Keypoint: This week new bills were introduced in Arizona, Iowa, Rhode Island, and Wisconsin, bills were voted out of committee in Florida, New York, and Ohio, and there was more movement on the VCDPA amendment bills.
Below is our fifth weekly update on the status of proposed state privacy legislation in 2022. Before we get to our update, we wanted to provide three reminders.
First, on February 23, 2022, we will be hosting a webinar to analyze the proposed CCPA-like privacy bills. For more information, and to register, click here.
Second, we regularly update our 2022 State Privacy Law Tracker to keep pace with the latest developments with CCPA-like privacy bills. We encourage you to bookmark the page for easy reference.
Finally, the contents provided below are time-sensitive and subject to change. If you are not already subscribed to our blog, consider doing so to stay updated. If you are interested in tracking developments between blog posts, consider following on LinkedIn and/or Twitter.
Table of Contents
- What’s New?
- Upcoming Hearings
- CCPA-Like Privacy Bills
- VCDPA Amendments
- Biometric Privacy Bills
- Data Broker Bills
- Other Bills
1. What’s New?
It was another busy week.
First, lawmakers voted three bills out of committee:
- On February 8, 2022, the New York Senate Consumer Affairs Committee voted S6701A out of committee. The bill was reported and committed to the Internet and Technology Committee.
- On February 9, 2022, the Ohio House Government Oversight Committee voted HB 376 out of committee.
- On February 10, 2022, the Florida House Commerce Committee voted Representative McFarland’s HB 9 out of committee.
In Alaska, the House Judiciary Committee held a hearing on the HB 159 on February 7, 2022. No vote was taken. The bill previously was voted out of the Labor and Commerce Committee on February 4, 2022. If you are interested in hearing more about the bill, please consider listening to our podcast with Alaska Representative Zack Fields.
Next week there are hearings scheduled on February 16, 2022 on Wisconsin’s AB 957 and Oklahoma’s HB 2969. There also is an informational hearing on February 15, 2022, on Connecticut’s new bill (which has yet to be published).
We also continue to see new bills introduced:
- In Arizona, Representative DeGrazia filed HB2790.
- In Iowa, lawmakers introduced HSB 674 and SF2208. HSB 674 was referred to a subcommittee of the Information Technology Committee and voted out of the subcommittee on February 9 by a 2-0 vote. SF2208 was referred to a Commerce Committee subcommittee.
- In Rhode Island, lawmakers introduced H7400 on February 9, 2022. The bill was referred to the House Innovation, Internet and Technology Committee.
- In Wisconsin, lawmakers introduced SB 957 on February 9, 2022. That bill is a companion bill to AB 957. Wisconsin lawmakers also introduced SB 977 on February 9, 2022. Both bills were referred to the Committee on Government Operations, Legal Review and Consumer Protection.
In Virginia, there was more movement on VCDPA amendment bills with a number of the bills passing through committee and/or chamber votes. More details in Section 4 below.
In biometric bill news, the Maryland Senate Finance Committee held a hearing on SB 335 on February 9, 2022. No vote was taken.
Finally, in data broker bill news, the Oregon House Business and Labor Committee voted HB 4017 out of committee. The bill now moves to the Joint Ways and Means Committee.
2. Upcoming Hearings
February 15
- Virtual public forum on the Connecticut Consumer Privacy Act
February 16
- Public hearing on Wisconsin AB 957 in House Consumer Protection Committee
- Public hearing on Oklahoma HB 2969 in House Technology Committee
February 22
- Public hearing on Maine LD 1945 (biometric privacy bill) in Judiciary Committee
- Public hearing on Connecticut Consumer Privacy Act
February 28
- Public hearing on Nebraska LB 1188 in Banking, Commerce and Insurance Committee
3. CCPA-Like Privacy Bills
Below is an analysis of the status of proposed bills. For links to these bills, please see our 2022 State Privacy Law Tracker.
Alaska
Alaska lawmakers are considering three bills – HB 222, HB 159 and SB 116. On February 4, the Alaska House Labor & Commerce Committee voted HB 159 out of committee. The House Judiciary Committee held a hearing on February 7, 2022. No vote was taken.
Arizona
Representative DeGrazia filed HB2790.
Connecticut
Connecticut Senator James Maroney, who introduced SB 893 in 2021, has scheduled a public forum on February 15, 2022 and a hearing on February 22, 2022. The revised bill has not yet been published.
District of Columbia
Council Chairman Mendelson introduced B24-0451 at the request of the Uniform Law Commission (ULC). The bill is based on the Uniform Personal Data Protection Act drafted by the ULC. The bill was referred to the Committee on Judiciary and Public Safety.
Florida
Florida lawmakers proposed two bills to date. Senator Bradley filed SB 1864 on January 7, 2022. That bill was referred to the Senate committees on Commerce and Tourism, Regulated Industries and Rules. In the House, Representative McFarland filed HB 9 on January 11, 2022. On February 10, 2022, the Florida House Commerce Committee voted HB 9 out of committee.
Georgia
Georgia lawmakers introduced the Georgia Computer Data Privacy Act (SB 394) on January 26, 2022. The bill was assigned to the Senate Committee on Science and Technology.
Hawaii
Hawaii lawmakers introduced four bills: HB 2051, HB2341, SB 2428, and SB 2797. HB 2051 was referred to the House Committees on Higher Education and Technology, Consumer Protection & Commerce, and Judiciary and Hawaiian Affairs. The House Committee on Higher Education & Technology held a hearing on February 2, 2022 and deferred the bill. SB 2428 and SB 2797 were referred to the Committees on Commerce and Consumer Protection, Judiciary, and Ways and Means. HB 2341 was referred to the House Committees on Higher Education and Technology, Consumer Protection & Commerce, and Finance.
Indiana
The Indiana Senate passed SB 358 on February 1, 2022. The bill now moves to the House. Representative Hamilton introduced HB 1261 on January 10, 2022. The bill was referred to the House Committee on Commerce, Small Business and Economic Development.
Iowa
Lawmakers introduced HSB 674 and SF2208. HSB 674 was referred to an Information Technology Committee subcommittee. It was voted out of the subcommittee on February 9 by a 2-0 vote. SF2208 was referred to a Commerce Committee subcommittee.
Kentucky
Senator Westerfield introduced SB 15 on January 13, 2022. The bill was referred to the Committee on Committees.
Maryland
Senator Susan Lee pre-filed the Maryland Online Consumer Protection and Child Safety Act (SB 11) in October. On January 26, 2022, the Senate Finance Committee held a hearing on the bill.
Massachusetts
The Joint Committee on Advanced Information Technology, the Internet and Cybersecurity passed an amended version of H.142 / S. 46 out of committee on February 1, 2022. Lawmakers also filed H.136.
Minnesota
Last year, the Minnesota legislature considered HF 1492, sponsored by Representative Steve Elkins. Representative Elkins held an informational hearing on the bill over the summer and will be filing an amended bill.
Mississippi
SB 2330 died in committee.
Nebraska
Senator Michael Flood introduced LB 1188 on January 20, 2022. The bill is based on the Uniform Law Commission’s model act. The bill is scheduled for a hearing on February 28, 2022.
New Jersey
New Jersey lawmakers filed three bills: S332, A505, and A1971.
New York
As shown on our tracker, New York lawmakers are considering a number of consumer privacy bills in 2022. Of note, the New York Privacy Act (S 6701A / A 680B) was amended and recommitted in early January. On February 8, 2022, the New York Senate Consumer Affairs Committee voted S6701A out of committee. The bill was reported and committed to the Internet and Technology Committee.
North Carolina
In 2021, Senator Joyce Waddell and others introduced SB569, the North Carolina Consumer Privacy Act. The bill was referred to the Committee on Rules and Operations of the Senate, where it has remained idle. The bill carried over into 2022.
Ohio
The Ohio Personal Privacy Act (HB 376) was introduced on July 13, 2021 and referred to the House Government Oversight Committee. On February 9, 2022, the Ohio House Government Oversight Committee voted HB 376 out of committee.
Oklahoma
Oklahoma lawmakers are considering two bills filed by Representative Collin Walke. HB 1602, which passed the Oklahoma House last year but stalled in the Senate, carried over. Representative Walke pre-filed a second bill – HB 2969 – in September. That bill is scheduled for a public hearing on February 16. Finally, Oklahoma Representative O’Donnell introduced HB 3477. The bill is based on the Uniform Law Commission’s model act.
Pennsylvania
Pennsylvania lawmakers are considering three bills.
HB 1126 was introduced in 2021 and referred to the House Consumer Affairs Committee where it remained idle. The bill will carry over to 2022.
In December 2021, lawmakers introduced a second bill – HB2202. That bill also was referred to the House Consumer Affairs Committee.
Finally, on January 20, 2022, lawmakers introduced a third bill – HB 2257 – which also was referred to the House Consumer Affairs Committee.
The Pennsylvania legislature is open year-round with recesses. It is set to reconvene on April 1, 2022.
Rhode Island
Lawmakers introduced H7400 on February 9, 2022. The bill was referred to the House Innovation, Internet and Technology Committee.
South Carolina
Lawmakers introduced the South Carolina Biometric Data Privacy Act (H3063) in 2021. The bill was referred to the House Committee on Labor, Commerce, and Industry where it remained idle. The bill carried over to the 2022 session.
Tennessee
Asked to comment on the status of proposed privacy legislation, Tennessee lawmakers indicated that HB1467 will carry over to 2022 and be the vehicle for such legislation. The text of the bill is not online. Last year, lawmakers introduced HB 1197.
Vermont
Representative Maida Townsend sponsored H.160 in 2021. She confirmed that the bill carried over to the 2022 session.
On January 11, 2022, Representatives Marcotte and Kimbell introduced H.570, which was referred to the House Committee on Commerce and Economic Development.
Washington
Washington lawmakers are considering a number of privacy bills in 2022.
Senator Carlyle’s Washington Privacy Act (SB 5062) carried over from last year. In 2021, that bill passed the Senate but failed in the House. The bill is assigned to the Senate Rules Committee.
Senator Carlyle also introduced SB 5813, which addresses children and adolescent information, data brokers, and opt out signals. On January 20, 2022, the Washington Senate Committee on Environment, Energy & Technology held a hearing on the bill.
Representative Kloba’s People’s Privacy Act (HB 1433) also carried over from 2021. Representative Kloba is working on an amended bill.
Finally, Representatives Vandana Slatter and April Berg introduced the Washington Foundational Data Privacy Act (HB 1850). On February 3, the Washington House Committee on Civil Rights & Judiciary narrowly voted HB 1850 out of committee. The House Appropriations Committee held a hearing on February 5, 2022, but did not vote on the bill.
West Virginia
West Virginia, lawmakers introduced HB 4454. The bill was assigned to the House Judiciary Committee.
Wisconsin
Lawmakers introduced AB 957. The bill was referred to the House Consumer Protection Committee and is scheduled for a hearing on February 16, 2022.
Lawmakers also introduced SB 957 on February 9. That bill is a companion bill to AB 957. It was referred to the Committee on Government Operations, Legal Review and Consumer Protection. Wisconsin lawmakers also introduced SB 977 on February 9, 2022. That bill also was referred to the Committee on Government Operations, Legal Review and Consumer Protection.
4. VCDPA Amendments
It was another active week for VCDPA amendment bills. The eight bills that were originally introduced have been consolidated into five bills. Those five bills were voted on this week by a committee and/or chamber. In general, the bills seek to (1) add a new exemption to the right to delete, (2) repeal the Consumer Privacy Fund, (3) modify/add definitions around nonprofits and political organizations, and (4) restrict the definition of sensitive data. We provide a full update on bills here.
5. Biometric Privacy Bills
Six states are considering BIPA-like biometric information privacy bills:
Kentucky
HB32 was introduced on January 4, 2022 and referred to the Committee on Committees.
Maine
Lawmakers in Maine introduced a biometric information privacy bill (LD 1945). The bill was referred to the Judiciary Committee. A hearing has been scheduled for February 22, 2022.
Maryland
Maryland lawmakers are considering HB 259 and SB 335, which are companion bills. The House Economic Matters Committee held a hearing on February 2, 2022. The Senate Finance Committee held a hearing on February 9, 2022. No votes were taken.
Massachusetts
Massachusetts lawmakers are considering S.220. The bill was assigned to the Senate Committee on Consumer Protection and Professional Licensure.
New York
New York lawmakers are considering A27 and S1933. A27 was referred to the Assembly Consumer Affairs and Protection Committee. S1933 was referred to the Consumer Protection Committee.
West Virginia
HB2064 was introduced on January 12, 2022. The bill was assigned to the House Judiciary Committee.
6. Data Broker Bills
Four states are considering bills to regulate data brokers:
Delaware
Delaware lawmakers are considering HB 262. On January 25, 2022, the House Technology & Telecommunications Committee held a public hearing on the bill. The Committee reported the bill favorably out of committee and the bill was assigned to the appropriations committee.
Massachusetts
Massachusetts lawmakers are considering S.50. The bill was referred to the Advanced Information Technology, the Internet and Cybersecurity Committee.
Oregon
Lawmakers in Oregon are considering HB 4017. The bill was passed out of the House Committee on Business and Labor on February 11 and referred to the Joint Ways and Means Committee.
Washington
As noted in Part 2, Senator Carlyle’s SB 5813 seeks to regulate data brokers.
7. Other Bills
Illinois Senator Thomas Cullerton introduced the Do Not Track Act (SB 3081) on January 11, 2022.
In Oklahoma, Representative Walke pre-filed the Voice Recognition Privacy Act of 2022 (HB3009) and a computer algorithm regulation bill (HB 3011). HB 3009 was referred to the House Technology Committee. HB 3011 was referred to the Judiciary – Criminal Committee.
West Virginia lawmakers are considering HB 2148, which seeks to impose a general data mining service tax.