Please can I ask what you would do in this situation?
At our December's full council meeting a councillor raised a potential breach in data, saying that a confidential document that was sent only to councillors (payment list and bank statements) had an entry that identified an employee by first name. Just to be clear this payment list is the full version that is sent to councillors only and provides full details of payments to be made and not what is published online. We publish a basic version with no annotations etc. It was actually my assistant that put an employees first name on the councillor version when she was preparing full council documents, I agree it shouldn't have had a name but I don't believe it was a data breach as it was on a confidential document. The councillor that raised it said that it could be a breach as 'hypothetically' they may let members of their family use their email account so the documents wouldn't be safe. I reiterated that once emails leave my office they have a duty to keep them safe. It has also identified a training need for councillors.
The problem comes down to the minutes, I have written that a councillor raised a potential breach but was reassured it wasn't a breach as the document was confidential and only given to councillors. The minutes were not approved in January as this councillor wanted to minutes amended, so I did within reason. I have since received an email saying they are still unhappy as they want me to write that there has been a breach because they believe there has been. I've explained that I have amended the minutes once already and cannot alter them again as they wouldn't be a true reflection of what was actually said. I cannot amend minutes to reflect their feelings surely?
Even if it were considered a breach, the ICO are only interested if there is a risk to the data being shared and there is no risk. It simply had a first name against a payment which means nothing to anyone else reading it.
As a new clerk, this has happened to me more than once where one councillor repeatedly asks for minutes to be amended. What is the correct procedure if minutes need to be amended? (Thankfully this is the only time members have voted to change them and that was just to add more detail). Currently the chair will ask members to vote on whether they should be changed and if the majority vote to have them amended, they are reviewed at the next meeting where they are agreed and signed. Is this correct?
Thanks!