Federal Commissioner for Data Protection and Freedom of Information explained

Agencyname:Federal Commissioner for Data Protection and Freedom of Information
Nativename:Bundesbeauftragter für den Datenschutz und die Informationsfreiheit
Abbreviation:BfDI
Country:Germany
Federal:Yes
Legaljuris:The BfDI is a completely independent authority not being under any external supervision.
Headquarters:Bonn, North Rhine-Westphalia
Website:http://www.bfdi.bund.de

The Federal Commissioner for Data Protection and Freedom of Information (BfDI, German: Bundesbeauftragter für den Datenschutz und die Informationsfreiheit), referring to either a person or the agency they lead, is tasked with supervising data protection as well as acting in an ombudsman function in freedom of information. The latter was introduced with the German Freedom of Information Act on 1 January 2006. In 2016, it became an independent federal agency in accordance with EU regulations.[1]

Organization

Before the commencement of the German Freedom of Information Act, the title was "Federal Commissioner for Data Protection (BfD)".

The German Federal Government nominates him and the German Bundestag elects him. During his time in office, he receives remuneration in the amount commensurate with a federal official in salary group B 11. In this regard, his status is that of a public law official, but not however, that of a civil servant. The term of office is five years. He can be reelected once.

The Federal Commissioner's budget is accounted for in its own budgetary section. The necessary personnel and facilities are to be made available to him pursuant to legal regulations. Given his independent status positions at the Federal Commissioner are filled by himself exclusively.

Responsibilities

The Federal Commissioner is the German Federal supervisory authority in the meaning of Art. 51 of the General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR). According to Art. 52 GDPR the Federal Commissioner is a completely independent supervisory authority. His tasks and powers are mainly based on Art. 57 and 58 GDPR and the Federal Data Protection Act (Bundesdatenschutzgesetz). His legal position and the procedure of his establishment are subject to the provisions of the Federal Data Protection Act. His competence is limited to supervision of the entire public sector at federal level and of telecommunications and postal services providers. The public sector of the Laender as well as the remaining private sector is supervised by the Data Protection Supervisory Authorities of the Laender. The Federal Commissioner publishes an annual activity report (Art. 59 GDPR).

A right to refuse to give evidence is available to the Federal Commissioner in regard to persons and facts with which comes into contact in his capacity as Federal Commissioner (FDPA sec 13, para 5). He is also authorized to decide about his employees' refusal to give evidence.

List of commissioners

ImageSize = width:200 Height:400PlotArea = left:40 right:0 bottom:80 top:20DateFormat = dd/mm/yyyyPeriod = from:14/02/1978 till:31/12/2019TimeAxis = orientation:vertical format:yyyyScaleMajor = unit:year increment:10 start:1980ScaleMinor = increment:5 start:1980Colors= id:BDB value:rgb(0.7,0.7,0.7)

PlotData= bar:Datenschutzbeauftragte color:BDB width:20 fontsize:M align:left shift:(20,-5) mark:(line,white)

from:start till:16/05/1983 text:Hans_Peter_Bull color:red from:16/05/1983 till:09/06/1988 text:Reinhold_Baumann color:BDB from:09/06/1988 till:30/06/1993 text:Alfred_Einwag color:BDB from:01/07/1993 till:17/12/2003 text:Joachim_Jacob color:yellow from:17/12/2003 till:16/12/2013 text:Peter_Schaar color:green from:06/01/2014 till:05/01/2019 text:Andrea_Voßhoff color:black from:07/01/2019 till:end text:Ulrich_Kelber color:red

See also

Notes and References

  1. Sertan Sanderson (17 June 2015), Commissioner slams data retention policies Deutsche Welle.