Washington State

House of Representatives

Office of Program Research

BILL

ANALYSIS

Financial Institutions & Insurance Committee

HB 1149

This analysis was prepared by non-partisan legislative staff for the use of legislative members in their deliberations. This analysis is not a part of the legislation nor does it constitute a statement of legislative intent.

Brief Description: Protecting consumers from breaches of security.

Sponsors: Representatives Williams, Roach, Simpson, Kirby, Dunshee, Nelson and Ormsby.

Brief Summary of Bill

  • Modifies the state security breach law.

  • Provides a cause of action for a financial institution against a person or business if there is a breach of security affecting 5,000 or more unencrypted individual names or account numbers.

Hearing Date: 1/22/09

Staff: Jon Hedegard (786-7127)

Background:

State Security Breach Law (Chapter 19.255 RCW).

In 2005 the Legislature enacted a security breach law. The law requires any person or business to notify possibly affected persons when security is breached and unencrypted personal information is (or is reasonably believed to have been) acquired by an unauthorized person. A person or business is not required to disclose a technical breach that does not seem reasonably likely to subject customers to a risk of criminal activity.

"Personal information" is defined as an individual's first name or first initial and last name in combination with one or more of the following data elements, when either the name or the data elements are not encrypted:

"Personal information" does not include publicly available information that is lawfully made available to the general public from federal, state, or local government records.

The notice required must be either written, electronic, or substitute notice. If it is electronic, the notice provided is consistent with federal law provisions regarding electronic records, including consent, record retention, and types of disclosures. Substitute notice is only allowed if the cost of providing direct notice exceeds $250,000; the number of persons to be notified exceeds 500,000; or there is insufficient contact information to reach the customer. Substitute notice consists of all of the following:

A customer injured by a violation of the security breach law has the right to a civil action for damages.

State Disposal of Personal Information Law.

State law places restrictions on how certain types of personal information may be disposed. If a person or business is disposing of records containing personal financial and health information and personal identification numbers issued by a government entity, the person or business must take all reasonable steps to destroy, or arrange the destruction of, the information.

An individual injured by the failure of an entity to comply with the disposal or personal information law may sue for:

The Attorney General may bring a civil action in the name of the state for damages, injunctive relief, or both, against an entity that fails to comply with the law. The court may award damages that are the same as those awarded to individual plaintiffs.

Additional Federal and State Privacy Protections.

Federal and state health privacy laws generally include security provisions and safeguards for health information, including information relating to an individual's identity and payment information. These duties are imposed on health insurers, providers, and others in the health system.

Federal banking and insurance laws generally include security provisions and safeguards for individually identifiable health and financial information. These duties are placed on individuals and businesses in the banking community.

Payment Card Industry Security Standards Council.

The Payment Card Industry Security Standards Council (Council) is a limited liability corporation with the mission of enhancing payment account data security by fostering broad adoption of their standards for payment account security. The Council was established by American Express, Discover Financial Services, JCB, MasterCard Worldwide, and Visa International in 2004. The Council developed the Payment Card Industry Data Security Standards (PCI DSS). According to the Council, there were six principles and requirements in developing the requirements for security management, policies, procedures, network architecture, software design and other measures:

• build and maintain a secure network;

• protect cardholder data;

• maintain a vulnerability management program;

• implement strong access control measures;

• regularly monitor and test networks; and

• maintain an information security policy.

The Council does not enforce the PCI DSS. Individual payment systems establish contractual terms and penalties for noncompliance.

Summary of Bill:

Any person or business that conducts business in this state and that owns or licenses computerized data that includes personal information must disclose any breach of the security of the system, if a reasonable person would believe that the breach could cause unencrypted data to be acquired by an unauthorized person. The notice must be provided following discovery or notification of the breach to any resident of this state.

No person, entity conducting business in Washington, or service provider for such a person or entity, that accepts an access device in connection with a transaction may retain the card security code data, the Personal Identification Number (PIN) verification code number, or the full contents of any track of magnetic stripe data, after the authorization of the transaction or in the case of a PIN debit transaction, subsequent to 48 hours after the authorization of the transaction. This does not apply of the person, or entity conducting business in Washington, or their service provider has the express consent of the customer using the access device.

Remedies.

A person or entity must reimburse a financial institution if there is a breach of the security of the system of a person or entity or their service provider and the:

The reimbursement is for a financial institution that issued any access devices affected by the breach for all actions reasonably undertaken in order to protect consumers, including costs for:

The remedies are cumulative and do not restrict any other right or remedy otherwise available to the financial institution.

Limited immunity.

A financial institution that provided or approved equipment used to process payment transactions is precluded from recovering cost if:

Additional transaction fees permitted.

A person or entity accepting an access device in connection with a transaction may add an additional two cents per transaction to the balance of the transaction for the purpose of subsidizing costs associated with insurance designed to protect against liability associated with the costs of a breach.

Arbitration.

The parties to a dispute arising under the security breach provisions may agree to submit to arbitration. The arbitrator must be agreed upon by the parties at the time the dispute arises. The arbitration process comply with the requirements of chapter 7.04A RCW relating to arbitration. A party to a dispute entering into arbitration as an initial method of dispute resolution may seek also a refund or credit made to an account holder to cover the cost of any unauthorized transaction related to the breach, except that costs may not include any amounts recovered by the financial institution from a credit card company. Any other remedy provided by law may also be sought by a party.

Appropriation: None.

Fiscal Note: Available.

Effective Date: The bill takes effect on January 1, 2010.