Source: https://www.huntonprivacyblog.com/2018/09/01/ccpa-amended-enforcement-delayed-substantive-changes-made/
Timestamp: 2019-09-21 04:51:01
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CCPA Amended: Enforcement Delayed, Few Substantive Changes Made | Privacy & Information Security Law Blog
Home » CCPA Amended: Enforcement Delayed, Few Substantive Changes Made
On August 31, 2018, the California State Legislature passed SB-1121, a bill that delays enforcement of the California Consumer Privacy Act of 2018 (“CCPA”) and makes other modest amendments to the law. The bill now goes to the Governor for signing. The provisions of the CCPA will become operative on January 1, 2020. As we have previously reported, the CCPA introduces key privacy requirements for businesses. The Act was passed quickly by California lawmakers in an effort to remove a ballot initiative of the same name from the November 6, 2018, statewide ballot. The CCPA’s hasty passage resulted in a number of drafting errors and inconsistencies in the law, which SB-1121 seeks to remedy. The amendments to the CCPA are primarily technical, with few substantive changes.
The bill extends by six months the deadline for the California Attorney General (“AG”) to draft and adopt the law’s implementing regulations, from January 1, 2020, to July 1, 2020. (CCPA § 1798.185(a)).
The bill delays the AG’s ability to bring enforcement actions under the CCPA until six months after publication of the implementing regulations or July 1, 2020, whichever comes first. (CCPA § 1798.185(c)).
The bill limits the civil penalties the AG can impose to $2,500 for each violation of the CCPA or up to $7,500 per each intentional violation, and states that a violating entity will be subject to an injunction. (CCPA § 1798.155(b)).
Definition of “personal information”: The CCPA includes a number of enumerated examples of “personal information” (“PI”), including IP address, geolocation data and web browsing history. The amendment clarifies that the listed examples would constitute PI only if the data “identifies, relates to, describes, is capable of being associated with, or could be reasonably linked, directly or indirectly, with a particular consumer or household.” (CCPA § 1798.140(o)(1)).
The amendments clarify that a consumer may bring an action under the CCPA only for a business’s alleged failure to “implement and maintain reasonable security procedures and practices” that results in a data breach. (CCPA § 1798.150(c)).
The bill removes the requirement that a consumer notify the AG once the consumer has brought an action against a business under the CCPA, and eliminates the AG’s ability to instruct a consumer to not proceed with an action. (CCPA § 1798.150(b)).
GLBA, DDPA, CIPA exemptions: The original text of the CCPA exempted information subject to the Gramm-Leach-Bliley Act (“GLBA”) and Driver’s Privacy Protection Act (“DPPA”), only to the extent the CCPA was “in conflict” with either statute. The bill removes the “in conflict” qualification and clarifies that data collected, processed, sold or disclosed pursuant to the GLBA, DPPA or the California Information Privacy Act is exempt from the CCPA’s requirements. The revisions also exempt such information from the CCPA’s private right of action provision. (CCPA §§ 1798.145(e), (f)).
Health care providers: The bill adds an exemption for HIPAA-covered entities and providers of health care governed by the Confidentiality of Medical Information Act, “to the extent the provider or covered entity maintains patient information in the same manner as medical information or protected health information,” as described in the CCPA. (CCPA § 1798.145(c)(1)(B)).
PHI: The bill expands the category of exempted protected health information (“PHI”) governed by HIPAA and the Health Information Technology for Economic and Clinical Health Act to include PHI collected by both covered entities and business associates. The original text did not address business associates. (CCPA § 1798.145(c)(1)(A)).
Clinical trial data: The bill adds an exemption for “information collected as part of a clinical trial” that is subject to the Federal Policy for the Protection of Human Subjects (also known as the Common Rule) and is conducted in accordance with specified clinical practice guidelines. (CCPA § 1798.145(c)(1)(C)).
Notice of right of deletion: The original text of the CCPA stated that a business must disclose on its website or in its privacy policy a consumer’s right to request the deletion of her PI. The bill modifies this requirement, stating that a business must disclose the right to deletion “in a form that is reasonably accessible to consumers.” (CCPA § 1798.105(b)).
First Amendment protection: The bill adds a provision to the CCPA, which states that the rights afforded to consumers and obligations imposed on businesses under the CCPA do not apply if they “infringe on the noncommercial activities of a person or entity” as described in Art. I, Section 2(b) of the California constitution, which addresses activities related to the free press. This provision is designed to prevent First Amendment challenges to the law. (CCPA § 1798.150(k)).
The bill adds to the CCPA’s preemption clause that the law will not apply in the event its application is preempted by, or in conflict with, the U.S. Constitution. The CCPA previously referenced only the California Constitution. (CCPA § 1798.196).
Certain provisions of the CCPA supersede and preempt laws adopted by local entities regarding the collection and sale of a consumer’s PI by a business. The bill makes such provisions of the Act operative on the date the bill becomes effective.
Tags: California, CCPA, Compliance, Gramm Leach Bliley Act, HIPAA, HITECH Act, Legislation, Personal Information, Protected Health Information