Over 40% Of London’s Rubbish Bins Contain Personal Information
As a founding member of NAID (National Association of Information Destruction) Europe, we are always keen to promote the secure disposal of discarded information while emphasising standards and ethics in the industry. So it was with a heavy heart I read the results of NAID’s most recent study that found over 40% of London’s commercial rubbish bins contained highly confidential personal details.
It would appear that the casual disposal of extremely sensitive personal is common practice for a significant portion of London-based organisations. Compare this to when Members of Parliament throw out personal information; they make headlines!
The month-long study, involved private investigators examining the contents of the city’s publicly accessible commercial rubbish bins in an effort to determine the amount of personal information present there. Included among the targets were a number of London-area hospitals, law offices, bank headquarters and branch offices, as well as government agencies.
The aim of the study was to determine whether or not the recently escalated data protection fines, now £500,000, and the ongoing publicity about the dangers of identity theft were being taken seriously. According to NAID Board member Lloyd Williams, “The instructions to the investigators were quite explicit. They were not to go to extraordinary lengths or breach any laws when examining the trash. We hired them to simply look in the bin to see what any passerby might find.”
Overall, 44% of the institutions, each with a legal burden to protect personal information, were found to be casually discarding personal information. You might be thinking what does this have to do with me all the way up in Yorkshire? Well, while I expect that London has a much more densely populated business community than, say Sheffield but you would expect that larger organisations, such as solicitors firms, bank headquarters and hospitals (those that handle personal information everyday) to have procedures in place to ensure the secure disposal of information. Thus avoiding throwing confidential information into the normal rubbish bins.
Therefore, what hope is there for smaller organisations that perhaps don’t deal with the volume of personal information and wrongly believe they do not need to shred documents? Make sure you are in the 60% of businesses that are securely disposing of sensitive information not least to protect your corporate identity but to also comply with the Data Protection Act.
Posted by Jonathan Richardson