When you join BALPA we collect your personal details
We store your personal details on the BALPA secure database; it is a legitimate aim of a trade union to provide you with information about furthering the aims and objectives of BALPA covering themes that are technical, flight safety oriented and industrial relations related. Therefore, we need to keep your personal contact details as up to date as possible.
When you participate in our surveys or when you apply for assistance with technical or legal matters relating to your professional duties we will carefully and securely store your personal information.
If you are involved in a BALPA disciplinary matter relating to a breach of the BALPA rulebook the outcome of a disciplinary hearing including your name may be released to the BALPA membership. On each occasion BALPA’s NEC will conduct a balancing exercise to consider the legitimate interest in favour of publication set against the rights and freedoms of those whose names and sanctions will be published. There will be an evaluation of the balance between the benefits to BALPA and the wider BALPA membership from publication, such as openness, democratic transparency, and improving behaviour as against the impact of publication on the individuals concerned. This process will consider the specific (and separate) ground for processing which is available to BALPA as a trade union. The relevant ground for processing sensitive personal data within trade unions is as follows:
“processing is carried out in the course of its legitimate activities with appropriate safeguards by a foundation, association or any other not-for-profit body with a political, philosophical, religious or trade union aim and on condition that the processing relates solely to the members or to former members of the body or to persons who have regular contact with it in connection with its purpose and the personal data are not disclosed outside that body without consent of the data subjects”.
We do not share any of your personal details with third parties external to BALPA without your consent. For example, we would need your consent to share your personal information with an appointed lawyer if BALPA recommends that the legal profession should be approached for advice about an incident that involves you.
When you give it to us indirectly, for example, when we undertake membership mapping in the workplace we will check that our database is up to date from information gleaned from your elected representatives in the workplace to ensure that our membership data is up to date. You will appreciate that taking industrial action, albeit always a last resort, requires BALPA under current legislation to declare the strength of the membership. Therefore, keeping our database up to date is an important legitimate aim, which is facilitated through regular membership mapping by comparing and contrasting pilot lists from your employer.