Privacy Policy
Neinstein Personal Injury Lawyers recognizes the importance of your personal privacy and the sensitivity of your personal information. As lawyers we have a professional obligation to keep confidential all information we receive within a lawyer-client relationship. We are committed to protecting any personal information we hold. This Privacy Policy outlines how we manage your personal information and safeguard your privacy.
Your Privacy Rights
Beginning on January 1, 2004, all businesses engaged in commercial activities must comply with the Personal Information Protection and Electronic Documents Act, (“the Act”) and the Canadian Standards Association Model Code for the Protection of Personal Information, which it incorporates. These obligations extend to lawyers and law firms, including Neinstein Personal Injury Lawyers. The Act gives you rights concerning the privacy of your personal information. The Act makes Neinstein Personal Injury Lawyers responsible for the personal information we collect and hold. To ensure this accountability, we have developed this policy, and trained our lawyers and support staff about our policies and practices.
Why Does Neinstein Personal Injury Lawyers Need Personal Information?
Neinstein Personal Injury Lawyers provides legal services to a wide range of clients. In doing so, it requires personal information in order to fulfill the terms of its retainers and to fulfill its professional responsibilities. As well, it occasionally produces and distributes materials concerning its services and new developments in the law.
What Personal Information Do We Collect and How Do We Collect It?
Neinstein Personal Injury Lawyers collects personal information relevant to our retainers with our clients. According to the Act, Personal information is defined as follows:
“personal information” means information about an identifiable individual, but does not include the name, title or business address or telephone number of an employee of an organization.
The information we collect may go beyond contact information and include financial or medical information (as an example) depending on the nature of the matter under investigation.
If we did not collect and use personal information we would not be able to provide legal services. In order to provide meaningful advice to our clients, we collect information only by lawful and fair means and not in an unreasonably intrusive way. Wherever possible we collect your personal information directly from you.
Sometimes we may obtain information about you from other sources, for example:
- Your insurance company
- From a government agency or registry;
- Your employer;
- an accountant or other professional, like a doctor;
- the other side in a litigation matter.
Consent
In most cases, we ask you to consent, if we collect, use, or disclose your personal information. Sometimes, your consent may be implied through your contact with us and the mere fact that we are retained to deal with a matter on your behalf. Thomson, Rogers’ standard retainer confirms our client’s consent to the collection, use and disclosure of personal information in the course of our retainer.
Use of Your Information
We use your personal information to provide legal advice and services, to fulfill our own professional responsibilities, to administer our client (time and billing databases) to manage our conflict avoidance program and, occasionally, to include you in our marketing activities. If you tell us that you no longer wish to receive marketing information about our services, or about new developments in the law, we will not send any further material to you.
Neinstein Personal Injury Lawyers does not disclose personal information to any third party to enable them to market their products and services. For example, we do not provide our client mailing lists to others. However, we do engage the services of third party marketing firms to help us find clients and we take no responsibility for their actions with personal information.
Neinstein Personal Injury Lawyers will retain personal information as long as may be necessary to complete our retainer, fulfill our own professional responsibilities, conduct our business, satisfy the requirements of the Law Society of Upper Canada and our insurers and as may be required for the maintenance of our marketing activities and our conflicts system.
Disclosure of Your Personal Information
Under certain circumstances, and/or as part of our client agreement, Neinstein Personal Injury Lawyers will disclose personal information, including:
- When we are required or authorized by law to do so
- When you have consented to the disclosure, expressly or by implication or its disclosure is necessary in the litigation or other matter about which we have been retained.
- When our retainer requires us to give your information to third parties (for example to a doctor for the purpose of obtaining a medical opinion or the opposing parties) your consent will be implied, unless you tell us otherwise. However, in litigation, you may have to disclose information and the failure to do so could adversely affect any claim you have.
- Where it is necessary to establish or collect fees
- If we engage a third party to provide administrative services to us (like computer back-up services or archival file storage, or our auditors) and the third party is bound by our privacy policy.
- If we engage expert witnesses on your behalf
- If we retain other law firms on your behalf
- If the information is already publicly known.
Updating Your Information
Since we use personal information to provide legal services, it is important that the information be accurate and up-to-date. If during the course of the retainer, any of your information changes, please inform us so that we can make any necessary changes. If Thomson, Rogers holds information about you and you can establish that it is not accurate, complete and up-to-date, Thomson, Rogers will take reasonable steps to correct it.
Is Personal Information Secure?
Neinstein Personal Injury Lawyers takes all reasonable precautions to ensure that personal information is kept safe from loss, unauthorized access, modification or disclosure. Among the steps taken to protect information are:
- Premises security
- Restricted file access to electronic personal information
- Deploying technological safeguards like password protection, security software and firewalls to prevent hacking or unauthorized computer access
- Internal password and security policies
- Procedures for the destruction of personal information when it is no longer required including shredding and the formatting of electronic media.
Access to Your Personal Information
You may ask for access to any personal information we hold about you. However, we may ask that we be reimbursed for the time and cost to us of such access at our normal rates.
Can I Be Denied Access to My Personal Information?
Rights to access your personal information are not absolute. We may deny access when:
- denial of access is required or authorized by law (for example, when a record containing personal information about you is subject to a claim of legal professional privilege by Neinstein Personal Injury Lawyers or one of our clients).
- information relates to existing or anticipated legal proceedings
- when granting you access would have an unreasonable impact on other people’s privacy
- when to do so would prejudice negotiations
- to protect our firm’s rights and property
- where the request is frivolous or vexatious
If we deny your request for access to, or refuse a request to correct information, we shall explain why.
Neinstein Personal Injury Lawyers does not use your Social Insurance Number as a way of identifying or organizing the information we hold.
Can a Client Request Anonymity?
The Proceeds of Crime (Money Laundering) and Terrorist Financing Act and our Rules of Professional conduct may require us to confirm the identity of new clients. It may also require us to disclose information to FINTRAC in relation to certain large cash transactions.
Credit Bureaus
To help us make credit decisions about clients, prevent fraud, check the identity of new clients and prevent money-laundering, we may on occasion, request information from the files of consumer reporting agencies.
Communicating With Us
You should be aware that e-mail and online form submittal is not a 100% secure medium, and you should be aware of this when contacting us to send personal or confidential information. Neinstein Personal Injury Lawyers does not take any responsibility for personal information collected by third party marketing firms.
Cookies and Other Tracking Technologies
Some of our web pages utilize “cookies” and other tracking technologies. A cookie is a small text file that a website transfers to an individual’s hard drive for record-keeping purposes. For example, we may use cookies to collect information about website activity. You may set most browsers to notify you if you receive a cookie, or you may choose to block cookies with your browser. However, please be aware that some features of the Site may not function properly or may be slower if you refuse cookies. We do not link the information we store in cookies to any Personal Information you submit while on the Site.
Tracking technologies may record information such as Internet domain and host names; Internet protocol (IP) addresses; browser software and operating system types; clickstream patterns; and dates and times that our Site is accessed. It is not our practice to link the information we record using tracking technologies to any Personal Information you submit while on the Site. However, we reserve the right to use IP addresses and other tracking technologies to identify a visitor only when we feel it is necessary to enforce compliance with the Site’s policies, to protect the Site, our customers, or others, or when we believe in good faith that the law requires it.
Links to Other Sites; Public Venues
Please be aware that when you are on the Site, you could be directed to other sites that are beyond our control via hyperlinks. These other websites may send their own cookies to visitors, collect data, or solicit Personal Information. The privacy policies of these other sites may be significantly different from this Privacy Policy. We are not responsible for the privacy practices of these other sites and cannot guarantee the security of any of your Personal Information collected there.
Changes to This Privacy Policy
Since Neinstein Personal Injury Lawyers regularly reviews all of its policies and procedures, we may change our Privacy Policy from time to time. Any changes will be posted on our web site.
Requests For Access
If you have any questions, or wish to access your personal information, please write to our Privacy Contact at:
Greg Neinstein
Managing Partner
Neinstein Personal Injury Lawyers
Suite 700, 1200 Bay Street
Toronto, Ontario M5R 2A5
greg@neinstein.com
If you are not satisfied with our response, the Privacy Commissioner of Canada can be reached at:
112 Kent Street,
Ottawa Ontario, K1A 1H3
1-800-282-1376
Employment Inquiries
If you apply to Neinstein Personal Injury Lawyers for a job, we need to consider your personal information, as part of our review process. We normally retain information from candidates after a decision has been made, unless you ask us not to retain the information. If we offer you a job, which you accept, the information will be retained in accordance with our privacy procedures for employee records.
Web Site
Our website may contain links to other sites, which are not governed by this privacy policy. On our website, like most other commercial websites, we may monitor traffic patterns, site usage and related site information in order to optimize our web service. We may provide aggregated information to third parties, but these statistics do not include any identifiable personal information.