Wexford is home to a thriving business community, and agri-contractors in the Wexford Town area and beyond are no exception. But many don’t realise the extent of their GDPR obligations — particularly around storing client farmer personal details, herd numbers, and payment information in unsecured spreadsheets or paper records. 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 agri-contractors in Wexford 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
Storing client farmer personal details, herd numbers, and payment information in unsecured spreadsheets or paper records
Sharing client farm data with subcontractors or machinery operators without formal data processing agreements
Retaining employee and seasonal worker personal data, including PPS numbers and bank details, without proper security or retention limits
Using GPS and telematics data from machinery that could track individual operators without transparency
Keeping old client records with personal contact details indefinitely because they might be needed someday
DATA INVENTORY
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REQUIRED DOCUMENTS
Every Agri-Contractor in Ireland needs these documents to demonstrate GDPR compliance.
STEP BY STEP
Provide a clear privacy notice to client farmers explaining what personal data you collect, why, and how long you keep it.
Secure client records — whether digital or paper — with appropriate measures such as password protection, locked filing, and limited staff access.
If your machinery uses GPS or telematics, inform operators what data is collected and your lawful basis for processing it.
Put data processing agreements in place with any subcontractors who access client farm details or handle data on your behalf.
Set retention periods: delete former client records after 3 years and employee records 7 years after employment ends (as required by the Organisation of Working Time Act).
Ensure seasonal worker data — including PPS numbers, bank details, and addresses — is stored securely and deleted according to your retention schedule.
Conduct a basic review of all the places you store personal data (phone, laptop, paper files, cloud storage) and consolidate where possible.
COMMON PITFALLS
Keeping all client farmer phone numbers, addresses, and bank details in an unprotected spreadsheet on a shared computer.
Not providing any privacy information to seasonal workers despite collecting their PPS numbers, bank details, and personal addresses.
Using subcontractors and sharing client farm details with them without any written agreement about data protection.
Retaining every client record from the past 20 years without ever reviewing whether the data is still needed.
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Everything you need to know about GDPR compliance for your business.
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Every day your Agri-Contractor in Wexford operates without proper GDPR compliance is a risk. The DPC is increasing enforcement across Ireland — get ahead of it today.
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