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F I S C A L I M P A C T R E P O R T
SPONSOR SJC
ORIGINAL DATE
LAST UPDATED
1/26/07
3/12/07 HB
SHORT TITLE Security Freeze on Credit Report
SB
165/448/SJCS/aSFl 1,2,3/
aHBIC
ANALYST Wilson
ESTIMATED ADDITIONAL OPERATING BUDGET IMPACT (dollars in thousands)
FY07
FY08
FY09 3 Year
Total Cost
Recurring
or Non-Rec
Fund
Affected
Total
$0.1
General
Fund
(Parenthesis ( ) Indicate Expenditure Decreases)
SOURCES OF INFORMATION
LFC Files
Responses Received From
Administrative Office of the District Attorneys (AODA)
Attorney General’s Office (AGO)
SUMMARY
Synopsis of HBIC Amendment
The House Business & Industry Committee amendment removes the three Senate Floor
amendments, but restores the language in several cases. The amendment also rewrites much of
the language contained within the bill and the Senate Floor amendments.
The amendment states that a consumer may elect to place a security freeze on the consumer's
credit report by making a request to a consumer reporting agency by means of certified or regular
mail sent to an address designated by the consumer reporting agency or by telephone or a secure
electronic method if such means are provided by the agency. A consumer shall provide any
personal identification required by the consumer reporting agency and pay a fee, if applicable.
Within five business days of placing a security freeze on a consumer’s credit report instead of
the same day, a consumer reporting agency shall be required to send a written confirmation of
the security freeze to the consumer and provide the consumer with a unique personal
identification number, password or similar device to be used by the consumer when providing
authorization for the release of the consumer's credit report to a specific person or for a specific
period of time or for permanent removal of the freeze.
.
As of September 1, 2008, a consumer reporting agency that receives a request shall release a
consumer's credit report as requested by the consumer within 15 minutes after the consumer's
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request is received by the consumer reporting agency through the use of a telephone or a secure
electronic method provided by the agency, which may include the use of the internet, facsimile
or other electronic means; provided that the consumer reporting agency is not required to release
the credit report within 15 minutes unless the consumer's request is received by the consumer
reporting agency between the hours of 6:00 a.m. and 9:30 p.m. mountain standard or mountain
daylight time, as applicable, Sunday through Saturday.
According to the amendment a consumer reporting agency need not release a credit report within
the time periods set forth above if the consumer fails to meet the above requirements or if the
consumer reporting agency's ability to remove the security freeze within fifteen minutes is
prevented by:
A.
an act of God, including fire, earthquake, hurricane, storm or similar natural
disaster or phenomenon;
B.
unauthorized or illegal acts by a third party, including terrorism, sabotage, riots,
vandalism, labor strikes or disputes disrupting operations or similar occurrences;
C.
operational interruption, including electrical failure, unanticipated delay in
equipment or replacement part delivery, computer hardware or software failure
inhibiting response time or similar disruption;
D.
governmental action, including emergency orders or regulations, judicial or law
enforcement actions or similar directives;
E.
regularly scheduled maintenance of, or updates to, the consumer reporting agency's
systems during other than normal business hours; or
F.
commercially reasonable maintenance of, or repair to, the consumer reporting
agency's systems that is unexpected or unscheduled...
The amendment allows a consumer reporting agency to charge a consumer no more than $10
instead of the current $5 in the bill for the initial placement of a security freeze. A consumer
reporting agency may charge a fee of no more than $5 instead of the current $10 in the bill for
the release of a credit report, upon which a security freeze has been placed, to a specific person
or for a specific period of time. A consumer reporting agency may charge a fee of no more than
$5 for the removal of a security freeze. A fee shall not be charged
to a consumer who is sixty-
five years of age or older or to a victim of identity theft who provides a valid police or
investigative report filed with a law enforcement agency alleging identity theft.
The amendment clarifies the debtor-creditor relationship by adding that a consumer reporting
agency may release a consumer’s credit report to a person or the person's subsidiary, affiliate,
agent or assignee with which the consumer has or, prior to assignment, had an account, contract
or debtor-creditor relationship for the purpose of reviewing the account or collecting the
financial obligation owing for the account, contract or debt. As used in this paragraph,
"reviewing the account" includes activities related to account maintenance, monitoring, credit
line increases and account upgrades and enhancements.
A consumer reporting agency may also release a consumer’s credit report to a subsidiary,
affiliate, agent, assignee or prospective assignee of a person to whom access has been granted by
the consumer for the purpose of facilitating the extension of credit or other permissible uses, to a
person or entity administering a credit file monitoring subscription service to which the
consumer has subscribed or to a person or entity for the purpose of providing a consumer with a
copy of the consumer's credit report upon the consumer's request.
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The amendment adds that the following entities are not required to place a security freeze on
credit reports:
a consumer reporting agency that acts only as a reseller of credit information by
assembling and merging information contained in the database of another consumer
reporting agency or multiple consumer credit reporting agencies and does not maintain a
permanent database of credit information from which new consumer credit reports are
produced. However, a consumer reporting agency acting as a reseller shall honor any
security freeze placed on a consumer credit report by another consumer reporting agency;
a check services or fraud prevention services company that issues reports on incidents of
fraud or authorizations for the purpose of approving or processing negotiable instruments,
electronic funds transfers or similar methods of payment or
a deposit account information service company that issues reports regarding account
closures due to fraud, substantial overdrafts, automatic teller machine abuse or similar
negative information regarding a consumer to inquiring banks or other financial
institutions for use only in reviewing a consumer request for a deposit account at the
inquiring bank or financial institution.
Synopsis of SFl #3
The Senate Floor Amendment #3 to the Senate Judiciary Committee substitute bill for Senate
Bill 165 and Senate Bill 448 strikes all of Senate Floor amendment # 2 and adds as of September
1, 2008 a request to a consumer reporting agency from a consumer asking to temporarily lift a
freeze on a credit report must be complied within 15 minutes of receiving the request by secure
electronic mail, facsimile or telephone.
The amendment also adds the same 15 minute requirement with the same conditions if a
consumer contacts a consumer reporting agency to lift a freeze.
Synopsis of SFl # 2
The Senate Floor Amendment #2 to the Senate Judiciary Committee substitute bill for Senate
Bill 165 and Senate Bill 448 requires a consumer reporting agency to remove a security freeze
within three business days after receiving a request from a consumer who provides the unique
personal identification number, password or similar device and proper identification and as of
September 1, 2008, a consumer reporting agency must comply with the request within 15
minutes after the consumers request is received by the consumer reporting agency through the
use of a telephone during normal business hours, and the request includes the consumer’s proper
identification and unique personal identification number, password or similar device.
Synopsis of SF l# 1
The Senate Floor Amendment #1 to the Senate Judiciary Committee substitute bill for Senate
Bill 165 and Senate Bill 448 adds and clarifies that a
consumer reporting agency that receives a
request shall release a consumer's credit report as requested by the consumer within the
following time periods:
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1) three business days after the business day on which the consumer’s written request to
release the consumer’s credit report is received by the consumer reporting agency or
2) on or after September 1, 2008, 15 minutes after the consumers request is received by
the consumer reporting agency through a secure electronic method provided by the
agency, or through the use of a telephone, during normal business hours, and the request
includes the consumer’s proper identification and unique personal identification number,
password or similar device.
The amendment does not require a consumer reporting agency to remove a security freeze
within the time periods cited above if the consumer fails to meet the requirements set forth in this
amendment or if the consumer reporting agency’s ability to remove the security freeze within 15
minutes is prevented by:
(a) an act of God, including fire, earthquake, hurricane, storm or similar natural disaster
or phenomenon;
(b) unauthorized or illegal acts by a third party, including terrorism, sabotage, riots,
vandalism, labor strikes or disputes disrupting operations or similar occurrence
(c) operational interruption, including electrical failure, unanticipated delay in equipment
or replacement part delivery, computer hardware or software failure inhibiting response
time or similar disruption;
(d) governmental action, including emergency orders or regulations, judicial or law
enforcement actions or similar directives;
(e) regularly scheduled maintenance of, or updates to, the consumer reporting agency's
systems during other than normal business hours;
(f) commercially reasonable maintenance of, or repair to, the consumer reporting
agency's systems that is unexpected or unscheduled; or
(g) receipt of a removal request outside of normal business hours.
Synopsis of Original Bill
The Senate Judiciary Committee substitute bill for Senate Bill 165 and Senate Bill 448 enacts the
Credit Report Security Act, providing consumers with the opportunity to place a security freeze
on the consumer’s credit report by making a request to a consumer reporting agency to refrain
from releasing any part of the consumer’s credit report or any information derived from the
report without the express authorization of the consumer.
The bill requires the consumer reporting agency to place a security freeze on a consumer’s credit
report no later than three business days after receiving a request from the consumer.
The bill also provides that while a freeze is in effect, a consumer may authorize a consumer
reporting agency to release the report to a specific person or to release the report for a specific
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period of time. The freeze shall remain in place until the consumer requests its removal. The
agency must remove the freeze within three business days after receiving the request provided
that no acts of God or vandalism by third parties prevent the consumer reporting agency from
releasing the consumer’s credit report. Under the Act, if an agency releases information on a
credit report while a freeze is in effect and without authorization, it must notify the consumer
within 5 business days.
SB 448 provides that an agency may charge a consumer who is less than 65 years old a fee of no
more than $5 for the initial placement of a freeze but shall not charge a fee for the release of a
credit report to a person, for the release of a credit report for a specific period of time or for the
removal of the freeze, nor to a proven victim of identity theft. The bill allows an agency to
provide information to a person with a current debtor-creditor relationship with the consumer, a
person acting pursuant to a court order, warrant or subpoena, the Child Support Enforcement
Division in order to carry out its statutory duties of establishing and collecting child support
obligations, a person for the purposes of prescreening as defined by the federal Fair Credit
Reporting Act, a consumer reporting agency for its data base or files for certain information and
for a governmental agency acting to investigate fraud, to investigate or collect delinquent taxes
or unpaid court orders or to fulfill any of its other statutory duties.
The bill also provides that whenever an agency is required to provide the consumer with a
summary of rights under the federal Fair Credit Reporting Act, a specific notice of right to obtain
a freeze must be include.
Finally, the bill provides for the bringing of a civil action by a consumer, in the event an agency
releases information placed under a security freeze in violation of the act. The consumer may
seek the following:
1) injunctive relief to prevent further violation of the security freeze;
2) any actual damages sustained as a result of a violation;
3) a civil penalty in an amount up to $2,000 for each violation of the security freeze; and
4) costs of the action and reasonable attorney fees.
The effective date of the Act is July 1, 2007.
FISCAL IMPLICATIONS
There will be a minimal administrative cost for statewide update, distribution and documentation
of statutory changes. New laws, amendments to existing laws and new hearings have the
potential to increase caseloads in the courts, thus requiring additional resources to handle the
increase.
SIGNIFICANT ISSUES
Credit reporting agencies are governed by the Federal Fair Credit Reporting Act (FCRA) and
therefore state laws governing credit reporting agencies are subject to possible preemption.
However, state security freeze laws should not be preempted by FCRA. The federal law offers
other consumer credit protection measures but does not address the issue of a security freeze.
Federal law requires credit bureaus upon the request of a consumer to:
put a fraud alert into the consumer’s file to warn potential users of the report that new
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credit should not be extended without first verifying the identity of the credit applicant;
block the reporting of any information in a consumer’s file that the consumer identifies as
information resulting from an identity theft.
States are preempted from imposing requirements regarding the conduct required by these
specific fraud alert and blocking provisions. These two provisions, however, do not establish
any conduct with respect to freezing access to the entire report and therefore, security freeze laws
should not be subject to federal preemption.
ADMINISTRATIVE IMPLICATIONS
The AODA suggests that if consumers take advantage of the provisions in the bill there will be a
reduction in identity theft prosecutions.
OTHER SUBSTANTIVE ISSUES
While the bill imposes liability on and creates a civil cause of action against a CRA that
wrongfully releases protected information, it does not create similar liability as against any
person who wrongfully requests and obtains that information.
DW/mt