SACRAMENTO, Calif.—The California State Legislature last week passed a number of amendments to the California Consumer Privacy Act (CCPA) it said are aimed at reducing the compliance burdens for businesses.
However, the legislature did not delay the compliance date, noted NAFCU, which had asked the legislature to push back.
The amendments leave the overall scope of the law generally intact, but are intended to make the CCPA clearer, remove certain conduct from its coverage, and potentially make compliance easier in some cases.
NAFCU joined with the U.S. Chamber of Commerce and other organizations representing every sector of the U.S. economy to urge the California governor, attorney general and members of the state senate and assembly to delay the CCPA's effective date by two years.
Similar to EU Standard
The new California rule resembles European Union's implementation of its General Data Protection Regulation.
The organizations argued that a delay would "provide sufficient time to resolve ambiguities" within the law. They also asked that help be given to businesses to implement systems that would "meaningfully protect consumers' privacy, provide rights offered by the CCPA, and meet consumers' expectations."
No further legislative clarification on the act is expected in the near future, noted NAFCU.
