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NAFCU Letter on Cyber Security and Data Security

April 16, 2013

The Honorable John Boehner
Speaker
U.S. House of Representatives
Washington, D.C. 20515

The Honorable Nancy Pelosi
Minority Leader
U.S. House of Representatives
Washington, D.C. 20515

Re:      Cyber Security and Data Security

Dear Speaker Boehner and Minority Leader Pelosi:

On behalf of the National Association of Federal Credit Unions (NAFCU), the only trade association exclusively representing our nation’s federal credit unions, I write today in regards to data security.  As the House prepares to consider a bill on cyber security this week, we urge you to not overlook the importance of data security for personally identifiable and financial information as part of the larger debate.

The risk of a data breach continues to be a serious problem for both consumers and businesses.  Every time a consumer chooses to use a plastic card for payment at a register or makes an online payment from their account, they are unwittingly put at risk.  Many are not aware that their financial and personal identities could be stolen, or that fraudulent charges could appear on their account, damaging their credit scores and reputations.  Consumers trust that entities collecting this type of information will, at the very least, make a minimal effort to protect them from such risks.  Unfortunately, this is not always true.

As you may be aware, financial institutions, including credit unions, have been subject to standards on data security since the passage of Gramm-Leach-Bliley.  However, retailers and many other entities that handle sensitive personal financial data are not subject to these same standards and all too often become victims of data breaches and data theft.  Financial institutions bear a significant burden as the issuers of payment cards used by millions of consumers.  Credit unions suffer steep losses in re-establishing member safety after a data breach occurs.  They are often forced to charge off fraud related losses, many of which stem from a negligent entities failure to protect sensitive financial and personal information, or the illegal maintenance of such information in their systems.  Moreover, as many cases of identity theft have been attributed to data breaches and identity theft continues to rise, any entity that stores financial or personally identifiable information should be held to a minimum standard for protecting such data.

In recent years, there have been several large-scale data breaches, such as the ones at Sony and Michael’s Inc.  The aftermath of these breaches demonstrates what we have been communicating to Congress all along—credit unions and other financial institutions, not retailers nor other entities, are out front protecting consumers in picking up the pieces after a data breach occurs.  It is the credit union or other financial institution that must notify their account holders, issue new cards, replenish stolen funds, change account numbers, and accommodate increased customer service demands that inevitably follow a major data breach.  The negligent entity that caused these expenses by failing to protect consumer data loses nothing, and is often undisclosed to the consumer.

NAFCU is pleased to see the House debate the issue of cyber security, but urge you not to forget the issue of data security and to consider adding provisions to protect consumers from breaches that compromise their financial and personally identifiable information.  Data security is a commonsense bipartisan issue that must be addressed.

With that in mind, NAFCU specifically recommends that the House consider the following issues related to data security as you tackle the broader issue of cyber security:

  • Payment of Breach Costs by Breached Entities: NAFCU asks that credit union expenditures for breaches resulting from card use be reduced.  A reasonable and equitable way of addressing this concern would be to require entities to be accountable for costs of data breaches that result on their end, especially when their own negligence is to blame.
  • National Standards for Safekeeping Information: It is critical that sensitive personal information be safeguarded at all stages of transmission.  Under Gramm-Leach-Bliley, credit unions and other financial institutions are required to meet certain criteria for safekeeping consumers’ personal information.  Unfortunately, there is no comprehensive regulatory structure akin to Gramm-Leach-Bliley that covers retailers, merchants, and others who collect and hold sensitive information.  NAFCU strongly supports the passage of legislation requiring any entity responsible for the storage of consumer data to meet standards similar to those imposed on financial institutions under the Gramm-Leach-Bliley Act.
  • Data Security Policy Disclosure: Many consumers are unaware of the risks they are exposed to by providing their personal information.  NAFCU believes that this problem can be alleviated by simply requiring merchants to post their data security policies at the point of sale if they take sensitive financial data.  Such a disclosure requirement would come at little or no cost to the merchant, but would provide an important benefit to the public at large.
  • Notification of the Account Servicer:  The account servicer or owner is in the unique position of being able to monitor for suspicious activity and prevent fraudulent transactions before they occur.  NAFCU believes that it would make sense to include entities such as financial institutions to the list of those to be informed of any compromised personally identifiable information when, associated accounts are involved.
  • Disclosure of Breached Entity: NAFCU believes that consumers should have the right to know which business entities have been breached.  We urge Congress to mandate the disclosure of identities of companies and merchants whose data systems have been violated, so consumers are aware of those that place their personal information at risk.
  • Enforcement of Prohibition on Data Retention: NAFCU believes it is imperative to address the violation of existing agreements and law by merchants and retailers who retain payment card information electronically.  Many entities do not respect this prohibition and store sensitive personal data in their systems, which can be breached easily in many cases.
  • Burden of Proof in Data Breach Cases: In line with the responsibility for making consumers whole after they are harmed by a data breach, NAFCU believes that the evidentiary burden of proving a lack of fault should rest with the merchant or retailer who incurred the breach.  These parties should have the duty to demonstrate that they took all necessary precautions to guard consumers’ personal information, but sustained a violation regardless.  The law is currently vague on this issue, and NAFCU therefore asks that this burden of proof be clarified in statute.

Thank you for your kind attention to this important matter.  We appreciate the opportunity to voice our concerns, and look forward to working with you as you examine this issue.  Should you have any questions or need additional information, please do not hesitate to contact myself or NAFCU’s Associate Director of Legislative Affairs, Chad Adams, at 703-842-2265 or cadams@nafcu.org.

Sincerely,

Brad Thaler

Vice President of Legislative Affairs

cc:        Members of the House of Representatives