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Financial Services Law Insights and Observations

Rep. McHenry introduces draft privacy legislation based on GLBA

Federal Issues Privacy/Cyber Risk & Data Security Federal Legislation Gramm-Leach-Bliley Consumer Protection

Federal Issues

On June 23, House Financial Services Ranking Member Patrick McHenry (R-NC) released a discussion draft of new federal legislation intended to modernize financial data privacy laws and provide consumers more control over the collection and use of their personal information. (See overview of the discussion draft here.) The draft bill seeks to build on the Gramm-Leach-Bliley Act (GLBA) to better align financial data protection law with evolving technologies that have innovated the financial system and the way in which consumers interact with financial institutions, including nonbank institutions. “Technology has fundamentally changed the way consumers participate in our financial system—increasing access and inclusion. It has also increased the amount of sensitive data shared with service providers. Our privacy laws—especially as they relate to financial data—must keep up,” McHenry said, emphasizing the importance of finding a way to “secure Americans’ privacy without strangling innovation.”

Among other things, the draft bill:

  • Requires notice of collection activities. The GLBA currently requires that consumers be provided notice when their information is being disclosed to third parties. The draft bill updates this requirement to require financial institutions to provide notice when consumers’ nonpublic personal information is being collected.
  • Recognizes the burden on small institutions. The draft bill stipulates that agencies shall consider compliance costs imposed on smaller financial institutions when promulgating rules.
  • Amends the definition of a “financial institution.” The draft bill will update the definition to cover data aggregators in addition to financial institutions engaged in financial activities as described in 4(k) of the Bank Holding Company Act of 1956.
  • Expands the definition of non-public information. The draft bill expands the definition of “personally identifiable financial information” to include “information that identifies, relates to, describes, is reasonably capable of being associated with, or could reasonably be linked, directly or indirectly, with a particular consumer.” Publicly available information is not included in this definition. The definition of “consumer account credentials” will mean “nonpublic information (including a username, password, or an answer to a security question) that enables the consumer to access an account of the consumer at a financial institution.”
  • Provides consumers access to data. The draft bill provides that financial institutions must, upon an authorized request from a consumer, disclose the data held, entities with which the financial institution shares consumer data, and a list of entities from whom the financial institution has received a consumer’s non-public personal information.
  • Allows consumers to stop the collection and disclosure of their data. When a financial institution is required to terminate the collection and/or sharing of a consumer’s nonpublic personal information, the draft bill provides that a financial institution must notify third parties that data sharing is terminated and must require the third parties to also terminate collection and disclosure. Additionally, upon request from a consumer, the financial institution must delete any nonpublic personal information in its possession, and if required by law to retain the data, the financial institution may only use the data for that purpose.
  • Minimizes data collection. The draft bill requires that financial institutions notify consumers of their data collection practices in their privacy policies, including the categories collected, how the information is collected, and the purposes for the collection. Consumers must be allowed an opportunity to opt-out of the collection of their data if not necessary for the provision of the product or service by that entity.
  • Provides informed choice and transparency. Under the draft bill, privacy terms and conditions must be transparent and easily understandable. The draft bill requires the disclosure of a financial institution’s privacy policies in a manner that provides consumers meaningful understanding of what data is being collected, the manner in which the data is collected, the purposes for which the data will be used, the right to opt-out, who has access to the data, how an entity is using the data, where the data will be shared, the data retention policies of the entity, the consumer’s termination rights, and the rights associated with that data for uses inconsistent with stated purpose, among others.
  • Stipulates liability for unauthorized access. The draft bill states that “[i]f the nonpublic personal information of a consumer is obtained from a financial institution (either due to a data breach or in any other manner) and used to make unauthorized access of the consumer’s account, the financial institution shall be liable to the consumer for the full amount of any damages resulting from such unauthorized access.’’
  • Requires preemption. The draft bill will preempt state privacy laws to create a national standard.

The draft bill was introduced days after the House Subcommittee on Consumer Protection and Commerce heard testimony from consumer advocates and industry representatives on the recently proposed bipartisan American Data Privacy and Protection Act (covered by a Buckley Special Alert here).