Several industry associations, including the American Escrow Association, American Land Title Association, National Association of Realtors, and the New York State Land Title Association, wrote to the chair and ranking member of the Senate Committee on Commerce, Science and Transportation, urging Congress to pass national privacy legislation.
“Over 120 countries have adopted comprehensive data protection laws, many very recently, with more countries considering legislation,” the associations wrote. “Unfortunately, in the United States, a growing patchwork of now three different state privacy laws makes it increasingly difficult for small businesses to compete due to increased compliance costs. This patchwork also fosters consumer confusion, as state residency is now the sole determinate of a U.S. consumer’s privacy rights. Recent calls for the Federal Trade Commission (FTC) rulemakings on privacy would exacerbate, rather than resolve, this patchwork. Additionally, the House Energy and Commerce Committee approved a $1 billion privacy and security enforcement bureau at the Federal Trade Commission — without an existing national privacy law to be enforced.
“The Federal Trade Commission has established itself over the last two decades as the expert federal privacy agency,” they continued. “We urge Congress to forge bipartisan consensus on privacy legislation that strengthens FTC’s role in the enforcement of a national privacy framework. We agree that the Federal Trade Commission should receive additional funding and staff to protect consumer privacy. However, this should come with appropriate safeguards to prevent the agency from making sweeping policy changes without meaningful public input as has recently happened. The creation of a new privacy bureau and rulemakings should be authorized only by comprehensive, bipartisan privacy legislation.
“We ask you and your committee to enact through the legislative process a clear set of rules that provide robust protections for consumers, predictability for businesses, and new resources for the FTC,” they concluded. “Such measures must be part of bipartisan, comprehensive privacy legislation that provides clear direction to the FTC.”