In the private sector, the duty to appoint a DPO depends on the activity carried out: large-scale processing of special categories of data, systematic monitoring of data subjects, or one of the cases listed in Article 34 of the LOPDGDD for professional associations, schools, financial entities or insurers, among others. In the public sector there is no such filter. Article 37(1)(a) GDPR imposes the appointment on any public authority or body simply because it is one, with the sole exception of courts acting in their judicial capacity. A town council of two hundred people that keeps the population register, issues certificates and processes social assistance is just as bound as a government ministry. In practice, a considerable number of small municipalities and joint boards in Castilla y León handle this obligation incompletely: they informally hand it to a member of staff who doesn't hold the qualification required under Article 37(5) GDPR, assume the provincial council already covers it without any formal appointment existing, or simply never notify the appointment to the AEPD as required under Article 37(7).
The GDPR itself provides the way out for bodies that cannot take on a full-time officer. Article 37(3) expressly allows a public authority or body to appoint a single DPO for several entities, "taking account of their organisational structure and size". This European provision applies directly in Spain and allows town councils, joint boards and consortia to share one officer instead of duplicating the cost at each entity; each body's appointment is notified to the AEPD within the ten-day period set by Article 34(3) of the LOPDGDD. It's the arrangement that makes most sense for the majority of municipalities under five thousand inhabitants in the region: a single outsourced DPO covers the town council, its sports or culture autonomous body if one exists, and the joint board it belongs to, through one coordinated appointment and a single point of contact with the Agency.
Summum Consultoría, active since 2007, works with local public bodies in Castilla y León and the Canary Islands on matters that share the same interlocutor — the secretary-treasurer, the procurement officer, the mayor's office — as our transparency law and public procurement services. That familiarity with how a small town council actually operates is what's missing from most outsourced-DPO offers designed for private companies: drafting the records of processing for a clinic is not the same as drafting one for a town hall that handles population register data, local police, public-space video surveillance, social assistance, administrative procurement and institutional social media accounts all at once. The service is also procured like any other local-authority supply or service: through a minor contract or a simplified open procedure depending on its amount, under the same framework of Law 9/2017 on Public Sector Contracts that we already apply in the procurement processes we manage for SMEs.