NEWS AND PR
24.11.08 Prince and Princess of Wales Hospice's Annual Business Lunch Raises £6,500
21.11.08 ROCCO Honour for Firms
18.11.08 Campbell Dallas Wins Praise for Standards
21.11.08 Campbell Dallas Shines at ROCCO Awards Night
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20.09.08 Campbell Dallas Expand in Stirling
23.08.08 HRMC admits data losses are increasing despite criticism
15.08.2008 Board decides to fold leadership foundation
15.08.2008 Jobs blow as skills body fails
26.07.2008 HMRC tax error could hit hundreds of thousands of pensioners
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28.06.2008 New tax penalty rules are 'unfair'
26.06.2008 Capital has strongest economy
25.06.2008 Edinburgh tops UK economy table
24.06.2008 County economy left behind by Scotland's cities
23.06.2008: Capital heads UK's economic table
02.06.2008 Bob Dallas to step down as Managing Partner of Campbell Dallas

RECENT NEWS:

24.11.08 Prince and Princess of Wales Hospice's Annual Business Lunch Raises £6,500
Eddie Bell, former Executive Chairman of the UK's largest and most profitable publishing company, Harper Collins, provided a humorous insight into his successful career as guest speaker at the Prince and Princess of Wales Hospice's annual Business Lunch recently. Read more

21.11.08 Campbell Dallas Shines at ROCCO Awards Night
Comedian Fred McAulay proved to be 'the business' as he had the audience in stitches at one of the biggest annual events in Renfrewshire's social calendar. Read more

21.11.08 ROCCO Honour for Firms
Renfrewshire's best businesses were celebrating after the fifth annual ROCCO awards. Read more

18.11.08 Campbell Dallas Wins Praise for Standards
Campbell Dallas Wins Praise for Standards Read more

23.08.08 HRMC ADMITS DATA LOSSES ARE INCREASING DESPITE CRITICISM

Data losses by HM Revenue & Customs continue to increase despite the furore last year over discs lost by the department. Responses to parlimentary written questions have revealed that data leakage from HMRC has not dropped, despite the scandal over the loss of discs containing the details of 25 million child benefit claimants last October.

Breaches relating to mobile phones and computers containing confidential numbers and information about the public have arisen to an average of ten a day, up from eight a day in the previous year.

In all,  there have been 1,993 data breaches since October 2007, with the one year figure likely to exceed 2,700.

The figures revealed a month after it was disclosed that the missing discs scandal cost the taxpayer £473,544 and raise questions about the merger of Revenue and Customs into a single department, believes Bruce Wilson, Tax Partner at Campbell Dallas Chartered Accountants in Glasgow.

"It is interesting that, in this day and age, with the Data Protection Act, nobody seems to be accountable for taking control of a situation in which a department that wants more and more personal information about us all but is ostensibly so cavalier with the information given to it."

However Treasury minister Jane Kennedy argued that the rise in the number of breaches reflected growing awareness among HRMC staff of the importance of reporting them.

Publication: The Scotsman

Date: 23rd August 2008

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