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FOI request (FOIR-827172190)
BACS payments
Requested Tue 14 April 2026
Responded Tue 12 May 2026- The name of the software system(s) currently used to facilitate BACS payments.
- The contract end date(s) and/or next renewal date(s) for the above system(s).
- The current annual contract value paid for this software (excluding VAT). If the exact figure is exempt, please provide the value within a cost band or range.
Response
- The name of the software system(s) currently used to facilitate BACS payments.
REFUSED - Please see refusal notice below.
- The contract end date(s) and/or next renewal date(s) for the above system(s).
Answer: Annual contract starting on the 1st May.
- The current annual contract value paid for this software (excluding VAT). If the exact figure is exempt, please provide the value within a cost band or range.
REFUSED - Please see refusal notice below.
NOTICE OF REFUSAL
Parts of the information you have requested is commercially sensitive and falls under Section 43 of the Freedom of Information Act – Commercially Sensitive Information
Information prejudicing commercial interests – commercial interest relating to an organisations commercial activity and may include trading activity procurement and relationships with third parties.
The exemption afforded by Section 43 is subject to what is known as the ‘public interest test’. When applying the test in a particular case a public authority is deciding whether the public interest is better served by non-disclosure than by disclosure.
Although the Freedom of Information Act does not define ‘in the public interest’, there is a presumption under Freedom of Information that openness is in the public interest. In applying the public interest test a public authority will take into account the distinction that has been often made by courts between things that are in the public interest, and things that merely interest the public. Where applicants have not identified public interest considerations succinctly or accurately, the public authority has a responsibility under the Act to make their own assessment of the public interest considerations in the particular case.
We have identified the following public interest factors that may be seen as encouraging the disclosure of information:
a) accountability of public spending
We consider these factors to be of limited relevance in relation to the information in question.
Public interest factors seen as encouraging non-disclosure are, generally, the exemptions themselves. In consideration of this matter we came to the following conclusions:
a) ensuring that companies are able to compete for business fairly
b) damage to reputation and/or financial interests
In weighing the factors for and against disclosure we have concluded that the likely benefit to the applicant and the wider public of disclosure is outweighed by the likely prejudice caused by such disclosure and that therefore the public interest is better served by non-disclosure.
For the reasons given above we will not be communicating to you the information you have requested.
- The name of the software system(s) currently used to facilitate BACS payments.
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Freedom of Information
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