California Advances Bills Extending CCPA Employee / B2B Exemption and Regulating Contact Tracing — Balch & Bingham

Balch and Bingham
3 min readSep 4, 2020

On August 19, 2020, the California State Assembly on Appropriations ordered to a second reading Assembly Bill 1281, which would extend the exemption of the California Consumer Privacy Act in relation to employee information and business-to-business transactions until January 1, 2022. Specifically, AB 1281 would exempt information collected about a natural person in the course of such person acting as a job applicant, employee, owner, director officer, medical staff member, or contractor. It would also exempt information reflecting a written or verbal communication or a transaction between the business and the consumer, if the consumer is a natural person who is acting as an employee, and whose communications or transactions with the business occur solely within the context of the business’s due diligence regarding a product or service. AB 1281 would only become operative if the California Privacy Rights Act is not approved by voters during the November 2020 general election.

Balch & Bingham Data Privacy & Security Observer
Balch & Bingham’s Data Privacy & Security Observer tracks Legal Developments and provides Thought Leadership in Data Privacy and Cyber Security

Two other bills, AB 660 and AB 1782, were also referred to the Appropriations Committee on August 19, 2020. AB 660 would prohibit data collected, received, or prepared for purposes of contact tracing from being used, maintained, or disclosed for any purpose other than facilitating contact tracing efforts. It would also require all data collected, received, or prepared for purposes of contact tracing to be deleted within 60 days, except if that data is in the possession of a state or local health department. AB 1782 would create the Technology-Assisted Contact Tracing Public Accountability and Consent Terms Act. This would generally regulate public health entities and businesses that provide technology-assisted contact tracing. AB 1782 would also require a business or public health entity offering technology-assisted contact tracing to provide a simple mechanism for a user to revoke consent for the collection, use, maintenance, or disclosure of data and permit revocation of consent at any time.

About Balch & Bingham LLP

Balch & Bingham is a corporate law firm recognized nationally for its deep experience and counsel in regulated industries including energy and financial services, and its highly regarded practices in business, environmental, government relations, healthcare, labor and employment and litigation. The firm includes more than 200 attorneys in offices across the Southeast and Washington, D.C., who are known for a collaborative, multidisciplinary approach. Since its founding in 1922, Balch’s commitment to an uncommon, efficient client experience has remained at the core of its mission. For more information, visit www.balch.com.

###

No representation is made that the quality of legal services to be performed is greater than the quality of legal services performed by other lawyers. This website, blog or newsletter is made available for educational purposes and is meant to give only general information about the law. See Disclaimers and Terms of Use on our website for more information.

###

--

--

Balch and Bingham
0 Followers

Balch & Bingham LLP is a corporate law firm with more than 200 attorneys across offices in Birmingham and Montgomery, Alabama; Jacksonville, Florida; Atlanta