Privacy

Christians Against Poverty (CAP) is a charity that aims to address poverty and its causes in the UK. We do this in partnership with local churches to provide a range of free services to members of the public, including CAP Debt Help, CAP Job Clubs, CAP Life Skills and money management courses. This privacy notice explains how we use any personal information we collect about you.

CAP has a legal duty to protect your information and provide you with information about the rights that you have. As we control how the information we collect will be used, the law refers to us as a data controller’. Our registered address is Jubilee House, 1 Filey St, Bradford BD1 5LQ.

We keep our privacy policy under regular review and we will place any updates on this webpage. This privacy policy was last reviewed in February 2024.

What personal information do we collect?

We collect information about you when you enquire about using any of our services, as part of us providing you with our service(s), or when you register an interest in supporting us. We will also collect information about you if you contact us to apply for a role working for CAP or if you complete one of our short supporter satisfaction surveys. Website usage information is collected using cookies. We will normally process your personal information on the basis that we have your consent to do so. We may also process some of your personal information on the basis that we believe there is a legitimate interest for us to do so.

Why do we collect this information?

We will initially use the information we collect from you to contact you to arrange an appointment, to provide you with details of our services in your area, or to enable you to use our online budgeting tool. We will then use your information to provide you with any service(s) we have agreed with you. As a faith-based charity, we may offer you our support through prayer, so we will record whether you are happy for us to do this so we can make sure we respect your wishes.

For Debt Help clients, we will use your financial information to advise you about how to deal with your debts and we may contact your creditors to make payment arrangements with them. For clients of other services, we will use your information to remain in contact with you for support, and record your ongoing progress.

We may use our clients’ information for the following legitimate interests: to contact you with information about other free services CAP offers that may be suitable for you, or to invite you to take part in research and feedback in relation to our services. We may also contact you to invite you to any free events (for example, client breaks) that we may run from time to time, if we consider that they might be suitable for you.

We will use the information we collect from you, including your level of interest, support for us and location, to tell you more about our work and improve the experience we offer you. We will also thank you for your support, and invite you to continue to support us. 

We may also use your information to invite you to fundraising or other events, or to ask if you would be able to increase your support. 

We will also process your information on the basis of our legitimate interest to improve our fundraising strategies. This will include analysing the information we collect about you and using publicly available information to aid our understanding of our supporters, understand the level of potential donations, profile supporters into categories and help provide a personalised service to you on our website content and emails. 

This may also include social media advertising. We will always do this in compliance with the rules in relation to direct marketing, including those set out by the Fundraising Regulator.

We will use the information we collect from you to process and consider your application for a role at CAP. Your information will only be shared with our Human Resources department and other CAP staff who will be involved in the selection and recruitment process. We will only request a reference or a DBS disclosure with your prior consent.

We may record both inbound and outbound phone calls on the basis of our legitimate interest in monitoring our service and training our staff. If there is a dispute or misunderstanding about what was said during a telephone call, we may use call recordings to help clarify the contents of conversations we have had.

We operate CCTV cameras on our Bradford head office site for the purpose of safeguarding the safety of our staff, visitors and property. We use these images on the basis of a legitimate interest in the prevention, investigation and detection of crime and for the prosecution of any offenders.

We have a legitimate interest in ensuring we continue to improve, and we may use your contact details to contact you to ask for your comments and opinions on how we might improve and develop our services. We may also use your information to study and better understand the composition of our client and supporter base.

We have a legitimate interest in building strong relationships with external companies that operate in sectors that we work in, and may store and use details of contacts at these companies to send regular communications. Any regular email communications sent will include an unsubscribe link, and we will remove contact details on request.

When will we share your information?

If you are a client, we may obtain your consent to share your information with third parties so that we can provide you with our service – for example, by sharing debt help clients’ information with their creditors. We will not normally share any information we hold about you to others without your prior consent, unless one of the following exceptions apply:

  • If it is necessary for law enforcement or similar purposes;
  • For the legitimate interest of reviewing the quality of our services – for example, the Advice Services Alliance and the Money and Pensions Service may audit our Debt Help service. The regulator of our Debt Help service, the Financial Conduct Authority, also has the right to inspect our files. This includes information we hold about you, to ensure we are complying with their rules;
  • As a necessary part of providing you with our service(s) or contacting you as a supporter — for example, by using a third party mailing house to process our communications;
  • As a necessary part of ensuring we comply with our legal obligations as a data controller — for example, by using a third party to migrate data or ensure it is accurate and up-to-date;
  • We may collect information that you make available on, for example, Twitter, Meta, LinkedIn or similar organisations. You may wish to check their privacy policy to find out more information on how they will process your data.

When do we transfer your information out of the UK?

We will normally keep your information in the UK, but may transfer your information to other countries that have appropriate safeguards in place – for example, processors based in the European Union or the USA, where they are certified to the EU-US Privacy Shield. In particular, we may host your data on G‑Suite servers operated by Google LLC which conform to the standards of the EU-US Privacy Shield.

How long do we keep your information for?

We will take all reasonable steps to ensure that the information we hold about you is kept secure. We will only hold your personal data for as long as it is required in line with our Data Retention Policy. Deleting your information may involve either the removal of the data or its anonymisation, meaning that it no longer continues to be personal data that will identify you. The following list sets out some of the main retention periods we have in place for the data we hold:

Up to 6 years from date case was closed to allow for the defence of legal claims in line with the Limitation Act 1980.

3 years from date of last interaction to allow us to analyse our client outcomes.

6 years from date of last interaction to allow us to keep supporters informed of our work. This is also a HMRC requirement in relation to Gift Aid records.

2 years from date call recorded for training and monitoring.

1 year. This is recommended practice by CIPD.

Please contact us using the details at the bottom of this page if you need further details about our retention policy, or to request that your data be deleted.

What are your rights over your information?

You have the following rights in relation to your information:

  • You may withdraw consent where we are using your information on the basis of this
  • You may object where we are using your information on legitimate interest grounds
  • You can ask us what information we hold about you and can request a copy of this. There is normally no fee for this — unless a request is manifestly unfounded or excessive
  • You can ask us to correct information we hold about you if it is inaccurate
  • You can ask us to erase your information in some circumstances
  • You can ask us to stop using your information for a period of time if you believe we are not doing so lawfully

To submit a request by email, post or telephone, please use the contact information provided below. We will deal with your request within one month, unless it is particularly complex, in which case we will contact you within one month to let you know that we may need a further two months to comply.

What information does our website collect?

Our website may record some of your personal information, for example, by logging your IP address or the location of your computer or network. It may also record information about you that you enter into online forms. Other data may be collected anonymously about your use of our site from cookies. Cookies are small text files that are placed on your computer by websites that you visit. To find out more about cookies, including how to see what cookies have been set and how to manage and delete them, visit allaboutcookies.org. We may use cookies:

  • To establish the needs of visitors and customise the content of our website
  • To process any forms, requests or applications you send
  • To inform advertising on social media
  • For internal administration and analysis

Our website contains links to other websites. This privacy policy only applies to this website so when you link to other websites you should read their own privacy policies.

What is your right to complain?

If you have a complaint about CAP’s use of your information, you can contact the Information Commissioner’s Office via their website at ico.org/concerns or write to them at:

Information Commissioner’s Office, Wycliffe House, Water Lane, Wilmslow, Cheshire, SK9 5AF

How can you contact us?

Please contact us if you have any questions about our privacy policy or information we hold about you. Debt help clients should contact their caseworker team directly on the contact details we have provided. Others may contact us:

Email: If you are a supporter, please contact supporterrelations@capuk.org. Otherwise, you may contact us by email at info@capuk.org

Phone: 01274 760720

Post: Data Protection Officer, Christians Against Poverty, Jubilee House, 1 Filey Street, Bradford, BD1 5LQ

For more information about your legal rights in relation to the information we hold about you, please visit the Information Commissioner’s Office at ico.org.uk