Sligo County Council – €29,500 Fine (Ireland, 2024)

€29,500Data Protection Commission13 November 2024Ireland
final
Fine

General GDPR enforcement action

This case relates to broader data protection obligations, not specifically to cookie or consent banner compliance. It is not included in cookie statistics or the Risk Calculator.

Sligo County Council was fined EUR 29,500 for improperly using CCTV cameras in public areas without proper records or security. This is important because it shows that even local governments must follow data protection rules when monitoring public spaces.

What happened

Sligo County Council installed CCTV cameras that filmed public areas without proper justification or security measures.

Who was affected

Residents and visitors in the areas where the CCTV cameras were installed were affected.

What the authority found

The Irish data protection authority found that the council violated multiple GDPR rules by failing to secure footage and not justifying the use of the cameras.

Why this matters

This ruling emphasizes that all organizations, including local councils, must ensure they comply with data protection laws when using surveillance. It serves as a reminder for public entities to review their data practices.

GDPR Articles Cited

AI-verified

Art. 13(GDPR)
Art. 25(GDPR)
Art. 30(GDPR)
Art. 5(1)(c) GDPR
Art. 5(1)(e) GDPR
Art. 5(1)(f) GDPR
Art. 32(1) GDPR
View original scraped data
Art. 5(1) GDPR
Art. 13(GDPR)
Art. 24(GDPR)
Art. 25(GDPR)
Art. 30(GDPR)

Original data from scraper before AI verification against source document.

Source verified 31 March 2026
articles corrected
Full Legal Summary
Detailed

On the 25 June 2018, the Irish DPA (Data Protection Commission - DPC) began an ex-officio investigation into the controller, a local County Council (Sligo). The controller had installed CCTV cameras at bottle banks and in housing estates stating that they were to aid the enforcement of the Irish Litter Pollution Act 1997 and to help detect anti-social behaviour. The cameras therefore constantly filmed public and private areas This video footage was then stored by the controller. The controller could not demonstrate any records of logs regarding the data processing and it was unclear for how long the data was stored. The cameras, as they were installed in public spaces filmed passers-by and individuals using nearby facilities such as a community centre. Some of the monitoring screens were in public spaces (such as the community centre) and could therefore be accessed by unauthorised persons. One CCTV footage monitor was not password protected while another had the capability to log all access to the system but staff had not been trained to use this function. The DPC found that the use of the CCTV cameras at the bottle banks could not be justified under the Litter Pollution Act 1997 nor the Waste Management Act 1996. Article 8(2) of the Law Enforcement Directive does not provide for such a broad scope of CCTV footage to be processed. Therefore, the Law Enforcement Directive only applied to some of the processing. The DPC found a total of 14 issues throughout the course of the inquiry ranging from unlawful processing to failing to conduct a Data Protection Impact Assessment. The DPC found violations of the GDPR as well as the Irish Data Protection Act 2018 which transposes the GDPR into national law. The DPC found the following violations of the GDPR showing negligence on the part of the controller: For failing to ensure the appropriate security of the CCTV monitoring screens, the controller had breached Article 5(1)(f) GDPR and Article 32(1) GDPR. The DPC hi

Related Enforcement Actions (0)

No other enforcement actions found for Sligo County Council in IE

This is the only recorded action for this entity in this jurisdiction.

Details

Fine Date

13 November 2024

Authority

Data Protection Commission

Fine Amount

€29,500

About this data

Data: GDPRhub (noyb.eu)
Licensed under CC BY-NC-SA 4.0
AI-verified and classified

Cite as: Cookie Fines. Sligo County Council - Ireland (2024). Retrieved from cookiefines.eu

Report Inaccuracy

Last updated: