Effective as of May 8, Vermont’s updated data breach law (Act 109) brings along several changes.
The biggest change is in the notification requirements. Notification to consumers must now occur no later than 45 days after discovery of the incident and must include the approximate date of the security breach, if known. To further complicate matters, notification to the Vermont attorney general must occur within 14 business days of either the discovery of the breach or notice to the consumers, whichever is sooner, and must include the date of the security breach, date of discovery of the breach and a preliminary description of the breach.
Act 109 also adopts the industry standard label of PII—formerly “personal information”—and changes the definition of security breach.
Previously, the security breach definition included acquisition or “access.” The legislature has dropped the reference to access and now defines a breach as an “unauthorized acquisition…or a reasonable belief of an unauthorized acquisition.” The legislation also gives a list of factors that may help determine whether the PII has been or is reasonably believed to be acquired.
For a quick reference guide to this and other state laws please see the Mintz Matrix (UPDATED Data Breach Matrix (6_2012). This chart is for informational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice or opinions regarding any specific facts relating to specific data breach incidents. You should seek the advice of experienced legal counsel when reviewing options and obligations in responding to a particular data security breach.