León is home to one of the most active business ecosystems in north-western Castilla y León. SMEs in the agri-food sector — cecina de Vegacervera, botillo del Bierzo, wines with the Bierzo Denominación de Origen designation — hospitality and tourism businesses serving the French Route of the Camino de Santiago, the industrial cluster of the Polígono de Onzonilla and the healthcare centres that complement the Complejo Asistencial Universitario de León (CAULE, León University Care Complex) all share a common reality: they process personal data on a daily basis and are subject to the obligations of the GDPR and the LOPDGDD. Non-compliance can lead to fines of up to €20 million or 4% of total annual worldwide turnover under Article 83 of the GDPR.
GDPR compliance goes well beyond publishing a legal notice on a website. The data controller must draw up the Record of Processing Activities required by Article 30 of the GDPR, implement information clauses at every data-collection point, enter into data processing agreements with processors — accountancy firms, software providers, maintenance companies — ensure that data subjects can exercise their rights within statutory deadlines, and document the security measures adopted. The Agencia Española de Protección de Datos (AEPD, the Spanish Data Protection Authority) has full jurisdiction to investigate and sanction any organisation established in Spain, regardless of its size.
The Federación Leonesa de Empresarios (FELE, León Employers' Federation) and professional associations based in León have in recent years promoted awareness initiatives on data protection, in line with sector-specific guides published by the AEPD. Nevertheless, many SMEs in León still lack up-to-date privacy documentation or a designated person to handle data subject rights requests. Anyone can file a complaint directly with the AEPD, which makes compliance an operational necessity rather than a mere formal obligation.
Summum Consultoría supports companies and self-employed professionals in León throughout the entire process: initial gap assessment, design of the data protection system, drafting of legal documentation, staff training and periodic review. We travel regularly to the provincial capital and to the districts of El Bierzo, La Bañeza and Sahagún for on-site meetings, and provide full remote support for all other matters. We do not act as the AEPD nor do we guarantee the outcome of any enforcement proceeding, but we do ensure that the organisation has a coherent, documented system that accurately reflects how it processes personal data in practice.