Rebecca Long Bailey (Salford and Eccles) (Lab)
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Q In relation to medical research, concerns have been raised that the Bill might risk a divergence from current EU adequacy and that that might have quite a significant detrimental impact on collaboration, which often happens across the EU on medical research. Are you concerned about that, and what should the Government do to mitigate it?

Jonathan Sellors: I think that it is absolutely right to be concerned about whether there will be issues with adequacy, but my evaluation, and all the analysis that I have read from third parties, particularly some third-party lawyers, suggests that the Bill does not or should not have any impact on the adequacy decision at all—broadly because it takes the sensible approach of taking the existing GDPR and then making incremental explanations of what certain things actually mean. There are various provisions of GDPR—for example, on genetic data and pseudonymisation—that are there in just one sentence. It is quite a complicated topic, so having clarification is thoroughly useful, and I do not think that that should have any impact on the adequacy side of it. I think it is a very important point.

Tom Schumacher: I agree that it is a critical point. I also feel as though the real value here is in clarifying what is already permitted in the European GDPR but doing it in a way that preserves adequacy, streamlines and makes it easier for all stakeholders to reach a quick and accurate decision. I think that adequacy will be critical. I just do not think that the language of the text today impacts the ability of it to be adequate.

Chi Onwurah Portrait Chi Onwurah (Newcastle upon Tyne Central) (Lab)
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Q I know that you are very supportive of the Bill, but I wonder whether you see risks to patients and service users from facilitating a greater sharing of health and care data. Could you each answer that question?

Jonathan Sellors: I think that data sharing, of one sort or another, absolutely underpins medical research. You need to be able to do it internationally as well; it is not purely a UK-centric activity. The key is in making sure that the data that you are using is properly de-identified, so that research can be conducted on patients, participants and resources in a way that does not then link back to their health data and other data.

--- Later in debate ---
Chi Onwurah Portrait Chi Onwurah
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Has the balance between sharing and the regulation of biometric data, particularly facial recognition data, been struck in the right way?

Helen Hitching: I do not think facial recognition data is captured.

Aimee Reed: On facial recognition, given that we have deployed it—very high profile—I think that the balance is right. We have learned a lot from the South Wales judgment and from our own technical deployments. The Bill will also highlight how other biometric data should be managed, creating parity and an environment where biometric data that we do not yet have access to or use of is future-proofed in the legislation. That is really welcome.

Rebecca Long Bailey Portrait Rebecca Long Bailey
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Q Helen, you mentioned that you are broadly supportive of the abolition of the Biometrics Commissioner and the Surveillance Camera Commissioner, but that that abolition will not reduce the existing level of oversight. Now seems to be the time to request additional resources if you did not feel that the new commissioners would be adequately resourced, so do you have confidence that the Investigatory Powers Commissioner has sufficient resources and expertise to take on the functions it has to? Similarly, does the Information Commissioner have sufficient resources and expertise to oversee regulation in this area?

Helen Hitching: It is difficult for the agency to comment on another organisation’s resources and capabilities. That question should probably be posed directly to them. The Information Commissioner’s Office already deploys resources on issues related to law enforcement data processing, including the publication of guidance. From a biometrics perspective, the casework is moving to the IPC, so from a resourcing perspective I think it would have adequate casework provision and expertise.

Aimee Reed: I echo the comments about expertise, particularly of the Investigatory Powers Commissioner. I think that the expertise exists but, like Helen, whether it has enough resources to cope with the casework I presume is a demand assessment that it will do in response to the Bill.