Information Commissioner orders EHRC to provide answers over Covid breach by former chief executive Rebecca Hilsenrath

Rebecca Hilsenrath

NEW: Since this post was published I have learned that Rebecca Hilsenrath has been awarded an honorary KC and been appointed a member of the Civil Justice Council, chaired by the Master of the Rolls,Sir Geoffrey Vos. She is responsible for advising the judiciary on the use of alternative dispute resolution, where disputes are settled outside the courts. Ironically this would include the demand from CEDAWinLAW to solve the dispute over compensation for 50swomen pensioners which ministers oppose. She was and still is chief executive of the Parliamentary Ombudsman’s Office when the former ombudsman ,Robert Behrens, recommended compensation for partial maladministration by the DWP. It would be curious to know what her position will be on this if this ever came up.

John Edwards, the Information commissioner, has ruled that the Equality and Human Rights Commission must answer what action it took when it was revealed that its former chief executive, breached Covid rules at the height of the pandemic by driving from north London to her holiday cottage in Wales for a family Christmas in 2020.

The decision is a partial victory for Mark Benny, a dogged campaigner, who sought answers to what action it took when it became publicly known through an article in The Times that she had driven hundreds of miles when there was a ban on any long distance travel as part of the national lockdown.

But the information commissioner has decided not to release a report of an EHRC investigation or correspondence from her because it goes into her private life and might cause unwanted distress.

Rebecca Hilsenrath’s Welsh holiday cottage

However his ruling is significant for a number of reasons. He has had to weigh up public interest in this case versus a person’s right to privacy. And he has come down very firmly that there is a public interest case about how senior public figures conducted themselves during the pandemic. He also ruled that public bodies cannot, as the EHRC did, impose a blanket ban under the privacy section of the Freedom of Information Act, to refuse to confirm or deny anything because it involves personal data.

This could have wider implications since public bodies use this technique where there are controversial appointments or resignations to refuse to provide information because itinvolves personal data

John Edwards, Information Commissioner

Rebecca Hilsenrath’s case was particularly controversial because she resigned her chief executive’s job at EHRC only to be parachuted into a top position at the Parliamentary Ombudsman’s Office where since became Interim Ombudsman and chief executive, an equivalent or even better status than she had at the EHRC.

Extraordinarily when Mark Benny pressed the Parliamentary Ombudsman’s Office on what they knew or whether they took into account of her Covid breach during her appointment, the office said it had lost the papers on her appointment process.

So now the EHRC will have to answer his questions within 30 days or as the Commissioner says in his report “failure to comply may result in the Commissioner making written certification of this fact to the High Court pursuant to section 54 of the Act and may be dealt with as a contempt of court.”
The questions he has asked include whether there was a proper investigation into the breach, whether it was completed and what was the outcome. He also wants to know whether she was suspended by the EHRC or put on gardening leave and whether she was dismissed or decided to resign.

All the public had at the time was a terse statement by the EHRC to the press. It said:

“The Equality and Human Rights Commission said they will consider whether further action against its chief executive is needed.
“She has apologised for this error of judgement,” said EHRC chair Baroness Kishwer Falkner.
“I will establish all the facts before deciding if any further action is
required.”

Nothing has been heard of this since and it is now known whether it came up again when she was interviewed to be Interim Ombudsman last year.

What the ruling by the Information Commissioner does is say that Mark Benney’s request was legitimate and it was necessary for the information to be released. But he thought this could be done through his questions and it was not a legitimate interest to release the full report because it contained details of her private life.

Interestingly he thought it might throw some more light on what happened at the Parliamentary Ombudsman’s Office. He said “he considers that disclosure of the requested
information would allow further scrutiny of that process.”

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3 thoughts on “Information Commissioner orders EHRC to provide answers over Covid breach by former chief executive Rebecca Hilsenrath

  1. My wife and I returned from China and Singapore on 20 1 2020 with covid We had seen cancellation of so many celebrations in China that we knew covid was rampant On our return our doctor gave us antibiotics and refused to accept what we had -covid My emails to mr Johnson and the health minister were ignored Surely this is a reason to prosecute them

    Sent from my iPhone

    >

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  2. Well done to the Information Commissioner. Mark will hopefully soon have his questions answered.

    The wider question is the role of the Ombudsman. As you have previously reported, there was a recommendation that the DWP made payments to the WASPI women. The DWP refused to pay and at the despatch box during PMQ’s in December 2024, the Prime Minister said the country could not afford to do so.

    There have been other cases where the Ombudsman’s recommendations have been ignored. It has no powers of enforcement and, as such, cannot be relied on to provide remedy to those so badly affected by actions of Government Departments and the NHS.

    We should recognise it for what it is – a useful dustbin for complaints

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  3. I fail to see why the report cannot be disclosed. In the US the report would be published in its entirety with private details redacted. Failing to publish the report and only providing information within the scope of the fixed questions gives the EHRC wide latitude to avoid disclosing potentially damaging information about a serious misjudgement by a senior figure, which may be contained within the body of the report. The purpose of the Freedom of Information Act was surely to provide greater transparency regarding the workings of public bodies and their officials and to engender greater trust in these bodies at a time, as Paula Sussex, the new Parliamentary and Health Service Ombudsman pointed out in her pre-appointment hearing before PACAC, of diminishing trust in public institutions. Failing to disclose the report does precisely the opposite.

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