Skip to main content
Menu Icon
Close

InfoBytes Blog

Financial Services Law Insights and Observations

Virginia passes additional VCDPA amendments

Privacy/Cyber Risk & Data Security State Issues State Legislation Consumer Protection Virginia VCDPA

Privacy, Cyber Risk & Data Security

On March 7, the Virginia House and Senate passed HB 714, which amends Sections 59.1-575 and 59.1-584 and repeals Section 59.1-585 of the Virginia Consumer Data Protection Act (VCDPA). Specifically, the amendments expand the definition of a nonprofit organization to include political and certain tax-exempt 501(c)(4) organizations, thus exempting them from the VCDPA’s provisions. The bill also abolishes the Consumer Privacy Fund and provides that all civil penalties, expenses, and attorney fees collected from enforcement of the VCDPA shall be deposited into the Regulatory, Consumer Advocacy, Litigation, and Enforcement Revolving Trust Fund. Under Section 59.1-584, the attorney general has exclusive authority to enforce the law and seek penalties of no more than $7,500 per violation should a controller or processor of consumer personal data continue to violate the VCDPA following a 30-day cure period, or breach an express written statement provided to the attorney general that the alleged violations have been cured.

As previously covered by InfoBytes, the VCDPA was enacted last year to establish a framework for controlling and processing consumers’ personal data in the Commonwealth. The VCDPA, which explicitly prohibits a private right of action, allows consumers to access their personal data; make corrections; request deletion of their data; obtain a copy of their data in a portable format; and opt out of targeted advertising, sale of their data, or “profiling in furtherance of decisions that produce legal or similarly significant effects concerning the consumer.” The bill now heads to the governor, and if enacted, will take effect January 1, 2023.