HB 18-1129
signedConsumer Report Security Freeze For Protected Consumers
Plain-English Summary
AI-generatedHB 18-1129, also known as the "Consumer Report Security Freeze For Protected Consumers," allows parents or legal guardians to request a security freeze on the credit reports of minors and other dependents. This means that no one can access their credit report without permission, which helps protect against identity theft. The bill also ensures that these freezes are free of charge for those requesting them. Once the protected individual turns 17 or if the guardian's role ends, they can remove this freeze themselves. Since the status is "signed," this means the bill has been approved and signed into law by the governor, making it official legislation in Colorado.
Official Summary
Section 2 of the bill authorizes a parent or legal guardian to request that a consumer reporting agency place a security freeze on the consumer report of a minor or other individual who is the legal guardian's ward (protected consumer). If the consumer reporting agency does not yet have a consumer report for the protected consumer at the time that a security freeze is requested, the consumer reporting agency is required to create a consumer record for the protected consumer and place a security freeze on the consumer record. The protected consumer's guardian may request that the consumer reporting agency temporarily lift the security freeze placed on the protected consumer's consumer report or record, lift the security freeze with respect to a specific third party, or permanently remove the security freeze. A protected consumer who demonstrates to the credit reporting agency that he or she has reached 17 years of age or that his or her guardian's appointment is no longer valid may have the security freeze removed. A consumer reporting agency is not allowed to charge a fee for the placement, temporary lift, partial lift, or removal of a security freeze on a protected consumer's consumer report or record. Section 1 defines the terms 'guardian', 'protected consumer', 'sufficient proof of authority', and 'sufficient proof of identification', and amends the definition of 'security freeze'. Sections 3 through 6 make conforming amendments.(Note: This summary applies to this bill as introduced.) Read More
Details
- Chamber
- House
- First action
- 2018-02-07
- Latest action
- 2018-01-19
- Last action desc.
- Introduced In House - Assigned to State, Veterans, & Military Affairs
- OpenStates
- View source ↗