Meath is home to a thriving business community, and convenience stores in the Navan area and beyond are no exception. But many don’t realise the extent of their GDPR obligations — particularly around cctv footage shared with an garda síochána or insurance companies without a clear lawful basis or documented procedure. This guide breaks down exactly what’s required under Irish and EU data protection law.
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Absolutely. Under the GDPR and the Irish Data Protection Act 2018, all convenience stores in Meath that collect, store, or process personal data must be fully compliant. This covers everything from booking details and payment information to CCTV footage and staff records. The DPC can impose fines of up to €20 million for non-compliance, and Irish businesses of all sizes are subject to enforcement.
RISK ASSESSMENT
CCTV footage shared with An Garda Síochána or insurance companies without a clear lawful basis or documented procedure
Lottery and bill payment transaction records containing customer financial data stored in shared POS systems without access controls
Age verification data for alcohol and tobacco sales recorded or stored beyond the point-of-sale interaction
Money transfer service records containing sensitive financial and identification data retained without adequate security
Customer data from mobile top-up and bill payment services retained indefinitely in unencrypted transaction logs
DATA INVENTORY
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REQUIRED DOCUMENTS
Every Convenience Store in Ireland needs these documents to demonstrate GDPR compliance.
STEP BY STEP
Audit CCTV systems to ensure footage retention is limited to 30 days, access is restricted, and a clear procedure exists for responding to Garda or insurance requests.
Review data handling for bill payment and money transfer services, ensuring customer financial data is processed securely and retained only as required by the service provider agreements.
Implement clear signage at CCTV locations and make the CCTV policy available to customers on request.
Ensure age verification processes do not involve recording or storing ID details beyond the point-of-sale check.
Review all third-party service provider contracts (lottery, bill payments, money transfers) to confirm Data Processing Agreements are in place.
Train all staff on GDPR basics, including how to handle CCTV access requests, customer data enquiries, and the importance of transaction data confidentiality.
COMMON PITFALLS
Handing over CCTV footage to anyone who requests it — including Gardaí or insurance companies — without following a documented procedure to assess the lawful basis for disclosure.
Recording customer ID details (e.g. date of birth from driving licences) during age verification checks instead of simply verifying age and returning the document.
Failing to recognise that bill payment and money transfer services involve processing significant personal and financial data that requires GDPR compliance.
Not having Data Processing Agreements with the multiple service providers whose systems process customer data through the store's terminals.
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Every day your Convenience Store in Meath operates without proper GDPR compliance is a risk. The DPC is increasing enforcement across Ireland — get ahead of it today.
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