In California Privacy Protection Agency et al. v. The Superior Court of Sacramento County (case number C099130), the Third Appellate District of the California Court of Appeal returned authority to the California Privacy Protection Agency (CPPA) to enforce the regulations promulgated under California’s groundbreaking consumer data privacy law, the California Consumer Privacy Act (CCPA, as amended by the California Privacy Rights Act (CPRA)). 

The California Chamber of Commerce had challenged the CPPA’s timeline for enforcing its newly finalized regulations, arguing that the agency had missed statutory deadlines, which, in their view, should delay the enforcement start date a full year after their promulgation—to March 29, 2024. The regulations in question, which address aspects such as privacy notice requirements and the handling of browser signals for opt-out requests, are part of the broader framework established by the CCPA. The lower court agreed and temporarily stripped the CPPA of its enforcement capabilities.

The appellate court overturned that decision. The court found no explicit mandate in the law that would necessitate delaying enforcement until a year after the finalization of the regulations, as the Chamber had contended. Consequently, the CPPA can now immediately begin enforcing the regulations finalized last March without the previously imposed delay.Continue Reading California Appeals Court Empowers Privacy Agency to Immediately Enforce CCPA Regulations

Since the California Consumer Privacy Act (“CCPA”) was passed in 2018, employers have been watching carefully to see how the law will apply to data collected and maintained about their employees. Up until now, employment data had been exempted from most of the CCPA’s requirements. But the new amendments to the CCPA embodied in the California Privacy Rights Act (“CPRA”) come into effect on January 1, 2023, and that, coupled with the fact that the legislature failed to extend the employer exemptions, means that many categories of human resources data will be subject to the requirements of the law.[1]

The Current CCPA Employer Exemptions Are Expiring

As it stands (and through the end of 2022), covered employers are only obligated to notify employees of the categories of data being collected and the purposes for which the data will be used. In the event of a security breach involving employee data, employers are required to notify affected individuals and could be liable for statutory damages. In response to these requirements, most covered employers developed privacy notices with the required disclosures and reviewed their data security policies and protocols to ensure consistency with best practices.

But starting in 2023, employee data will be treated as any other commercial information, and covered employers will need to add employee and human resources data to their ongoing compliance efforts. Indeed, under the CCPA, “personal information” is defined broadly to include information that “identifies, relates to, describes, is reasonably associated with, or could reasonably be linked, directly or indirectly, with a particular consumer household.” Cal. Civ. Code § 1798.140(o)(1). In the employee or human resources context, personal information could include an employee’s contact information, insurance and benefits elections, bank and direct deposit information, emergency contacts, dependents, resume and employment history, performance evaluations, wage statements, time punch records, stock and equity grants, compensation history, and many other forms of data routinely collected in the context of the employment relationship. Moreover, the CPRA introduces a new concept of “sensitive personal information” (such as financial information, social security numbers, communications content, health information, and biometrics) that must be considered and addressed by the employer.

New Requirements Take Effect in 2023

So what does this mean for employers? First, employers must prepare and provide a privacy notice to an employee (or a job applicant since such applicant is likely providing personal information) at or before the time personal information is collected. This could mean including a privacy policy (and a click-through mechanism) on any online application site, in the employee handbook, and/or on internal websites. The privacy policy is likely to be similar to the online privacy policy the employer includes for consumers, though it will need to be revised to accurately reflect the categories of personal information collected (along with the length of time the employer intends to retain data in each category), as well as the categories of third parties with whom such information will be shared (e.g., payroll service providers, etc.).
Continue Reading Employee Data Under the CCPA: Expiration of Employer Exemptions Requires Compliance as of January 1, 2023

Californians for Consumer Privacy has announced that it has secured and submitted enough signatures to qualify its California Privacy Rights Act (“CPRA”) for inclusion on California’s November 2020 ballot.

Alistair Mactaggart, the architect behind the ballot initiative that led to the California legislature’s adoption of the CCPA, pushed forward with the CPRA to amend perceived issues and shortcomings in the CCPA.
Continue Reading Signatures Submitted for Inclusion of New California Privacy Law on November Ballot