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Answer:

The Royal Institute of Chartered Surveyors developed the EWS1 form which came into use in December 2019. It records what assessment/fire survey has been carried out on the external wall system for buildings of 18 metres or more above ground level “or where specific concerns exist”.

Flat owners seeking to sell or re-mortgage their homes are asked by lenders to complete an EWS1 form. EWS1 forms are not a legal requirement but lenders may refuse a mortgage application where one cannot be produced.

The EWS process involves a fire safety assessment by a suitably qualified professional who completes the EWS1 form. More information can be found on the RICS website.

EWS1 forms are valid for five years. Where a building has been altered a new form may be needed.

The EWS is a set way for a building owner to confirm to valuers and lenders that an external cladding system on residential buildings in scope above 18 metres in height (approximately 6-storeys) has been assessed by a suitable expert. Not every building in scope above 18m will require an EWS1 form – only those with some form of combustible cladding or combustible material on balconies.

Owners of flats in buildings without cladding do not need an EWS1 form to sell or re-mortgage their property. This follows on from an agreement reached between the Government and the Royal Institution of Chartered Surveyors (RICS), UK Finance and the Building Societies Association (BSA). The full press release issued on 21st November 2020 by the Ministry of Housing, Communities and Local Government.

Despite this announcement, there will be properties with issues other than cladding which will not become automatically exempt from a fire survey. Buildings with wooden balconies, and other safety issues, will still be required to undertake the external fire safety checks.

By exception there may be some residential buildings below 18m which may have ‘specific concerns. These would be 4 & 5 storey buildings in scope which may have combustible cladding or balconies with combustible materials, which are only a clear and obvious danger to life safety and may require remediation in accordance with the latest Government advice.

Answer:
The external wall system is made up of the outside wall of a residential building, including cladding, insulation, fire-break systems, etc. The external wall may be a cavity wall, rainscreen cladding system or an External Wall Insulation (EWI) system.
Answer:
All materials which become part of an external wall or specified attachment must achieve European fire rating Class A2-s1, d0 (both limited combustibility) or Class A1 (non-combustible).
Answer:

The ban on combustible materials in external walls applies to the external walls for residential blocks of flats, student accommodation, care homes, sheltered housing, hospitals and dormitories in boarding schools which are above 18 metres in height. It does not apply to any room in a hostel, hotel or a boarding house, and any commercial buildings.

The ban on combustible materials also applies to buildings where the above building types have balconies, sun shadings and solar panels attached to an external wall. The ban applies to new building work and to existing buildings going through a change of use such as office buildings being converted into apartments, which are above 18 metres in height.

Answer:

The EWS form must be completed by a fully qualified member of a relevant professional body within the construction industry with sufficient expertise to identify the relevant materials within the external wall cladding and attachments, including whether fire resisting cavity barriers and fire stopping have been installed correctly.

The Council cannot approve individual persons who can deliver the EWS1 and cannot advise on who can and cannot complete the EWS1 form/ process. Only qualified chartered members of the relevant professional bodies such as IFE and RICS will have the necessary self-assessed competence AND professional indemnity insurance to carry out this work.

Answer:

An EWS1 assessment is required every 5 years for each building or block. This means multiple sellers located in one block can use the same assessment to assist with the sale of their property.

Five years is intended to capture any renovation or adaptation work done to the building, as well as maintenance over that period.

However, a new EWS1 may be required within the 5-year period if substantial works have been completed to a property, affecting the original conclusions.

Answer:

Data Controller and purpose

The information you provide will be used by the London Borough of Tower Hamlets’ Employment and Skills Service, to process your engagement with the service.

We process your data in accordance with the General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) and if you have any concerns the Council’s Data Protection Officer can be contacted on DPO@towerhamlets.gov.uk

Condition for processing Personal Data

Most often, It is necessary for us to process your personal data (name, address, contact details], under the GDPR as a task carried out in the public interest and more personal data (health, personal and household circumstances) as necessary for substantial public interest reasons employment, social security, social protection law or research and statistical purposes.

The categories of information that we collect, process, hold and share include: name, address, date of birth, national insurance number, employment record/history, educational attainment, employment and training application data, gender, ethnicity, nationality, religion, marital status, sexual orientation, period of unemployment, benefits received, age, disability, gender reassignment, pregnancy and maternity race, religion or belief, sex, sexual orientation

A delay in you providing the information requested may result in a delay in providing appropriate services.

How long do we keep your information?

We will only hold your information for as long as is required by law and to provide you with the necessary services. For further details, you can view our Retention Schedule.

We may also anonymise some personal data you provide to us to ensure that you cannot be identified and use this for statistical analysis of data to allow the Council to effectively target and plan the provision of services. 

Information sharing

Your personal information may be shared with internal departments or with external partners and agencies involved in delivering services on our behalf including training providers, prospective employers, advice and support providers

The council has a duty to protect public funds and may use personal information and data-matching techniques to detect and prevent fraud, and ensure public money is targeted and spent in the most appropriate and cost-effective way. Information may be shared with internal services and external bodies like the Audit Commission, Department for Work and Pensions, other local authorities, HM Revenue and Customs, and the Police. This activity is carried out under social protection law.

We have a duty to improve the health of the population we serve. To help with this, we use data and information from a range of sources including hospitals to understand more about the nature and causes of disease and ill-health in the area. This data would normally be anonymised and never used to make decisions on a specific individual or family.

The law prohibits organisations from processing data outside the EEA and the Council abides by this.

Automated decision making and profiling

The service will process some of the data by computer and may therefore make automated decisions on your case. You can ask for this to be explained to you, please see the ‘your rights’ link below. We may also to some degree use the data to build a profile for you regarding service provision and priority.

Your rights

You can find out more about your rights on our Data Protection Page and this includes details of your rights about automated decisions, such as the ranking of Housing Applications, and how to complain to the Information Commissioner. 

Answer:

Data controller and purpose

The information you provide will be used by the London Borough of Tower Hamlets’ Intelligence & Performance Service to facilitate the delivery of the 2021 Census. Your personal data will be processed as part of this. The London Borough of Tower Hamlets is the Controller of the data.

We process your data in accordance with the General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) and the Data Protection Act 2018. If you have any concerns the council’s Data Protection Officer can be contacted on DPO@towerhamlets.gov.uk.  

Condition for processing personal data

It is necessary for us to process your personal and equalities data (gender, age, ethnicity, sexual orientation, language, religion, health, personal and household circumstances) as a task carried out in the public interest and a substantial task in the public interest for the equalities data.

How long do we keep your information?

We will only hold your information for as long as is required by law and to provide you with the necessary services. This is likely to be for five years after the survey is complete. For further details you can view our retention schedule.

We may also anonymise some personal data you provide to us to ensure that you cannot be identified and use this for statistical analysis of data to allow the council to effectively target and plan the provision of services.

Information sharing

Your personal information may be shared with internal departments or with external partners and agencies involved in delivering services on our behalf. As stated above this will include some personal information such as names and contact details.

The council has a duty to protect public funds and may use personal information and data-matching techniques to detect and prevent fraud, and ensure public money is targeted and spent in the most appropriate and cost effective way.

Information may be shared with internal services and external bodies like the Audit Commission, Department for Work and Pensions, other local authorities, HM Revenue and Customs, and the Police.

This activity is carried out under social protection law.

We have a duty to improve the health of the population we serve. To help with this, we use data and information from a range of sources including hospitals to understand more about the nature and causes of disease and ill-health in the area.

This data would normally be anonymised and never used to make decisions on a specific individual or family.

Your rights

You can find out more about your rights on our data protection page and how to complain to the Information Commissioner.

Answer:

Who we are and what we do

The London Borough of Tower Hamlets is a data controller under the UK Data Protection law as we collect and process personal information about you in order to identify risks to children at the earliest point and respond with the most effective interventions.

Data controller and purpose

This privacy notice applies to children and families; the London Borough of Tower Hamlets council takes the privacy of your information very seriously.

This privacy notice applies to the council’s use of any and all of the data provided by you or collected by the council in relation to your use of this service. It is important that you understand that sometimes we will need to share your data with other agencies where necessary or appropriate and by engaging with our service you understand that that your data may be shared.

The information you provide will be used by the London Borough of Tower Children Services Social Care Teams to process incoming referrals to social care, to assess risk to children and young people and to support and safeguarding for children and their families to better meet the needs of the children and families and to provide the help that they require as early as possible. 

Why we need your information and how we use it

  • Under the 1989 and 2004 Children Act we have a duty to safeguard the welfare of children. S17 of the 1989 Children Act places a duty to assess children in need. S47 of the 1989 Children Act places a duty to investigate if a child is suffering or likely to suffer significant harm.
  • In order to safeguard children and young people and their families we need their demographic information to create a record on our Information Communication Systems (Frameworki). Information gathered is used to safeguard children from harm.
  • Provision of Services to and monitoring of vulnerable children and young people, including services to children in need, safeguarding, looked after children, children leaving care and children with disabilities.

What is the source of your personal data?

In most cases we will obtain your personal data directly from you. If we get it from another source we will: 

  1. Inform you of the source within a reasonable period after obtaining the personal data, but at the latest within one month or when we first communicate with you using that information (which) ever is the earliest
  2. We will also tell you if we disclosure or envisage disclosing that personal data to another party.

What type of information is collected from you?

Demographic details (name, DOB, gender, ethnicity etc.)

Information sharing

Your personal information may be shared with internal departments or with external partners and agencies involved in delivering services on our behalf.

Internally

  • Demographic information (name, gender, DOB, ethnicity, address etc.) about the child and their family
  • Reason for referral
  • Children & families (Child protection & assessment teams, education & inclusion)
  • Corporate parents with parental responsibility.

Externally

  1. NHS and other Health Agencies
  2. Police
  3. Courts and other Judicial Agencies
  4. Education providers (Schools and Colleges)
  5. Housing Department
  6. Probation
  7. Youth Offending Service
  8. Other Local Authorities who need to carry out checks for their MASH, child and family assessments and child protection enquiries.
  9. Department for Education (DfE) in respect of children in need and looked after children to help the DfE develop national policies, manage Local Authority performance, administer and allocate funding and identify and encourage good practice. For more information about the data collection requirements placed on council by the DfE. Please see looked after children or children in need on GOV.UK.

The council has a duty to protect public funds and may use personal information and data-matching techniques to detect and prevent fraud, and ensure public money is targeted and spent in the most appropriate and cost-effective way. Information may be shared with internal services and external bodies like the Audit Commission, Department for Work and Pensions, other local authorities, HM Revenue and Customs, and the Police. This activity is carried out under Article 9(2)(b) of the GDPR, under social protection law.

We have a duty to improve the health of the population we serve. To help with this, we use data and information from a range of sources including hospitals to understand more about the nature and causes of disease and ill-health in the area. This data would normally be anonymised and never used to make decisions on a specific individual or family. 

We process your data in accordance with the General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) and if you have any concerns the council’s Data Protection Officer can be contacted on DPO@towerhamlets.gov.uk.

Condition for processing personal data

It is necessary for us to process your personal data (name, DOB, address, health, personal and household circumstances), under GDPR Article:

  1. 6(1)(a) consent
  2. 6(1)(c) compliance with a legal obligation
  3. 9(2)(b) employment, social security or social protection law, collective agreement
  4. 9(2)(h) preventative or occupational medicine, working capacity of the employee, medical diagnosis, the provision of health or social care or treatment or management
  5. 9(2)(j) archiving in the public interest, or scientific and historical research purposes or statistical purposes.

Other specific legislation and reasons for processing information:

  1. Children Act 1989
  2. Children (Leaving Care) Act 2000
  3. Adoption & Children Act 2002 and associated regulations
  4. Childcare Act 2006
  5. Children and Families Act 2014
  6. Children and Social Work Act 2017

How long do we keep your information?

We will only hold your information for as long as is required by law and to provide you with the necessary services. This is likely to be up to 75 years depending on your case. In certain cases we will hold the information permanently. For further details, you can view our retention schedule.

Marketing and e-newsletters

Information collected is not used for Marking or sending out E-Newsletters but social workers would provide families with information about advocacy. 

We may also anonymise some personal data you provide to us to ensure that you cannot be identified and use this for statistical analysis of data to allow the council to effectively target and plan the provision of services. 

Business Intelligence, profiling and automated-decision making

We may analyse your personal information to improve services and for the following purposes:

  1. Undertake statutory functions efficiently and effectively
  2. Service planning by understanding your needs to provide the services that you request.
  3. Understanding what we can do for you and inform you of other relevant services and benefits
  4. Help us to build up a picture of how we are performing at delivering services to you and what services the people of Tower hamlets need.

The council is however committed to using pseudonymised or anonymised information as much as is practical, and in many cases this will be the default position.

We may use your information from the different services that you engage with to create a single view and profile of you, which will help us to better understand your specific needs and ensure we are providing the right and efficient services to you in accordance with your needs as well as ensure that we hold one accurate record of your basic personal data across all our council services; such as your name, DoB, address, email address, change in circumstances etc. 

Profiling will be carried out only when it is necessary in order to provide you with the service you have agreed to receive or where the council has a statutory obligation or where to the law allows.   However, we will notify you where we would do this.

Your information choice and rights

Where we use your personal data for other purposes other than what you have consented or where we have to fulfil a statutory obligation, or where the data protection law allows, then we will let you know so that you can make an informed choice about how your information is used.

If you do not want your information to be used for any purpose beyond providing the services you have agreed to receive, such as; sharing it with our partners or providers for service delivery planning or improvement of services or for Business Intelligence, profiling research or statistical purposes (in such instance only minimum and necessary, anonymised or pseudonymised data will be used), you can choose to opt-out of this.

Data protection legislation gives you a number of rights in relation to your personal data. The rights available to you will depend on the Lawful basis that we rely on to process your personal data. We have a legal obligation processes your personal data for the provision of this service, as such the following rights are available to you:

  1. Right to rectification
  2. Right to restrict processing (limited cases).

You can find out more about your rights on our Data Protection page and this includes details of your rights about automated decisions and how to complain to the Information Commissioner. 

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