Interagency Notice of Proposed Rulemaking: Procedures To Enhance the Accuracy and Integrity of Information Furnished to Consumer Reporting Agencies Under Section 312 of the Fair and Accurate Credit Transactions Act, 70944-70986 [E7-23549]
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70944
Federal Register / Vol. 72, No. 239 / Thursday, December 13, 2007 / Proposed Rules
DEPARTMENT OF THE TREASURY
Office of the Comptroller of the
Currency
12 CFR Part 41
[Docket ID OCC–2007–0019]
RIN 1557–AC89
FEDERAL RESERVE SYSTEM
12 CFR Part 222
[Docket No. R–1300]
FEDERAL DEPOSIT INSURANCE
CORPORATION
12 CFR Part 334
RIN 3064–AC99
DEPARTMENT OF THE TREASURY
Office of Thrift Supervision
12 CFR Part 571
[Docket No. OTS–2007–0022]
RIN 1550–AC01
NATIONAL CREDIT UNION
ADMINISTRATION
12 CFR Part 717
FEDERAL TRADE COMMISSION
16 CFR Part 660
RIN 3084–AA94
Interagency Notice of Proposed
Rulemaking: Procedures To Enhance
the Accuracy and Integrity of
Information Furnished to Consumer
Reporting Agencies Under Section 312
of the Fair and Accurate Credit
Transactions Act
Office of the Comptroller of
the Currency, Treasury (OCC); Board of
Governors of the Federal Reserve
System (Board); Federal Deposit
Insurance Corporation (FDIC); Office of
Thrift Supervision, Treasury (OTS);
National Credit Union Administration
(NCUA); and Federal Trade Commission
(FTC).
ACTION: Notice of proposed rulemaking.
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AGENCIES:
SUMMARY: The OCC, Board, FDIC, OTS,
NCUA, and FTC (Agencies) are
publishing for comment proposed
regulations and guidelines to implement
the accuracy and integrity provisions in
section 312 of the Fair and Accurate
Credit Transactions Act of 2003 (FACT
Act).1 The proposed regulations and
1 Pub.
L. 108–159, 117 Stat. 1952 (Dec. 4, 2003).
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guidelines would implement the
requirement that the Agencies issue
guidelines for use by furnishers
regarding the accuracy and integrity of
the information about consumers that
they furnish to consumer reporting
agencies and prescribe regulations
requiring furnishers to establish
reasonable policies and procedures for
implementing the guidelines. The
Agencies also are publishing for
comment proposed regulations to
implement the direct dispute provisions
in section 312. The proposed
regulations would implement the
requirement that the Agencies issue
regulations identifying the
circumstances under which a furnisher
must reinvestigate disputes about the
accuracy of information contained in a
consumer report based on a direct
request from a consumer.
DATES: Comments must be submitted by
February 11, 2008.
ADDRESSES: Because paper mail in the
Washington, DC area and at the
Agencies is subject to delay,
commenters are encouraged to submit
comments by e-mail, if possible.
Commenters are also encouraged to use
the title ‘‘Procedures to Enhance the
Accuracy and Integrity of Information
Furnished to Consumer Reporting
Agencies’’ to facilitate the organization
and distribution of the comments.
Comments submitted to one or more of
the Agencies will be made available to
all of the Agencies. Interested parties are
invited to submit comments to:
OCC: You may submit comments by
any of the following methods:
• Federal eRulemaking Portal—
‘‘Regulations.gov’’: Go to https://
www.regulations.gov, select
‘‘Comptroller of the Currency’’ from the
agency drop-down menu, then click
‘‘Submit.’’ In the ‘‘Docket ID’’ column,
select ‘‘OCC–2007–0019’’ to submit or
view public comments and to view
supporting and related materials for this
notice of proposed rulemaking. The
‘‘User Tips’’ link at the top of the
Regulations.gov home page provides
information on using Regulations.gov,
including instructions for submitting or
viewing public comments, viewing
other supporting and related materials,
and viewing the docket after the close
of the comment period.
• Mail: Office of the Comptroller of
the Currency, 250 E Street, SW., Mail
Stop 1–5, Washington, DC 20219.
• E-mail:
regs.comments@occ.treas.gov.
• Fax: (202) 874–4448.
• Hand Delivery/Courier: 250 E
Street, SW., Attn: Public Information
Room, Mail Stop 1–5, Washington, DC
20219.
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Instructions: You must include
‘‘OCC’’ as the agency name and ‘‘Docket
Number OCC–2007–0019’’ in your
comment. In general, OCC will enter all
comments received into the docket and
publish them on Regulations.gov
without change, including any business
or personal information that you
provide such as name and address
information, e-mail addresses, or phone
numbers. Comments received, including
attachments and other supporting
materials, are part of the public record
and subject to public disclosure. Do not
enclose any information in your
comment or supporting materials that
you consider confidential or
inappropriate for public disclosure.
You may review comments and other
related materials by any of the following
methods:
• Viewing Comments Electronically:
Go to https://www.regulations.gov, select
the ‘‘Search for All Documents (Open
and Closed for Comment)’’ option,
select ‘‘Comptroller of the Currency’’
from the agency drop-down menu, then
click ‘‘Submit.’’ In the ‘‘Docket ID’’
column, select ‘‘OCC–2007–0019’’ to
view public comments for this notice of
proposed rulemaking.
• Viewing Comments Personally: You
may personally inspect and photocopy
comments at the OCC’s Public
Information Room, 250 E Street, SW.,
Washington, DC. You can make an
appointment to inspect comments by
calling (202) 874–5043.
• Docket: You may also view or
request available background
documents and project summaries using
the methods described above.
Board: You may submit comments,
identified by Docket No. R–1300, by any
of the following methods:
• Agency Web site: https://
www.federalreserve.gov. Follow the
instructions for submitting comments at
https://www.federalreserve.gov/
generalinfo/foia/ProposedRegs.cfm.
• Federal eRulemaking Portal: https://
www.regulations.gov. Follow the
instructions for submitting comments.
• E-mail:
regs.comments@federalreserve.gov.
Include docket number in the subject
line of the message.
• FAX: (202) 452–3819 or (202) 452–
3102.
• Mail: Jennifer J. Johnson, Secretary,
Board of Governors of the Federal
Reserve System, 20th Street and
Constitution Avenue, NW., Washington,
DC 20551.
All public comments are available from
the Board’s Web site at
www.federalreserve.gov/generalinfo/
foia/ProposedRegs.cfm as submitted,
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unless modified for technical reasons.
Accordingly, your comments will not be
edited to remove any identifying or
contact information. Public comments
may also be viewed electronically or in
paper in Room MP–500 of the Board’s
Martin Building (20th and C Streets,
NW.) between 9 a.m. and 5 p.m. on
weekdays.
FDIC: You may submit comments,
identified by the RIN for this
rulemaking, by any of the following
methods:
• Agency Web site: https://
www.fdic.gov/regulations/laws/federal/
propose.html. Follow instructions for
submitting comments on the Agency
Web site.
• Federal eRulemaking Portal: https://
www.regulations.gov. Follow the
instructions for submitting comments.
• E-Mail: Comments@FDIC.gov.
Include the RIN number in the subject
line of the message.
• Mail: Robert E. Feldman, Executive
Secretary, Attention: Comments, Federal
Deposit Insurance Corporation, 550 17th
Street, NW., Washington, DC 20429.
• Hand Delivery/Courier: Guard
station at the rear of the 550 17th Street
Building (located on F Street) on
business days between 7 a.m. and 5 p.m.
Public Inspection: All comments
received will be posted without change
to https://www.fdic.gov/regulations/laws/
federal/propose.html, including any
personal information provided.
Comments may be inspected and
photocopied at the FDIC Public
Information Center, Room E–1002, 3501
North Fairfax Drive, Arlington, VA
22226, between 9 a.m. and 5 p.m. (EST)
on business days. Paper copies of public
comments may be ordered from the
Public Information Center by telephone
at (877) 275–3342 or (703) 562–2200.
OTS: You may submit comments,
identified by OTS–2007–0022, by any of
the following methods:
• Federal eRulemaking Portal: Go to
https://www.regulations.gov, select
‘‘Office of Thrift Supervision’’ from the
agency drop-down menu, then click
submit. Select Docket ID ‘‘OTS–2007–
0022’’ to submit or view public
comments and to view supporting and
related materials for this notice of
proposed rulemaking. The ‘‘User Tips’’
link at the top of the page provides
information on using Regulations.gov,
including instructions for submitting or
viewing public comments, viewing
other supporting and related materials,
and viewing the docket after the close
of the comment period.
• Mail: Regulation Comments, Chief
Counsel’s Office, Office of Thrift
Supervision, 1700 G Street, NW.,
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Washington, DC 20552, Attention: OTS–
2007–0022.
• Fax: (202) 906–6518.
• Hand Delivery/Courier: Guard’s
Desk, East Lobby Entrance, 1700 G
Street, NW., from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. on
business days, Attention: Regulation
Comments, Chief Counsel’s Office,
Attention: OTS–2007–0022.
• Instructions: All submissions
received must include the agency name
and docket number for this rulemaking.
All comments received will be entered
into the docket and posted on
Regulations.gov without change,
including any personal information
provided. Comments, including
attachments and other supporting
materials received are part of the public
record and subject to public disclosure.
Do not enclose any information in your
comment or supporting materials that
you consider confidential or
inappropriate for public disclosure.
• Viewing Comments Electronically:
Go to https://www.regulations.gov, select
‘‘Office of Thrift Supervision’’ from the
agency drop-down menu, then click
‘‘Submit.’’ Select Docket ID ‘‘OTS–
2007–0022’’ to view public comments
for this notice of proposed rulemaking.
• Viewing Comments On-Site: You
may inspect comments at the Public
Reading Room, 1700 G Street, NW., by
appointment. To make an appointment
for access, call (202) 906–5922, send an
e-mail to public.info@ots.treas.gov, or
send a facsimile transmission to (202)
906–6518. (Prior notice identifying the
materials you will be requesting will
assist us in serving you.) We schedule
appointments on business days between
10 a.m. and 4 p.m. In most cases,
appointments will be available the next
business day following the date we
receive a request.
NCUA: You may submit comments by
any of the following methods (please
send comments by one method only):
• Federal eRulemaking Portal: https://
www.regulations.gov. Follow the
instructions for submitting comments.
• NCUA Web Site: https://
www.ncua.gov/
RegulationsOpinionsLaws/
proposed_regs/proposed_regs.html.
Follow the instructions for submitting
comments.
• E-mail: Address to
regcomments@ncua.gov. Include ‘‘[Your
name] Comments on Notice of Proposed
Rulemaking Part 717, Procedures to
Enhance the Accuracy and Integrity of
Information Furnished to Consumer
Reporting Agencies under Section 312
of the Fair and Accurate Credit
Transactions Act’’ in the e-mail subject
line.
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• Fax: (703) 518–6319. Use the
subject line described above for e-mail.
• Mail: Address to Mary Rupp,
Secretary of the Board, National Credit
Union Administration, 1775 Duke
Street, Alexandria, VA 22314–3428.
• Hand Delivery/Courier: Address to
Mary Rupp, Secretary of the Board,
National Credit Union Administration.
Deliver to guard station in the lobby of
1775 Duke Street, Alexandria, VA
22314–3428, on business days between
8 a.m. and 5 p.m.
All public comments are available on
the agency’s Web site at https://
www.ncua.gov/
RegulationsOpinionsLaws/comments as
submitted, except as may not be
possible for technical reasons. Public
comments will not be edited to remove
any identifying or contact information.
Paper copies of comments may be
inspected in NCUA’s law library, at
1775 Duke Street, Alexandria, VA
22314, by appointment weekdays
between 9 a.m. and 3 p.m. To make an
appointment, call (703) 518–6546 or
send an e-mail to OGCMail@ncua.gov.
FTC: Comments should refer to
‘‘Procedures to Enhance the Accuracy
and Integrity of Information Furnished
to Consumer Reporting Agencies under
Section 312 of the Fair and Accurate
Credit Transactions Act, Project No.
R611017,’’ and may be submitted by any
of the following methods. Comments
containing confidential material must be
filed in paper form, must be clearly
labeled ‘‘Confidential,’’ and must
comply with Commission Rule 4.9(c).2
• E-mail: https://
secure.commentworks.com/ftcFACTAfurnishers. To ensure that the
Commission considers an electronic
comment, you must file it on the Webbased form found at this Web link and
follow the instructions on that form.
• Federal eRulemaking Portal: https://
www.regulations.gov. You may visit this
Web site to read this request for public
comment and to file an electronic
comment. The Commission will
consider all comments that
regulations.gov forwards to it.
• Mail or Hand Delivery: A comment
filed in paper form should refer, both in
the text and on the envelope, to the
name and project number identified
above, and should be mailed or
delivered to the following address:
2 The comment must be accompanied by an
explicit request for confidential treatment,
including the factual and legal basis for the request,
and must identify the specific portions of the
comment to be withheld from the public record.
The request will be granted or denied by the
Commission’s General Counsel, consistent with
applicable law and the public interest. See
Commission Rule 4.9(c), 16 CFR 4.9(c).
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Federal Trade Commission/Office of the
Secretary, Room 159–H (Annex C), 600
Pennsylvania Avenue, NW.,
Washington, DC 20580.
The FTC Act and other laws the
Commission administers permit the
collection of public comments to
consider and use in this proceeding as
appropriate. All timely and responsive
public comments, whether filed in
paper or electronic form, will be
considered by the Commission, and will
be available to the public on the FTC
Web site, to the extent practicable, at
https://www.ftc.gov/os/
publiccomments.htm. As a matter of
discretion, the FTC makes every effort to
remove home contact information for
individuals from the public comments it
receives before placing those comments
on the FTC Web site. More information,
including routine uses permitted by the
Privacy Act, may be found in the FTC’s
privacy policy, at https://www.ftc.gov/
ftc/privacy.htm.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
OCC: Stephen Van Meter, Assistant
Director, Community and Consumer
Law Division, (202) 874–5750; Patrick
T. Tierney, Senior Attorney, Legislative
and Regulatory Activities Division,
(202) 874–5090; or Paul Utterback,
National Bank Examiner, Compliance
Policy, (202) 874–4428, Office of the
Comptroller of the Currency, 250 E
Street, SW., Washington, DC 20219.
Board: David A. Stein, Counsel, Amy
E. Burke, Attorney, or Jelena
McWilliams, Attorney, Division of
Consumer and Community Affairs, (202)
452–3667 or (202) 452–2412; or Anne B.
Zorc, Senior Attorney, (202) 452–3876,
or Kara L. Handzlik, Attorney, (202)
452–3852, Legal Division, Board of
Governors of the Federal Reserve
System, 20th and C Streets, NW.,
Washington, DC 20551.
FDIC: David P. Lafleur, Policy
Analyst, (202) 898–6569, or John
Jackwood, Senior Policy Analyst, (202)
898–3991, Division of Supervision and
Consumer Protection; Richard M.
Schwartz, Counsel, (202) 898–7424, or
Richard B. Foley, Counsel, (202) 898–
3784, Legal Division; 550 17th St., NW.,
Washington, DC 20429.
OTS: Suzanne McQueen, Consumer
Regulations Analyst, Compliance and
Consumer Protection Division, (202)
906–6459; or Richard Bennett, Senior
Compliance Counsel, Regulations and
Legislation Division, (202) 906–7409, at
1700 G Street, NW., Washington, DC
20552.
NCUA: Linda Dent or Regina Metz,
Attorneys, Office of General Counsel,
phone (703) 518–6540 or fax (703) 518–
6569, National Credit Union
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Administration, 1775 Duke Street,
Alexandria, VA 22314.
FTC: Clarke W. Brinckerhoff and
Pavneet Singh, Attorneys, (202) 326–
2252, Bureau of Consumer Protection,
Federal Trade Commission, 600
Pennsylvania Avenue, NW.,
Washington, DC 20580.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
I. Introduction
The Fair Credit Reporting Act (FCRA),
which was enacted in 1970, sets
standards for the collection,
communication, and use of information
bearing on a consumer’s
creditworthiness, credit standing, credit
capacity, character, general reputation,
personal characteristics, or mode of
living.3 In 1996, the Consumer Credit
Reporting Reform Act extensively
amended the FCRA.4 The FACT Act
further amended the FCRA for various
purposes, including to increase the
accuracy of consumer reports.
Section 623 of the FCRA describes the
responsibilities of persons that furnish
information about consumers
(furnishers) to consumer reporting
agencies (CRAs).5 Section 312 of the
FACT Act amended section 623 by
requiring the Agencies to issue
guidelines for use by furnishers
regarding the accuracy and integrity of
the information about consumers that
they furnish to consumer reporting
agencies and to prescribe regulations
requiring furnishers to establish
reasonable policies and procedures for
implementing the guidelines (referred to
in this proposal as the accuracy and
integrity regulations and guidelines).
Section 312 also requires the Agencies
to issue regulations identifying the
circumstances under which a furnisher
must reinvestigate disputes concerning
the accuracy of information provided by
a furnisher to a CRA and contained in
a consumer report based on a direct
request from a consumer (referred to in
this proposal as the direct dispute
regulations). The Agencies are
proposing to adopt accuracy and
integrity regulations and guidelines and
direct dispute regulations to satisfy the
requirements of section 312.6
3 15
U.S.C. 1681–1681x.
L. 104–208, 110 Stat. 3009 (Sept. 20, 1996).
5 Section 623 is codified at 15 U.S.C. 1681s–2.
6 The FACT Act also directs the FTC to ‘‘conduct
an ongoing study of the accuracy and completeness
of information contained in consumer reports
prepared or maintained by consumer reporting
agencies and methods for improving the accuracy
and completeness of such information.’’ See section
319 of the FACT Act. The FTC submitted its first
interim report to Congress on this study on
December 9, 2004, https://www.ftc.gov/reports/facta/
041209factarpt.pdf (last visited Oct. 4, 2007). The
FTC submitted its second interim report to Congress
4 Pub.
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II. Statutory Requirements
Accuracy and Integrity Regulations and
Guidelines
As added by section 312 of the FACT
Act, section 623(e)(1)(A) of the FCRA
requires the Agencies to establish and
maintain guidelines for use by each
furnisher ‘‘regarding the accuracy and
integrity of the information relating to
consumers’’ that the furnisher provides
to CRAs. In developing the guidelines,
section 623(e)(3) directs the Agencies to:
• Identify patterns, practices, and
specific forms of activity that can
compromise the accuracy and integrity
of information furnished to CRAs;
• Review the methods (including
technological means) used to furnish
information relating to consumers to
CRAs;
• Determine whether furnishers
maintain and enforce policies to assure
the accuracy and integrity of
information furnished to CRAs; and
• Examine the policies and processes
employed by furnishers to conduct
reinvestigations and correct inaccurate
information relating to consumers that
has been furnished to CRAs.
The Agencies also are required to
update the guidelines as often as
necessary.
Section 623(e)(1)(B) of the FCRA
requires the Agencies to prescribe
regulations requiring furnishers to
‘‘establish reasonable policies and
procedures for implementing the
guidelines’’ established pursuant to
section 623(e)(1)(A). Section 623(e)(2) of
the FCRA provides that the Agencies
must consult and coordinate with one
another so that, to the extent possible,
the regulations prescribed by each
Agency are consistent and comparable
with the regulations prescribed by each
of the other Agencies.
Direct Disputes
As amended by section 312 of the
FACT Act, section 623(a)(8) of the FCRA
directs the Agencies jointly to prescribe
regulations that identify the
circumstances under which a furnisher
is required to reinvestigate a dispute
concerning the accuracy of information
contained in a consumer report on the
consumer, based on a direct request by
the consumer. In prescribing the direct
dispute regulations, section 623(a)(8)
directs the Agencies to weigh the
following specific factors:
• The benefits to consumers and the
costs to furnishers and the credit
reporting system;
in December 2006, https://www.ftc.gov/reports/
FACTACT/FACT_Act_Report_2006.pdf (last visited
Oct. 4, 2007).
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• The impact on the overall accuracy
and integrity of consumer reports of any
direct dispute requirements;
• Whether direct contact by the
consumer with the furnisher would
likely result in the most expeditious
resolution of any dispute; and
• The potential impact on the credit
reporting process if credit repair
organizations are able to circumvent the
provisions in subparagraph G of section
623(a)(8), which generally states that the
direct dispute rules shall not apply
when credit repair organizations
provide notices of dispute on behalf of
consumers.
III. The Agencies’ Consideration of the
Statutory Accuracy and Integrity
Criteria and Direct Dispute Factors
The Agencies’ Advance Notice of
Proposed Rulemaking
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In order to obtain information
pertaining to the criteria that Congress
directed the Agencies to consider in
developing the accuracy and integrity
guidelines and the factors that Congress
directed the Agencies to weigh in
prescribing the direct dispute
regulations, the Agencies issued an
advance notice of proposed rulemaking
(ANPR) in March 2006.7 The ANPR
contained detailed requests for
comment on ten issues related to the
statutory criteria governing the
development of the accuracy and
integrity guidelines, and on eight issues
related to the statutory factors that the
Agencies must weigh when
promulgating the direct dispute
regulations. The Agencies also
specifically requested comment on how
the issues presented by the ANPR might
differ depending on the type of
furnisher, the types of information
furnished, the frequency with which a
furnisher reports information about
consumers to CRAs, or the type of CRA
that receives the furnished information.
The Agencies received a total of 197
comments. Commenters included
depository institutions, other financial
services companies, trade associations, a
CRA, a credit score service provider, a
mortgage company, consumer groups,
and individual consumers. Key issues
identified and comments received on
the accuracy and integrity criteria and
on the direct dispute factors are
summarized separately in the next two
sections.
Comments Pertaining to Accuracy and
Integrity Regulations and Guidelines
Burden of accuracy and integrity
regulations and guidelines. A consistent
7 71
FR 14,419 (March 22, 2006).
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theme among industry commenters on
the ANPR was that the proposed
guidelines and regulations should be
sensitive to the voluntary nature of the
reporting of information about
consumers by furnishers to CRAs and
not create undue burdens on furnishers
that would discourage reporting. These
commenters asserted that imposing
burden on furnishers may result in
furnishers reporting less information
than they do presently or ceasing to
report at all, thereby decreasing the
effectiveness of the current credit
reporting system for both consumers
and industry.
Types of errors, omissions, or other
problems that may impair the accuracy
and integrity of furnished information.
Many commenters detailed the types of
errors that may impair the accuracy of
information furnished to CRAs. Industry
commenters, consumer groups, and
individuals stated that some furnishers
do not report consumers’ positive
payment histories, a practice that can
lead to lower credit scores than
consumers may merit. Similarly,
commenters also noted that some
furnishers do not report credit limits,
which may likewise lead to lower credit
scores. Consumer groups reported that
sales of consumer accounts to collection
agencies also result in accounts being
‘‘re-aged,’’ meaning that a debt receives
a new origination date when the
collection account is opened, resulting
in the debt being included on a
consumer’s credit file longer than
legally permissible. In addition, a
number of industry commenters
mentioned that data entry errors by
furnishers and different data processing
procedures by the CRAs can result in
‘‘mixed files’’—files that include
information from two or more
consumers. Commenters noted that
furnishing inaccurate information can
adversely affect consumer credit scores
and result in higher costs of credit for
some consumers and increased credit
risk for lenders.
Patterns, practices, and specific forms
of activity that can compromise the
accuracy and integrity of furnished
information. Industry commenters and
consumer groups stated that a number
of furnishers do not use the industry
standard format for reporting
information about consumers to CRAs,
which results in the reporting of
inaccurate information. In addition,
industry and consumer groups
mentioned that sales of debt to
collection agencies or to other creditors
results in inaccurate information
reported to the CRAs (e.g., duplicative
reporting of accounts and re-aged
accounts). Consumer groups and a trade
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association noted problems with
inaccurate bankruptcy information
being reported—some furnishers
continue to report a debt as not
included in bankruptcy, fail to record a
debt as discharged, or continue to show
a balance owed after bankruptcy
discharge. Several industry commenters
stated that some furnishers do not
provide data to CRAs in a timely
manner, which may result in delinquent
debtors appearing as current on their
loans.
Business, economic, or other reasons
for the patterns, practices, and specific
forms of activity that can compromise
the accuracy and integrity of furnished
information. A few consumer groups
and trade associations indicated that
some creditors omit good payment
history or credit limit information in
order to protect their proprietary
underwriting systems and prevent
competitors from soliciting business
from their customers. Some commenters
also asserted that collection agencies
have little economic incentive to report
updated or accurate information
because they typically do not use
consumer report information to
determine credit risk.
Recommendations and descriptions of
policies and procedures that a furnisher
should implement and maintain to
identify, prevent, or mitigate patterns,
practices, and specific forms of activity
that can compromise the accuracy and
integrity of information furnished to a
CRA. Some individual and industry
commenters recommended that
furnishers report all consumer account
information to CRAs and not omit
information. Consumer groups and
some industry commenters
recommended that furnishers should
report using the Metro 2 format—a
standard reporting format created by the
credit reporting industry—or a similar
standardized format. Some depository
institutions and trade associations
suggested that the accuracy and
integrity guidelines should be flexible
and take into consideration the diversity
of furnishers with regard to size and
business complexity.
Methods (including technological
means) used to furnish information
about consumers to CRAs. Industry
commenters stated that most furnishers
are reporting to the three nationwide
CRAs electronically using the Metro 2
format, although some furnishers
transmit information via magnetic tape,
disks, or paper. Some trade associations
commented that errors can be
introduced into a consumer’s credit file
when a CRA translates the furnisher’s
raw data into the CRA’s database.
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Maintenance and enforcement of
policies and procedures to ensure the
accuracy and integrity of information
furnished to CRAs. Industry
commenters stated that, in general,
furnishers have policies and procedures
in place to ensure the accuracy of
information and perform internal audits
to verify accuracy. Industry commenters
also stated that furnishers have a
business incentive to maintain and
report accurate information in order to
maintain good customer relations.
Methods (including any technological
means) that a furnisher should use to
ensure the accuracy and integrity of
information about consumers furnished
to CRAs. Industry commenters
suggested that furnishers should use
internal reports to verify the accuracy of
information transmitted to the CRAs.
Consumer groups recommended that
furnishers take appropriate steps to
ensure that they report bankruptcy
discharge information accurately.
Descriptions of policies, procedures,
and processes used by furnishers to
conduct reinvestigations and to correct
inaccurately furnished information and
recommendations that furnishers
should adopt. Industry commenters
indicated that most furnishers use an
electronic automated system (e-OSCAR)
for receiving and transmitting consumer
dispute information from and to the
three nationwide CRAs. Although each
furnisher has its own procedures for
investigating disputes, furnishers
generally review the information
provided by the CRA and compare it to
the information in the consumer’s file at
the furnisher. A few industry
commenters stated that using the
e-OSCAR system to conduct
reinvestigations is adequate. One trade
association stated that furnishers should
establish better reinvestigation
procedures and provide staff training for
processing credit disputes.
Consumer groups commented that
furnishers’ reinvestigation procedures
are inadequate in that they only verify
that the reported information is
consistent with the furnishers’ records,
not the underlying accuracy of such
information. Consumer groups
recommended that furnishers should
perform in-depth investigations beyond
verifying that information reported to
CRAs matches furnishers’ records,
including contacting consumers to
obtain additional information, if
necessary. Consumer groups also noted
that CRAs do not provide furnishers
with documentation provided by
consumers to support their claims.
Description of the policies and
procedures of CRAs for ensuring the
accuracy and integrity of furnished
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information and whether and to what
extent those policies, procedures, or
other requirements address particular
problems that may affect information
accuracy and integrity. A few industry
commenters noted that CRAs have
implemented policies to ensure the
accuracy of information that they
receive from furnishers. One industry
commenter asserted that once CRAs
incorporate data into their databases,
furnishers do not know how CRAs
actually apply the data to consumer
credit files or whether the data is
applied to the correct consumers.
Comments Pertaining to Direct Dispute
Regulations
Circumstances under which a
furnisher should be required to
investigate a dispute. Industry
commenters indicated that furnishers
generally are voluntarily investigating
disputes that are directly submitted to
them using a process that is similar to
the one furnishers use to investigate
disputes that CRAs forward to the
furnishers. Industry commenters,
however, also stated that investigations
of direct disputes should be required
only in instances of fraud or identity
theft that can be documented by the
consumer, or where the consumer has
provided a written detailed dispute to
the furnisher. Other industry
commenters believe that investigations
of direct disputes should only be
required if the consumer has already
disputed the item with the CRA and
received a response. Consumer groups
favored a broad application of the direct
dispute rule, noting that many
furnishers already have an obligation to
investigate other types of disputes for
major product categories under other
laws, such as the Truth in Lending Act,
Real Estate Settlement Procedures Act,
and Electronic Fund Transfer Act. Some
individuals commented that furnishers
should always be required to
reinvestigate a consumer’s account upon
the consumer’s request.
Benefits or costs to consumers that
may result from a direct dispute right.
Consumer groups commented that
consumers would benefit from direct
disputes because the dispute
requirement would eliminate the
problem of CRAs not forwarding
disputes and supporting documentation
to furnishers and would provide
furnishers with necessary
documentation to investigate errors or
fraud. One individual noted that
consumers would benefit by being able
to deal with one entity, the furnisher,
rather than the three nationwide CRAs.
Some industry commenters noted that
consumers would benefit from direct
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disputes in complex cases or where the
consumer needs to provide the furnisher
with supporting documentation.
Benefits to furnishers, consumer
reporting agencies, or the credit
reporting system that may result if
furnishers are required to investigate
direct disputes. Consumer groups stated
that direct disputes will result in a more
accurate credit reporting system and
would afford industry the opportunity
to standardize the dispute resolution
process. A few industry commenters
stated that direct disputes would yield
faster dispute resolution for consumers.
Some industry commenters mentioned
that direct disputes may be beneficial
for providing to furnishers additional
documentation for complex disputes,
noting that such information may not be
forwarded by CRAs.
Costs to furnishers, consumer
reporting agencies, or the credit
reporting system of implementing a
direct dispute requirement. Industry
commenters believed that a direct
dispute requirement would impose
significant costs on furnishers resulting
from an expected increase in the
number of direct disputes. One
depository institution reported that the
costs of resolving a direct dispute are
related to whether the disputed
information contains derogatory
information and the nature of the
consumer’s dispute. Some industry
commenters noted that reviewing
consumers’ lengthy payment histories
can be costly. One industry commenter
noted that a direct dispute requirement
would shift costs from CRAs to
furnishers.
One consumer group commented that
start-up costs should not be burdensome
as many furnishers already have direct
dispute responsibilities for their major
products (such as credit cards). This
commenter asserted that the cost for
processing a direct dispute ranges from
$25 to $200, and that this cost is
exceeded by the harms to consumers
who are adversely affected due to
reporting errors.
Impact on the overall accuracy and
integrity of consumer reports if
furnishers are required to investigate
direct disputes. Some industry
commenters stated that they expect an
adverse impact on overall accuracy and
integrity of consumer reports as a result
of an increase in duplicate disputes and
costs, decreased efficiency in processing
disputes, and the likelihood that some
furnishers would stop reporting or
report less information than they
currently do.
Whether direct contact by the
consumer with the furnisher would
likely result in the most expeditious
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resolution of a dispute. Industry
commenters generally believed that
direct contact by the consumer is most
appropriate in instances of fraud,
identity theft, or where detailed
information is needed in order to
resolve the consumer dispute. Some
industry commenters also stated that
direct contact by the consumer would
not be appropriate where the error lies
with the CRA or an aggregator rather
than with the furnisher.
Potential impact on the credit
reporting process if credit repair
organizations are able to circumvent the
FCRA’s prohibition of their submission
of direct disputes. Consumer groups and
an individual commented that attorneys
should be permitted to assist consumers
with disputes and not be considered
credit repair organizations. Industry
commenters predicted an increase in
costs resulting from a significant
increase in the number of direct
disputes that would be filed by credit
repair organizations, which, these
commenters contended, are often
deliberately vague or overbroad.
Additional, specific comments are
mentioned, as appropriate, in the
section-by-section analysis.
The Agencies have carefully
considered the comments received in
response to the ANPR in developing the
proposed accuracy and integrity
regulations and guidelines and the
proposed direct dispute regulations. The
Agencies also reviewed a number of
studies that have identified potential
issues that may affect the accuracy of
consumer report information. These
studies indicate that consumer report
accuracy may be affected by the
presence of stale account information,
the practice of furnishing only negative
information about an account,
inaccurate or incomplete public record
data, inaccurate or incomplete
collection account data, and unreported
credit limits.8
8 See Robert B. Avery, Raphael W. Bostic, Paul S.
Calem & Glenn B. Canner, An Overview of
Consumer Data and Credit Reporting, Federal
Reserve Bulletin, vol. 89, at 47–73 (Feb. 2003);
Robert B. Avery, Paul S. Calem, Glenn B. Canner
& Shannon C. Mok, Credit Report Accuracy and
Access to Credit, Federal Reserve Bulletin, vol. 90,
at 297–322 (Summer 2004); Consumer Federation of
America & National Credit Reporting Association,
Credit Score Accuracy and Implications for
Consumers (Dec. 17, 2002), https://
www.consumerfed.org/pdfs/
121702CFA_NCRA_Credit_Score_Report_Final.pdf
(last visited Oct. 4, 2007); Federal Trade
Commission and Board of Governors of the Federal
Reserve System, Report to Congress on the Fair
Credit Reporting Act Dispute Process (Aug. 2006).
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IV. Section-by-Section Analysis 9
The following describes the three
components of this rulemaking: the
proposed accuracy and integrity
regulations, the proposed accuracy and
integrity guidelines, and the proposed
direct dispute regulations.
Proposed Accuracy and Integrity
Regulations
Section _.40 Scope
Section _.40 sets forth the scope of
each Agency’s proposed regulations
requiring furnishers to establish
reasonable policies and procedures for
implementing the accuracy and integrity
guidelines. Each of the Agencies has
tailored this section to describe those
entities to which this subpart applies.
The FDIC requests comment on whether
it would be useful to include a crossreference in its proposed regulation to
the definition of ‘‘subsidiary’’ in the
Federal Deposit Insurance Act.10
Section _.41 Definitions.
Two approaches to defining the terms
‘‘accuracy’’ and ‘‘integrity.’’
Section 623(e) of the FCRA requires
the Agencies to establish and maintain
guidelines for use by furnishers
regarding the accuracy and integrity of
the information about consumers that
they furnish to CRAs. The statute does
not define the terms ‘‘accuracy’’ or
‘‘integrity.’’
Consumer group and industry
commenters on the ANPR provided
suggestions for defining the terms
‘‘accuracy’’ and ‘‘integrity.’’ Consumer
groups proposed that the Agencies
define the term ‘‘accuracy’’ to mean
‘‘conformity to fact,’’ rather than
conformity to data records. They said
that an accuracy standard should rely
not only upon a furnisher’s data records,
but also upon original documents such
as credit agreements. Some consumer
groups also said that information should
not be considered ‘‘accurate’’ if it is
overly general, incomplete, out-of-date,
9 The OCC, Board, FDIC, OTS and NCUA would
place the proposed regulations and guidelines
implementing section 312 in the part of their
regulations that implement the FCRA—12 CFR
parts 41, 222, 334, 571, and 717, respectively. For
ease of reference, the discussion in the
Supplementary Information section uses the shared
numerical suffix of each of these agency’s
regulations. The FTC also would place the proposed
regulations and guidelines in the part of its
regulations implementing the FCRA, specifically 16
CFR part 660. However, the FTC uses different
numerical suffixes that equate to the numerical
suffixes discussed in the Supplementary
Information section as follows: Suffix .40 = FTC
suffix .1, suffix .41 = FTC suffix .2, suffix .42 = FTC
suffix .3, and suffix .43 = FTC suffix .4. In addition,
Appendix E referenced in the Supplementary
Information section is the FTC’s Appendix A.
10 See 12 U.S.C. 1813(w)(4).
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70949
or misleading. Consumer groups also
proposed that the Agencies make clear
that information lacks ‘‘integrity’’ if it is
technically accurate, but misleads users
of consumer reports because it does not
include critical information.
Industry commenters, citing the
legislative history of the FACT Act,
suggested that the term ‘‘integrity’’ does
not mean completeness, but rather, that
the information a furnisher provides to
a CRA is factually correct.
In the Agencies’ view, neither the text
nor the legislative history of the FACT
Act resolves how the terms ‘‘accuracy’’
and ‘‘integrity’’ should be defined.
Although the terms used in section
623(e) differ from terms used in other
provisions of the FCRA,11 the text of
section 623(e) provides no direction to
the Agencies about the meaning or
significance of that difference.12 The
Agencies have reviewed the legislative
history, and note that the Congressional
Record includes post-enrollment
statements regarding section 623(e)
made by the Chairman of the House
Financial Services Committee and by
the Ranking Member of the Senate
Committee on Banking, Housing and
Urban Affairs.13 Those statements,
11 See FCRA section 623(b)(1), 15 U.S.C. 1681s–
2(b)(1) (requiring entities that furnish information
to CRAs to conduct investigations in response to
complaints regarding the ‘‘completeness or
accuracy’’ of furnished information); sections FCRA
623(a)(2)(A)–(B), 15 U.S.C. 1681s–2(a)(2)(A)–(B)
(requiring furnishers to correct and update
information that the furnisher determines is ‘‘not
complete or accurate’’ and to refrain from
refurnishing information that remains ‘‘not
complete or accurate’’).
12 Earlier versions of the legislation that became
the FACT Act required the agencies to prescribe
regulations and guidelines regarding the ‘‘accuracy
and completeness’’ of information relating to
consumers. This language also was contained in the
bill passed by the Senate and referred to the
Conference Committee. However, the bill reported
by the Conference Committee used the phrase
‘‘accuracy and integrity.’’ Compare 149 Cong. Rec.
S13990 (Nov. 5, 2003) (bill as passed by the Senate)
with 149 Cong. Rec. H12198 (Nov. 21, 2003) (bill
as reported by the Conference Committee).
13 See 149 Cong. Rec. E2512, E2516 (Nov. 4, 2003)
(extension of remarks of Chairman Michael Oxley,
entered into the Congressional Record on Dec. 9,
2003) (‘‘ ‘[a]ccuracy and integrity’ was selected [by
the Congress] as the relevant standard rather than
‘accuracy and completeness’ as used in Sections
313 and 319 [of the FACT Act], to focus on the
quality of the information furnished rather than the
completeness of the information furnished.’’); 149
Cong. Rec. S15806–02 (Nov. 24, 2003) (statement of
Ranking Member Paul Sarbanes) (‘‘ ‘[A]ccuracy’
relates to whether the information that is provided
by data furnishers to credit reporting agencies is
factually correct. The term ‘integrity’ relates to
whether all relevant information that is used to
assess credit risk and to grant credit is accurately
provided. Integrity of information is not achieved
when furnishers do not fully provide data that, by
its absence, could have a positive or negative effect
on a consumer’s credit score, or on his or her ability
to obtain credit under the most favorable terms for
which he or she qualifies.’’).
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however, provide different views on the
meaning of the terms.
In light of these considerations, the
Agencies are proposing for comment
two alternative approaches to defining
the terms ‘‘accuracy’’ and ‘‘integrity’’ in
the text of the regulations and
guidelines. Although the definition of
‘‘accuracy’’ is the same under both
alternatives, the two approaches differ
in terms of both the substance of the
definition of ‘‘integrity’’ and the
placement of the definitions.
Accordingly, the Agencies request
comment on which definition of
‘‘integrity’’ should be adopted in the
final rule, and on whether the
definitions of ‘‘accuracy’’ and
‘‘integrity’’ should be placed in the
regulations or in the guidelines.
A. Regulatory Definition Approach
Under the first approach, the
Agencies would provide specific
definitions for the terms ‘‘accuracy’’ and
‘‘integrity’’ in the regulations. This
approach, labeled ‘‘Regulatory
Definition Approach,’’ appears at
§§ _.41(a) and _.41(b) in the text of the
proposed regulations. Under proposed
§ _.41(a), the term ‘‘accuracy’’ means
that any information that a furnisher
provides to a CRA about an account or
other relationship with the consumer
reflects without error the terms of and
liability for the account or other
relationship and the consumer’s
performance or other conduct with
respect to the account or other
relationship. This proposed definition
of ‘‘accuracy’’ is intended to require that
furnishers have reasonable procedures
in place to ensure that the information
they provide to CRAs is factually
correct. The Agencies solicit comment
on whether the definition of accuracy
should specifically provide that
accuracy includes updating information
as necessary to ensure that information
furnished is current.
Under proposed § _.41(b), the term
‘‘integrity’’ means that any information
that a furnisher provides to a CRA about
an account or other relationship with
the consumer does not omit any term,
such as a credit limit or opening date,
of that account or other relationship, the
absence of which can reasonably be
expected to contribute to an incorrect
evaluation by a user of a consumer
report of a consumer’s creditworthiness,
credit standing, credit capacity,
character, general reputation, personal
characteristics, or mode of living. Thus,
the Regulatory Definition Approach
provides that information furnished to a
CRA may be technically ‘‘accurate’’ yet
lack ‘‘integrity’’ because it presents a
misleading picture of the consumer’s
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creditworthiness by omitting critical
information, such as a credit limit on a
revolving credit account.14
Under the Regulatory Definition
Approach—and as described in further
detail in the section-by-section analysis
of the guidelines—the Agencies would
include in the guidelines six objectives
that a furnisher’s policies and
procedures should be designed to
achieve. The six objectives seek to
ensure that: Information is furnished
accurately; information is furnished
with integrity; the furnisher conducts
reasonable investigations of consumer
disputes about the accuracy or integrity
of information in consumer reports and
takes appropriate actions based on the
outcome of such investigations;
information is reported in a form and
manner designed to minimize the
likelihood that it will be erroneously
reflected in the consumer’s report;
information furnished is substantiated
by the furnisher’s records; and the
furnisher updates information it
furnishes as necessary to reflect the
current status of the consumer’s account
or other relationship. The first two of
these objectives would reflect the
regulatory definitions of ‘‘accuracy’’ and
‘‘integrity.’’
Thus, under the Regulatory Definition
Approach, the guidelines would provide
that a furnisher should have written
policies and procedures reasonably
designed to ensure that the information
it furnishes about accounts or other
relationships with a consumer:
• Accurately identifies the
appropriate consumer;
• Accurately reports the terms of
those accounts or other relationships;
and
• Accurately reports the consumer’s
performance and other conduct with
respect to the account or other
relationship.
Further, the guidelines would provide
that a furnisher should have policies
and procedures reasonably designed to
ensure that the information it furnishes
about accounts or other relationships
with a consumer avoids misleading
14 ‘‘A key factor that credit evaluators consider
when they assess the creditworthiness of an
individual is credit utilization. If a creditor fails to
report a credit limit for an account, credit
evaluators must either ignore utilization or use a
substitute measure such as the highest-balance
level—that is, the largest amount ever owed on the
account. Substituting the highest balance level for
the credit limit generally results in a higher
estimate of credit utilization because the highestbalance amount is typically lower than the credit
limit: the higher estimate leads, in turn, to a higher
perceived level of credit risk for affected
consumers.’’ Robert B. Avery, Paul S. Calem, Glenn
B. Canner, Credit Report Accuracy and Access to
Credit; Federal Reserve Bulletin, Summer 2004, p.
306.
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users of consumer reports about the
consumer’s creditworthiness, credit
standing, credit capacity, character,
general reputation, personal
characteristics, or mode of living.
Consistent with the FCRA, under
which the furnishing of information
about consumers is voluntary, the
proposed definitions would apply only
to information that the furnisher elects
to report to CRAs. The Agencies are
aware that some furnishers may be
subject to separate obligations to report
all available information about an
account or other relationship.15 These
proposed definitions, however, are not
intended to require furnishers to do so.
B. Guidelines Definition Approach
The second approach contained in the
proposal, labeled the ‘‘Guidelines
Definition Approach,’’ would define the
terms ‘‘accuracy’’ and ‘‘integrity’’ in the
guidelines—rather than in the
regulations—with reference to the
objectives that a furnisher’s policies and
procedures should be designed to
accomplish.
Under the Guidelines Definition
Approach, the Agencies have identified
four objectives that pertain to the
accuracy and integrity of information
furnished and related matters.
Definitions for the terms ‘‘accuracy’’ and
‘‘integrity’’ would be incorporated into
the first two of these objectives. Thus,
the guidelines would provide that a
furnisher should have written policies
and procedures reasonably designed to
ensure that the information it furnishes
about accounts or other relationships
with a consumer is accurate. The
guidelines would define ‘‘accuracy’’ to
mean that any information that a
furnisher provides to a CRA about an
account or other relationship with the
consumer reflects without error the
terms of and liability for the account or
other relationship and the consumer’s
performance or other conduct with
15 Furnishers that report information about
consumers to CRAs related to mortgage loans may
be required by Freddie Mac, Fannie Mae, and the
Federal Housing Administration to report full-file
information. See Fannie Mae Servicing Guide, Part
I, Section 304.09 and Part VII, Section 107; Freddie
Mac Service Guide, Section 55.4: Reports to credit
repositories; and the Federal Housing
Administration Servicing Handbook, Section
4330.1(c) (Rev-5) (incorporating by reference the
Fannie Mae Servicing Guide). Further, the
Department of Housing and Urban Development has
defined ‘‘Mortgages contrary to good lending
practices’’ to include a mortgage or a group or
category of mortgages entered into by a lender and
purchased by Fannie Mae or Freddie Mac where it
can be shown that a lender engaged in a practice
of failing to report monthly on borrowers’
repayment history to credit repositories on the
status of each loan purchased by Fannie Mae or
Freddie Mac that a lender is servicing. 24 CFR
81.2(b).
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respect to the account or other
relationship. This is the same definition
of ‘‘accuracy’’ used in the Regulatory
Definition Approach.
Additionally, the guidelines would
provide that a furnisher’s policies and
procedures should ensure that the
information it furnishes about accounts
or other relationships with a consumer
is furnished with integrity. The
guidelines would define ‘‘integrity’’ to
mean that any information that a
furnisher provides to a CRA about an
account or other relationship with the
consumer: (1) Is reported in a form and
manner that is designed to minimize the
likelihood that the information,
although accurate, may be erroneously
reflected in a consumer report; and (2)
should be substantiated by the
furnisher’s own records. In addition to
being placed in a different location, this
definition is substantively different from
that used in the Regulatory Definition
Approach.
Under the Guidelines Definition
Approach, the definition of ‘‘integrity’’
does not address the omission of any
term the absence of which could
contribute to an incorrect evaluation by
a user of a consumer’s creditworthiness.
Instead, the proposed definition of
‘‘integrity’’ addresses two potential
issues with furnished information. First,
accurate information may be attributed
to the wrong consumer or the wrong
account, or may be associated with an
erroneous date. Second, if the accuracy
of the furnished information is
disputed, the furnisher should be able to
substantiate, or verify, the information
through its own records. The Regulatory
Definition Approach also includes these
two concepts in the guidelines as
objectives that a furnisher’s policies and
procedures should be designed to
achieve. The Guidelines Definition
Approach, like the Regulatory
Definition Approach, also includes as
objectives: Ensuring that the furnisher
conducts reasonable investigations of
consumer disputes about the accuracy
or integrity of information in consumer
reports and takes appropriate actions
based on the outcome of such
investigations; and ensuring that the
furnisher updates information it
furnishes as necessary to reflect the
current status of the consumer’s account
or other relationship.
As noted above, the Agencies invite
comment on these alternative
definitions of ‘‘integrity,’’ and on
whether the definitions of ‘‘accuracy’’
and ‘‘integrity’’ should be placed in the
regulatory text or in the guidelines.
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Furnisher
Proposed § _.41(c) would define the
term ‘‘furnisher’’ to mean an entity other
than an individual consumer that
furnishes information relating to
consumers to one or more CRAs. An
entity is not a furnisher under the
proposed definition when it provides
information to a CRA solely to obtain a
consumer report under sections 604(a)
and (f) of the FCRA, which enumerate
the circumstances under which a CRA
may provide a consumer report and
prohibit persons from obtaining or using
consumer reports for impermissible
purposes. Users of consumer reports
may provide information about
consumers to CRAs in order to obtain
such reports, but they do not do so for
the purpose of having such information
included in consumer reports. Although
the user’s request for the report may be
reflected in the consumer report as an
inquiry, the Agencies do not believe it
would be appropriate to subject such
furnishing of information to the
regulations and guidelines proposed
here. In addition, by defining the term
‘‘furnisher’’ in terms of an entity other
than an individual consumer, the
proposal makes clear that consumers are
not furnishers, even if they self-report
information about themselves to a CRA.
Identity Theft
Proposed § _.41(d) provides that the
term ‘‘identity theft’’ has the same
meaning as in the FTC’s regulations at
16 CFR 603.2(a). Section 603.2(a), which
was adopted pursuant to section 111 of
the FACT Act,16 defines the term
‘‘identity theft’’ to mean ‘‘a fraud
committed or attempted using the
identifying information of another
person without authority.’’ This
definition also is used in the
interagency regulations implementing
section 114 of the FACT Act (Red Flags).
Direct Dispute
Proposed § _.41(e) defines ‘‘direct
dispute’’ to mean a dispute submitted
directly to a furnisher by a consumer
concerning the accuracy of any
information contained in a consumer
report relating to the consumer.
Although the definition of ‘‘direct
dispute’’ uses the term accuracy, the
proposed Regulatory Definition
Approach provides a definition of
accuracy for purposes of the definition
of ‘‘direct dispute,’’ but the Guidelines
Definition Approach does not.
16 Section 111 provides for a definition of the
term ‘‘identity theft,’’ and authorizes the FTC to
refine that definition. See section 603(q)(3) of the
FCRA, 15 U.S.C. 1681a(q)(3).
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The Agencies solicit comment on
whether the definition of ‘‘accuracy’’
should be made applicable to direct
disputes, if the Guidelines Definition
Approach is adopted. The Agencies also
solicit comment on whether the
proposed definition of ‘‘accuracy’’ is
appropriate for the direct dispute
provision.17
Section _.42 Reasonable Policies and
Procedures Concerning the Accuracy
and Integrity of Furnished Information
Paragraph (a) of proposed § _.42
would require each furnisher to
establish and implement reasonable
written policies and procedures
regarding the accuracy and integrity of
the information about consumers that it
furnishes to a CRA. The policies and
procedures must be appropriate to the
nature, size, complexity, and scope of
the furnisher’s activities.
The requirement that furnishers’
policies and procedures be written
facilitates effective implementation and
enables the Agencies to assess
furnishers’ compliance with the rules.
The Agencies do not believe that the
requirement for written policies and
procedures will be unduly burdensome,
particularly since, under the guidelines,
a furnisher may include any of its
existing policies and procedures that are
relevant and appropriate. As noted
previously, industry commenters
responding to the ANPR noted that, in
general, furnishers have policies and
procedures in place to ensure the
accuracy of information furnished to
CRAs. The Agencies invite comment on
any burden and effects on furnishers,
particularly small furnishers, regarding
the requirement that the policies and
procedures be written.
The Agencies recognize that there is
substantial diversity among furnishers
with respect to their structure,
operations, and the types of business
they conduct, such that a ‘‘one-size-fitall’’ approach to the implementation of
the guidelines is inappropriate. The
requirement that the furnisher’s policies
and procedures must be appropriate to
the nature, size, complexity, and scope
of the furnisher’s activities permits
furnishers to tailor their policies and
procedures to their business activities.
17 The Agencies note that section 623(a)(8) only
requires a furnisher to handle direct disputes about
‘‘accuracy.’’ In contrast, section 611(a) requires a
CRA to handle disputes about ‘‘completeness or
accuracy’’ and section 623(b) requires furnishers to
reinvestigate disputes about ‘‘completeness or
accuracy’’ if the disputes come through a CRA. The
Agencies particularly request comment on whether
the definition of ‘‘accuracy’’ needs to be clarified in
order to more clearly delineate those disputes that,
while subject to the CRA dispute process, would
not be subject to the direct disputes rule.
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The Agencies expect, for example, that
the policies and procedures for a small
retail entity would differ from those of
a multi-billion dollar financial services
company.
Proposed § _.42(b) requires each
furnisher to consider the accuracy and
integrity guidelines in developing its
policies and procedures and to
incorporate those guidelines that are
appropriate. Furnishers should consider
the guidelines in the context of the
nature, size, complexity, and scope of
their activities and incorporate the
guidelines that are appropriate to ensure
the accuracy and integrity of the
information about consumers that they
provide to CRAs.
Some of the commenters on the ANPR
specifically suggested that the Agencies
require furnishers to review or audit
their furnishing policies and procedures
in order to ensure that the information
about consumers continues to be
furnished accurately and with integrity.
Proposed § _.42(c) incorporates these
commenters’ suggestions and would
require each furnisher to review its
policies and procedures periodically
and update them as necessary to ensure
their continued effectiveness.
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Proposed Accuracy and Integrity
Guidelines
The accuracy and integrity guidelines
appear as Appendix E to the appropriate
part of each Agency’s regulations. In the
introductory language to the guidelines,
the Agencies encourage voluntary
furnishing of information about
consumers to CRAs. This reflects the
recognition that the voluntary system of
consumer reporting produces
substantial benefits for consumers, users
of consumer reports, and the economy
as a whole. The introduction also
reminds furnishers that § _.42 of the
proposed regulations would require
each furnisher to establish and
implement reasonable written policies
and procedures concerning the accuracy
and integrity of the information about
consumers it furnishes to CRAs and to
consider the guidelines in developing
those policies and procedures.
Section I—Nature, Scope, and
Objectives of Policies and Procedures
The Nature and Scope section of the
guidelines references the requirement,
at proposed § _.42(a), that a furnisher’s
policies and procedures must be
appropriate to the nature, size,
complexity, and scope of the furnisher’s
activities and provides the following
examples of aspects of a furnisher’s
business activities that its policies and
procedures should reflect: The types of
business activities in which the
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furnisher engages; the nature and
frequency of the information about
consumers the furnisher provides to
CRAs; and the technology used by the
furnisher to provide information to
CRAs.
The Objectives section of the
guidelines provides that a furnisher
should have written policies and
procedures reasonably designed to
accomplish the specified objectives. As
described earlier in the discussion of the
terms ‘‘accuracy’’ and ‘‘integrity,’’ the
wording of some of the objectives set
out in the guidelines is related to the
alternative approaches to construing the
term ‘‘integrity’’ that the Agencies are
proposing in the text.
In connection with the Regulatory
Definition Approach, the first two
objectives of the guidelines would
provide that a furnisher should have
written policies and procedures
reasonably designed to ensure that the
information it furnishes about accounts
or other relationships with a consumer
accurately identifies the appropriate
consumer; accurately reports the terms
of those accounts or other relationships;
accurately reports the consumer’s
performance and other conduct with
respect to the account or other
relationship; and designed to ensure
that the information it furnishes about
accounts or other relationships with a
consumer avoids misleading a consumer
report user as to the consumer’s
creditworthiness, credit standing, credit
capacity, character, general reputation,
personal characteristics, or mode of
living.
Under the Guidelines Definition
Approach, definitions of ‘‘accuracy’’
and ‘‘integrity’’ would be incorporated
into the first two objectives. Thus, the
guidelines would provide that a
furnisher should have written policies
and procedures reasonably designed to
ensure that the information it furnishes
about accounts or other relationships
with a consumer is accurate. The
guidelines would define ‘‘accuracy’’ to
mean that with respect to any
information that a furnisher provides
about an account or other relationship
with the consumer to a CRA reflects
without error the terms of and liability
for the account or other relationship and
the consumer’s performance and other
conduct with respect to the account or
other relationship.
Additionally, under the Guidelines
Definition Approach, the guidelines
would provide that a furnisher’s written
policies and procedures should be
reasonably designed to ensure that the
information it furnishes about accounts
or other relationships with a consumer
is furnished with integrity. The
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guidelines would define ‘‘integrity’’ to
mean, that any information that a
furnisher provides to a CRA about an
account or other relationship with the
consumer is:
• Reported in a form and manner that
is designed to minimize the likelihood
that the information, although accurate,
may be erroneously reflected in a
consumer report, for example, by
ensuring that the information is: (A)
Reported with appropriate identifying
information about the consumer to
which it pertains; (B) reported in a
standardized and clearly
understandable form and manner; and
(C) reported with a date specifying the
time period to which the information
pertains; and
• Substantiated by the furnisher’s
own records.
As indicated in the discussion of the
proposed accuracy and integrity
regulations, the Agencies invite
comment on the alternative approaches
to defining the term ‘‘integrity’’ and the
appropriate placement of the
definitions. When responding to these
issues raised by the Agencies,
commenters may wish to address,
among other relevant factors, how the
approaches would impact the quality of
information in consumer reports, the
burdens on furnishers, and the relative
benefits to consumers, the credit
reporting system, and users of consumer
reports.
The third proposed objective under
both approaches states that a furnisher’s
policies and procedures should ensure
that the furnisher conducts reasonable
investigations of consumer disputes
about the accuracy or integrity of
information in consumer reports and
takes appropriate actions based on the
outcome of such investigations. This
objective addresses concerns raised by
commenters that some furnishers
perform perfunctory investigations of
consumer disputes in cases where a
proper investigation would require
reviewing information beyond the
account status listed in the furnisher’s
electronic records, and that some
furnishers do not update their own
records when errors are discovered,
resulting in incorrect information being
reported again to the CRAs.
The fourth proposed objective under
both approaches states that a furnisher
should have written policies and
procedures reasonably designed to
ensure that the furnisher updates
information it furnishes as necessary to
reflect the current status of the
consumer’s account or other
relationship, including: (a) Any transfer
of an account (e.g., by sale or
assignment for collection) to a third
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party; and (b) any cure of the
consumer’s failure to abide by the terms
of the account or other relationship.
The fifth proposed objective under the
Regulatory Definition Approach states
that the information a furnisher
furnishes about accounts or other
relationships with a consumer is
reported in a form and manner that is
designed to minimize the likelihood
that the information, although accurate,
may be erroneously reflected in a
consumer report, for example, by
ensuring that the information is
reported with appropriate identifying
information about the consumer to
which it pertains, in a standardized and
clearly understandable form and
manner, with a date specifying the time
period to which the information
pertains.
The sixth proposed objective under
the Regulatory Definition Approach
states that the information a furnisher
furnishes about accounts or other
relationships with a furnisher should be
substantiated by the furnisher’s own
records.
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Section II—Accuracy and Integrity
Duties of Furnishers Under the FCRA
This section reminds furnishers of
their statutory duties that relate to the
accuracy and integrity of the
information about consumers they
provide to CRAs. This section states that
a furnisher’s policies and procedures
should address compliance with all
applicable requirements imposed on the
furnisher under the FCRA and lists
certain of those requirements, including
the duty to investigate direct disputes as
required by proposed § _.43 and section
623(a)(8) of the FCRA. This section also
lists requirements such as the duty to
provide to CRAs corrections or
additional information necessary to
make furnished information complete
and accurate under the circumstances
specified under section 623(a)(2) of the
FCRA.
Section III—Establishing and
Implementing Policies and Procedures
This section identifies three steps that
furnishers should take when
establishing accuracy and integrity
policies and procedures. First, a
furnisher should identify its practices or
activities that can compromise the
accuracy and integrity of information
about consumers furnished to CRAs.
Methods appropriate for this purpose
include:
• Reviewing the furnisher’s existing
practices and activities;
• Reviewing historical records
relating to accuracy or integrity or to
disputes, or other information relating
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to the accuracy and integrity of
information provided by the furnisher to
CRAs and the types of errors, omissions,
or other problems that may have
affected the accuracy and integrity of
such information about consumers; and
• Obtaining feedback from CRAs,
consumers, the furnisher’s staff, or other
appropriate parties.
Second, a furnisher should evaluate
the effectiveness of its existing policies
and procedures regarding the accuracy
and integrity of information about
consumers furnished to CRAs and
consider whether additions or
modifications to the policies and
procedures are necessary. As is
specifically mentioned in the
introduction to the guidelines, a
furnisher may incorporate in its
accuracy and integrity policies and
procedures any of its existing policies
and procedures that are relevant and
appropriate.
Third, a furnisher should evaluate the
effectiveness of specific methods
(including technological means) the
furnisher uses to provide information
about consumers to CRAs and
determine whether changes to those
methods are appropriate to enhance the
accuracy and integrity of that
information.
Section IV—Specific Components of
Policies and Procedures
This section serves to address specific
problems raised by commenters on the
ANPR, studies regarding the consumer
reporting system, and other information
gathered by the Agencies in the course
of developing this proposal. The
proposed guidelines detail specific
components that should be addressed in
a furnisher’s policies and procedures.
These include:
• Establishing and implementing a
system for furnishing information about
consumers to CRAs that is appropriate
to the nature, size, complexity, and
scope of the furnisher’s business
operations.
• Using standard data reporting
formats and standard procedures for
compiling and furnishing data, where
feasible, such as the electronic
transmission of information about
consumers to CRAs.
• Ensuring that the furnisher
maintains its own records for a
reasonable period of time, not less than
any applicable recordkeeping
requirement, in order to substantiate the
accuracy of any information about
consumers it furnishes that may be
subject to a direct dispute. Thus, a
furnisher’s policies and procedures
should incorporate any applicable
recordkeeping requirements such as
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those contained in regulations
implementing the Truth in Lending Act
and the Equal Credit Opportunity Act,18
or agency-specific requirements.19 The
Agencies note that section 611(a)(5) of
the FCRA contains no time limit on the
requirement that if a CRA reinvestigates
a consumer dispute, it must modify or
delete items that cannot be verified. The
Agencies seek comment on whether a
specific time period for recordkeeping
should be incorporated in the final
regulations.
• Establishing and implementing
appropriate internal controls regarding
the accuracy and integrity of
information about consumers furnished
to CRAs, such as by implementing
standard procedures, verifying random
samples, and conducting regular
reviews of information provided to
CRAs.
• Training staff that participates in
activities related to the furnishing of
information about consumers to CRAs to
implement the policies and procedures.
• Providing for appropriate and
effective oversight of relevant service
providers whose activities may affect
the accuracy and integrity of
information about consumers furnished
to CRAs to ensure compliance with the
policies and procedures.
• Furnishing information about
consumers to CRAs following mergers,
portfolio acquisitions or sales, or other
acquisitions or transfers of accounts or
other debts, in a manner that prevents
re-aging of information, duplicative
reporting, or other problems affecting
the accuracy or integrity of the
information furnished.
• Attempting to obtain the
information listed in § _.43(d) from a
consumer before determining that the
consumer’s dispute is frivolous or
irrelevant.
• Ensuring that deletions, updates,
and corrections furnished to CRAs are
reflected in business systems to avoid
furnishing erroneous information.
• Conducting investigations of direct
disputes in a manner that promotes the
efficient resolution of such disputes.
• Ensuring that technological and
other means of communication with
CRAs are designed to prevent
duplicative reporting of accounts,
erroneous association of information
with the wrong consumer(s), and other
18 See
12 CFR 226.25(a) and 12 CFR 202.11(b).
e.g., 12 CFR 561.2 (savings associations
must retain accurate and complete records of all
business transactions) and OTS Examination
Handbook § 310 (savings associations should retain
original business transaction records until the
savings association has two regular examinations
and has resolved any supervisory matters raised in
the examinations).
19 See,
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occurrences that may compromise the
accuracy and integrity of information
contained in consumer reports.
• Providing CRAs with sufficient
identifying information in the
furnisher’s possession about each
consumer about whom information is
furnished to enable the CRA properly to
identify the consumer.
• Conducting a periodic evaluation of
its own practices, CRA practices of
which the furnisher is aware,
investigations of disputed information,
corrections of inaccurate information,
means of communication, and other
factors that may affect the accuracy and
integrity of information furnished to
CRAs.
Proposed Regulations Concerning Direct
Disputes
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The third component of this notice of
proposed rulemaking comprises the
Agencies’ proposed regulations
implementing section 623(a)(8) of the
FCRA, which directs the Agencies
jointly to prescribe regulations that
identify the circumstances under which
a furnisher is required to reinvestigate a
dispute concerning the accuracy of
information about the consumer
contained in a consumer report,20 based
on a direct request by the consumer.
The statute sets forth procedural and
other requirements applicable to any
such reinvestigations.
We note that a number of industry
commenters on the ANPR indicated that
they are already voluntarily
investigating direct disputes as a matter
of good customer relations and sound
business practices. The Agencies
encourage furnishers to continue
voluntary investigations of consumer
disputes as one way to enhance the
accuracy and integrity of the
information about consumers they
provide to CRAs.21
20 For purposes of the proposed § _.43(c) and (d)
of the direct disputes provision, a ‘‘consumer
report’’ means a disclosure a CRA provides to a
consumer as referenced in section 609(a) of the
FCRA. CRAs may provide such disclosures in a
different format than a consumer report they
provide to a third party and refer to them as ‘‘file
disclosures.’’
21 The Agencies note that many entities,
including depository institutions and their
affiliates, also investigate disputes about
information they furnish to CRAs that consumers
raise through the consumer complaint processes
established by their respective supervisory
agencies. See generally FRB, ‘‘How to File a
Consumer Complaint Against a Bank,’’ https://
www.federalreserveconsumerhelp.gov (last visited
October 26, 2007); FDIC, ‘‘Consumer Affairs
Brochure: Fostering Consumer Confidence in
Banking, How to file a Written Complaint’’ (October
2005), https://www.fdic.gov/consumers/questions/
consumer/complaint.html (last visited November 1,
2007); OTS, ‘‘How to Resolve a Consumer
Complaint’’ (February 2007), https://
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Section _.43(a) General Rule
The proposed general rule would
require a furnisher to investigate a direct
dispute if it relates to:
• The consumer’s liability for a credit
account or other debt with the furnisher,
such as direct disputes relating to
whether there is or has been identity
theft or fraud against the consumer,
whether there is individual or joint
liability on an account, or whether the
consumer is an authorized user of a
credit account;
• The terms of a credit account or
other debt with the furnisher, such as
direct disputes relating to the type of
account, principal balance, scheduled
payment amount on an account, or the
amount of the reported credit limit on
an open-end account;
• The consumer’s performance or
other conduct concerning a credit
account or other debt with the furnisher,
such as direct disputes relating to the
current payment status, high balance,
date a payment was made, the amount
of a payment made, or the date an
account was opened or closed; or
• Any other information contained in
a consumer report regarding an account
or other relationship with the furnisher
that bears on the consumer’s
creditworthiness, credit standing, credit
capacity, character, general reputation,
personal characteristics, or mode of
living attributed to the furnisher on the
consumer report.
The proposed rule is designed to
permit direct disputes in virtually all
circumstances involving disputes with
respect to the types of information
typically provided by the furnisher to a
CRA, while excepting out certain types
of information from the direct dispute
process. The Agencies are proposing
this approach in light of the
considerations set forth in the statute to
be weighed by the Agencies, including
the benefits to consumers, the impact on
the overall accuracy and integrity of
consumer reports, and whether direct
disputes would lead to the most
expeditious resolutions of consumer
disputes. The exceptions in the
proposed rule relate to information
where the disputes are more
appropriately directed to the CRA, such
as information derived from public
records, which may be obtained directly
from public sources,22 and information
www.ots.treas.gov/docs/4/480924.pdf (last visited
October 24, 2007); and OCC, ‘‘Assistance for
Customers of National Banks’’ (April 2005),
https://www.occ.gov/customer.pdf (last visited
October 24, 2007).
22 The public records exception applies only to
information ‘‘derived’’ by the CRA from public
records. It would not exempt a consumer’s dispute
of the accuracy of a furnisher’s reference to a
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about requests for consumer reports
(‘‘inquiries’’). The Agencies specifically
request comment on whether this
approach appropriately weighs all of the
relevant considerations.
In developing the proposed rule, the
Agencies considered more targeted
approaches based, for example, on
commenters’ suggestions that fraud and
identity theft should be the only
circumstances when a furnisher must
investigate a direct dispute. The
Agencies also considered other
commenters’ suggestions about when
investigations of a direct dispute would
be appropriate, such as for disputing
account ownership and complex issues
requiring analysis of supporting
documentation. The Agencies are not
proposing these approaches, however,
as these approaches would likely
present at least one disadvantage,
namely, that it would be difficult for
consumers and furnishers to know
whether there is a direct dispute right in
any particular circumstance.
In addition, the Agencies considered
another commenter’s suggestion to
require investigation of direct disputes
only where the consumer first raises the
dispute with a CRA, but that process
does not resolve the matter to the
consumer’s satisfaction. The Agencies
are not proposing such an approach,
however, because it could impose
unnecessary barriers and delays for
consumers wishing to avoid the CRA
dispute process and bring disputes
immediately to the furnisher.23
The Agencies believe that the
approach adopted by the proposed rule
more closely comports with consumer
expectations that they be able to submit
a dispute directly to the furnisher (with
certain exceptions) when the issue in
dispute relates to information for which
the furnisher is responsible. The
Agencies request comment on whether
a more targeted approach would
represent a more appropriate balancing
of relevant policy considerations.
The Agencies also specifically invite
comment on how direct dispute
requirements would affect furnishers to
smaller and specialty CRAs, such as
CRAs that report medical information,
particular account being included in bankruptcy,
for example.
23 The Agencies note further that section
623(a)(8)(F) states that the obligation to
reinvestigate direct disputes shall not apply if the
dispute is ‘‘frivolous or irrelevant’’ because the
consumer submitted a dispute that is substantially
the same as a dispute previously submitted to a
furnisher or through a CRA. The Agencies note that
under the proposed rule, a direct dispute is not
substantially the same if a consumer’s dispute
includes information listed in § _.43(d) that had not
previously been provided to the furnisher.
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check writing history, apartment rental
history, or insurance claim filings.
Section _.43(b)
Exceptions
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A consumer report may include
identifying information about a
consumer (e.g., names, addresses), trade
line information (e.g., name of creditor,
payment history, loan amount), past and
present employer information, and
public record information (e.g.,
information received from courts or
other governmental authorities that are
related to bankruptcies, judgments, or
liens). Any given furnisher is the source
of some, but not all, of the information
included on a consumer report. A
furnisher should only be responsible for
investigating disputes about information
regarding an account or other
relationship between the furnisher and
the consumer. Accordingly, the
proposal requires a furnisher to
investigate direct disputes only with
respect to the types of information that
it typically provides to CRAs. In most
cases, the information subject to direct
dispute will be part of a furnisher’s
trade line entry or entries on a consumer
report.
Proposed § _.43(b) excepts from the
investigation requirement any direct
dispute that relates to:
• The consumer’s identifying
information (other than a direct dispute
relating to a consumer’s liability for a
credit account or other debt with the
furnisher, as provided in § _.43(a)(1)),24
such as name(s), date of birth, Social
Security number, telephone number(s),
or address(es);
• The identity of past or present
employers; 25
• Inquiries or requests for a consumer
report;
• Information derived from public
records, such as judgments,
bankruptcies, liens, and other legal
matters (unless provided by a furnisher
having a relationship with the
consumer); or
• Information related to fraud alerts
or active duty alerts.
24 A direct dispute that relates both to identifying
information and a consumer’s liability for a credit
account or other debt with the furnisher, such as
in cases of identity theft, must be investigated by
a furnisher pursuant to § _.43(a)(1).
25 For this category of information concerning the
identity of past or present employers, the Agencies
believe that direct contact by the consumer would
be unlikely to result in the most expeditious
resolution of an employer identity-related dispute.
For example, consumer reports sometimes contain
certain ‘‘employment history’’ information, which
is typically obtained from sources other than
employers (such as credit applications). In those
cases, an identified employer would be unable to
correct disputed information because it was
provided by another source.
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Proposed § _.43(b) also excepts from
the investigation requirement any direct
dispute if the notice of dispute is
submitted by, is prepared on behalf of
the consumer by, or is submitted on a
form supplied to the consumer by, a
credit repair organization as defined in
15 U.S.C. 1679a(3),26 or an entity that
would be a credit repair organization
but for 15 U.S.C. 1679a(3)(B)(i), which
excludes tax-exempt section 501(c)(3)
organizations.
Section _.43(c) Direct Dispute Address
As added by section 312 of the FACT
Act, section 623(a)(8)(D) of the FCRA
requires a consumer to provide a direct
dispute notice ‘‘at the address
specified’’ by the furnisher. The statute
and legislative history provide no
guidance about how this address is to be
specified by furnishers and effectively
communicated to consumers. The
Agencies believe that, in order for the
direct dispute right to be implemented
and to operate as Congress intended, it
is necessary to clarify how a furnisher’s
direct dispute address is to be specified
and communicated to consumers.
Proposed § _.43(c) would require a
furnisher to investigate a direct dispute
only if a consumer submits a dispute
notice to the furnisher at:
• The address of the furnisher
provided by a furnisher and set forth on
a consumer report relating to the
consumer (i.e., the disclosure under
section 609(a) of the FCRA);
• An address clearly and
conspicuously specified by the
furnisher for submitting direct disputes
that is provided in writing or
electronically (if the consumer has
agreed to the electronic delivery of
information from the furnisher); or
• Any business address of the
furnisher, if the furnisher has not so
specified and provided an address for
submitting direct disputes.
Thus, a consumer would always be able
to submit a direct dispute to the
appropriate address appearing on the
consumer report. The consumer would
also be able to submit a direct dispute
to any other business address of the
26 Under this provision of the Credit Repair
Organizations Act, the term ‘‘credit repair
organization’’—
(A) means any person who uses any
instrumentality of interstate commerce or the mails
to sell, provide, or perform (or represent that such
person can or will sell, provide, or perform) any
service, in return for the payment of money or other
valuable consideration, for the express or implied
purpose of—
(i) improving any consumer’s credit record, credit
history, or credit rating; or
(ii) providing advice or assistance to any
consumer with regard to any activity or service
described in clause (i).
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furnisher unless the furnisher has
separately specified an address to the
consumer in accordance with the
regulation. A furnisher choosing to
specify an address must do so in a
manner that is both reasonably
understandable and designed to call the
consumer’s attention to the fact that the
address is the one to use for submitting
direct disputes about the accuracy of
information in a consumer report. The
Agencies note that a furnisher that
specifies such an address for this
purpose will not be deemed to have
specified an address for purposes of
section 623(a)(1)(B) of the FCRA,
relating to the general duty to provide
accurate information to the CRAs.
The Agencies believe that it will
benefit consumers and be operationally
feasible to allow consumers to submit a
dispute notice to the address of the
furnisher specified on the consumer
report. The Agencies understand that in
a large majority of cases, the consumer
report includes an address supplied by
the furnisher and the furnisher can
control such address.27 In addition, the
Agencies believe that allowing
consumers to submit dispute notices to
the address of the furnisher set forth on
the consumer report will increase the
likelihood that the consumers will know
where to send that dispute (because that
address will be seen by consumers
contemporaneous in time and location
with the disputed information) and will
encourage consumers to obtain and
review their consumer reports prior to
submitting a dispute to a furnisher. A
furnisher will not be in violation of this
provision for failure to investigate a
dispute submitted to the address set
forth on the consumer report if that
address is incorrect due to an error by
the CRA and does not reflect any
business address of the furnisher.
27 Allowing consumers to submit dispute notices
to the address of the furnisher set forth on the
consumer report is consistent with existing Federal
and some state laws because these laws already
impose related obligations. Section 611(a)(6)(B)(iii)
of the FCRA requires the CRA to provide, upon the
consumer’s request, the business name and address,
and phone number if reasonably available, of any
furnisher the CRA contacts in connection with
information reinvestigated in response to a
consumer complaint filed with the CRA. California
law requires that upon request of the consumer, the
CRA must provide the consumer with the ‘‘names,
addresses and, if provided by the sources of
information, the telephone numbers identified for
customer service for the sources of information.’’
Cal. Civil Code § 1785.10(c). It is the Agencies’
understanding that CRAs commonly include the
furnisher’s business name, address, and telephone
number on the consumer report (where the
furnisher provides it) so that consumers will
automatically learn how to contact the furnisher
about a dispute upon receipt of the consumer report
without the need to request that information from
the CRA.
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The Agencies request comment on
whether there are circumstances under
which it would not be appropriate for a
consumer to submit a dispute notice to
the address of the furnisher set forth on
the consumer report. The Agencies also
invite comment on whether § _.43(c)(3)
should exclude certain types of business
addresses, such as a business address
that is used for reasons other than for
receiving correspondence from
consumers or business locations where
business is not conducted with
consumers.
In addition, the Agencies request
comment on whether § _.43(c)(2) should
be amended to permit furnishers to
notify consumers orally of the address
for direct disputes. The agencies also
request comment on whether and, if so,
how an oral notice can be provided
clearly and conspicuously.
Section _.43(d) Direct Dispute Notice
Contents
Section 623(a)(8)(D) of the FCRA
provides that a furnisher is not required
to investigate a dispute unless a
consumer provides the furnisher with a
notice of dispute that:
• Identifies the specific information
that is being disputed;
• Explains the basis for the dispute;
and
• Includes all supporting
documentation required by the
furnisher to substantiate the basis of the
dispute.
Proposed § _.43(d) would implement
623(a)(8)(D) by requiring that a notice of
dispute include:
• The name, address, and telephone
number of the consumer;
• Sufficient information to identify
the account or other relationship that is
in dispute, such as an account number;
• The specific information that the
consumer is disputing and an
explanation of the basis for the dispute;
and
• All supporting documentation or
other information reasonably required
by the furnisher to substantiate the basis
of the dispute, such as a copy of the
consumer report that contains the
allegedly inaccurate information, a
police report, a fraud or identity theft
affidavit, a court order, or account
statements.
Section 609(c)(2) of the FCRA requires
the FTC to promulgate, and CRAs to
disseminate with their provision of
consumer reports to consumers, a
‘‘General Summary of Consumer
Rights.’’ The FTC intends to update the
existing General Summary of Consumer
Rights to reflect additional rights
provided to consumers by the FACT Act
and the implementing rules, including
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consumers’ direct dispute rights. The
Agencies invite comment on what
additional mechanisms should be
required, if any, for informing
consumers of their direct dispute rights.
Section _.43(e) Frivolous or Irrelevant
Disputes
Section 623(a)(8)(F) of the FCRA
provides that a furnisher is not required
to investigate a dispute that a furnisher
reasonably determines to be frivolous or
irrelevant. That statutory provision
states that a frivolous or irrelevant
dispute includes situations involving:
• The failure of a consumer to
provide sufficient information to
investigate the disputed information; or
• The submission by a consumer of a
dispute that is substantially the same as
a dispute previously submitted by or on
behalf of the consumer, either directly
to the furnisher or through a CRA under
section 623(b) of the FCRA, with respect
to which the furnisher already
completed its investigation duties.
Proposed § _.43(e) implements these
statutory provisions, including these
two types of frivolous or irrelevant
disputes. Under the statute, when a
furnisher determines that a dispute is
frivolous or irrelevant, it must send a
notice of that determination (including
the reasons for the determination) to the
consumer. In cases involving
insufficient information, furnishers
should make a good faith attempt to
obtain sufficient information from a
consumer before sending such a notice
to the consumer as noted in section IV(I)
of the guidelines.
The Agencies note that the language
of section 623(a)(8)(F) specifies two
situations, but does not limit frivolous
or irrelevant disputes solely to those
two situations. The Agencies are
proposing to specify a third situation
involving a frivolous or irrelevant
dispute. Under proposed § _.43(e)(1)(iii),
a dispute would be frivolous or
irrelevant if the furnisher is not
otherwise required to investigate the
direct dispute under the proposed
regulation.28 This provision is intended
to provide clarity for furnishers
regarding their duty to investigate direct
disputes and their responsibilities when
no such investigation is required. This
provision also would ensure that
consumers in this situation receive
notice from the furnisher that their
28 For example, under proposed § _.43(b)(2), a
furnisher would not be required to investigate a
direct dispute that is submitted by, is prepared on
behalf of the consumer by, or is submitted on a form
supplied to the consumer by, a credit repair
organization. Thus, such a dispute would be
frivolous or irrelevant under proposed
§ _.43(e)(1)(iii).
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dispute was deemed frivolous or
irrelevant, as required by the FCRA in
sections 623(a)(8)(F)(ii) and (iii).29
Section _.43(e)(2) would incorporate
the FCRA’s section 623(a)(8)(F)(ii)
requirement that a furnisher must notify
a consumer of its determination that a
dispute is frivolous or irrelevant not
later than five business days after
making the determination. Section
_.43(e)(3) likewise would incorporate
from section 623(a)(8)(F)(iii) of the
FCRA the content requirements for a
notice of determination that a dispute is
frivolous or irrelevant. Such notices are
to include the reasons for the
determination and identify any
information required to investigate the
disputed information.
V. Request for Comment
The Agencies invite comment on all
aspects of the proposed accuracy and
integrity regulations and guidelines and
of the proposed direct dispute
regulations, on the factors to be
considered by the Agencies under
sections 623(a)(8) and 623(e) of the
FCRA, and on the specific issues on
which comment is solicited elsewhere
in the SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION,
including the following:
• The alternative definitions of
‘‘integrity’’ and the alternative
placement of the definitions of
‘‘accuracy’’ and ‘‘integrity’’ in regulatory
text or in the guidelines;
• Whether the definition of accuracy
should specifically provide that
‘‘accuracy’’ includes updating
information as necessary to ensure that
information furnished is current;
• Whether the definition of
‘‘accuracy’’ should be made applicable
to direct disputes if the Guidelines
Definition Approach is adopted;
• Whether the proposed definition of
‘‘accuracy’’ is appropriate for the direct
dispute rule, and, in particular, whether
the definition of ‘‘accuracy’’ needs to be
clarified in order to more clearly
delineate those disputes that, while
subject to the CRA dispute process,
would not be subject to the direct
dispute rule;
• Whether the Agencies’ approach to
direct disputes appropriately reflects the
relevant considerations, or whether a
more targeted approach would represent
a more appropriate balancing of relevant
policy considerations;
• Whether proposed § _.43(c)(2)
should be amended to permit furnishers
to notify consumers orally of the
29 15 U.S.C. 1681s–2(a)(8)(F)(ii) and (iii). Those
provisions of the FCRA generally set out a
furnisher’s responsibilities regarding the notice it
must provide to a consumer once it determines that
a dispute is frivolous or irrelevant.
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address for direct disputes and, if so,
how an oral notice can be provided
clearly and conspicuously;
• What additional mechanisms
should be required, if any, for informing
consumers of their direct dispute rights;
• How direct dispute requirements
would affect furnishers to smaller and
specialty CRAs, such as CRAs that
report medical information, check
writing history, apartment rental
history, or insurance claim filings;
• Whether the guidelines should
incorporate a specific time period for
retaining records in order to provide for
meaningful investigations of direct
disputes, and, if so, what record
retention time period would be
appropriate; and
• Whether § _.42(c)(2) should exclude
certain types of business addresses,
such as a business address that is used
for reasons other than for receiving
correspondence from consumers or
business locations where business is not
conducted with consumers.
In addition, the Agencies specifically
invite comment as follows:
The Agencies invite comment from
individuals and public interest and
consumer advocacy organizations on the
effect this proposal may have on
consumers and the credit reporting
industry.
The Agencies recognize that small
institutions operate with more limited
resources than larger institutions. Thus,
the Agencies specifically request
comment on the impact of this proposal
on small institutions’ current resources,
including personnel resources, and
whether the goals of the proposal could
be achieved for small institutions
through an alternative approach.
The Agencies invite comment from
businesses other than depository
institutions that furnish information
about consumers to CRAs, including
non-depository institution mortgage
lenders, debt collectors, consumer
finance companies, and retailers. The
Agencies also invite comment from
persons who furnish information about
consumers to specialized types of CRAs,
such as CRAs that collect information
for the purpose of making decisions
regarding insurance, employment or
tenant screening, or check verification.
Similarly, the Agencies request
comments from CRAs, including
nontraditional CRAs that may only
provide information to a limited class of
businesses (e.g., medical information
providers and tenant screening
services).
The Agencies also invite comment on
ways to minimize the burden of the
final rule.
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VI. Regulatory Analysis
A. Paperwork Reduction Act
Request for Comment on Proposed
Information Collection
In accordance with section 3512 of
the Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995,
44 U.S.C. 3501–3521 (‘‘PRA’’), the
Agencies may not conduct or sponsor,
and the respondent is not required to
respond to, an information collection
unless it displays a currently valid
Office of Management and Budget
(‘‘OMB’’) control number. The
information collection requirements
contained in this joint notice of
proposed rulemaking have been
submitted by the OCC, FDIC, OTS,
NCUA, and FTC to OMB for review and
approval under section 3506 of the PRA
and § 1320.11 of OMB’s implementing
regulations (5 CFR Part 1320). The
review and authorization information
for the Board is provided later in this
section along with the Board’s burden
estimates. The proposed rule contains
requirements subject to the PRA. The
requirements are found in 12 CFR
§§ _.42(a), _.43(e)(2), and _.43(e)(3) and
16 CFR §§ 660.3(a), 660.4(e)(2), and
660.4(e)(3).
Comments are invited on:
(a) Whether the collection of
information is necessary for the proper
performance of the Agencies’ functions,
including whether the information has
practical utility;
(b) The accuracy of the estimates of
the burden of the information
collection, including the validity of the
methodology and assumptions used;
(c) Ways to enhance the quality,
utility, and clarity of the information to
be collected;
(d) Ways to minimize the burden of
the information collection on
respondents, including through the use
of automated collection techniques or
other forms of information technology;
and
(e) Estimates of capital or start up
costs and costs of operation,
maintenance, and purchase of services
to provide information.
All comments will become a matter of
public record.
Comments should be addressed to:
OCC: Communications Division,
Office of the Comptroller of the
Currency, Public Information Room,
Mailstop 1–5, Attention: 1557–NEW,
250 E Street, SW., Washington, DC
20219. In addition, comments may be
sent by fax to (202) 874–4448, or by
electronic mail to
regs.comments@occ.treas.gov. You can
inspect and photocopy comments at the
OCC’s Public Information Room, 250 E
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70957
Street, SW., Washington, DC 20219. For
security reasons, the OCC requires that
visitors make an appointment to inspect
comments. You may do so by calling
(202) 874–5043. Upon arrival, visitors
will be required to present valid
government-issued photo identification
and submit to security screening in
order to inspect and photocopy
comments.
Board: You may submit comments,
identified by R–1300, by any of the
following methods:
• Agency Web Site: https://
www.federalreserve.gov. Follow the
instructions for submitting comments
on the https://www.federalreserve.gov/
generalinfo/foia/ProposedRegs.cfm.
• Federal eRulemaking Portal: https://
www.regulations.gov. Follow the
instructions for submitting comments.
• E-mail:
regs.comments@federalreserve.gov.
Include docket number in the subject
line of the message.
• Fax: 202–452–3819 or 202–452–
3102.
• Mail: Jennifer J. Johnson, Secretary,
Board of Governors of the Federal
Reserve System, 20th Street and
Constitution Avenue, NW., Washington,
DC 20551.
All public comments are available
from the Board’s Web site at https://
www.federalreserve.gov/generalinfo/
foia/ProposedRegs.cfm as submitted,
unless modified for technical reasons.
Accordingly, your comments will not be
edited to remove any identifying or
contact information. Public comments
may also be viewed electronically or in
paper in Room MP–500 of the Board’s
Martin Building (20th and C Streets,
NW.) between 9 a.m. and 5 p.m. on
weekdays.
FDIC: You may submit written
comments, which should refer to 3064–
AC99, by any of the following methods:
• Agency Web Site: https://
www.fdic.gov/regulations/laws/federal/
propose.html. Follow the instructions
for submitting comments on the FDIC
Web site.
• Federal eRulemaking Portal: https://
www.regulations.gov. Follow the
instructions for submitting comments.
• E-mail: Comments@FDIC.gov.
• Mail: Robert E. Feldman, Executive
Secretary, Attention: Comments, FDIC,
550 17th Street, NW., Washington, DC
20429.
• Hand Delivery/Courier: Guard
station at the rear of the 550 17th Street
Building (located on F Street) on
business days between 7 a.m. and 5 p.m.
Public Inspection: All comments
received will be posted without change
to https://www.fdic.gov/regulations/laws/
federal/propose/html including any
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personal information provided.
Comments may be inspected at the FDIC
Public Information Center, Room E–
1007, 3501 North Fairfax Drive,
Arlington, Virginia, between 9 a.m. and
4:30 p.m. on business days.
OTS: Information Collection
Comments, Chief Counsel’s Office,
Office of Thrift Supervision, 1700 G
Street, NW., Washington, DC 20552;
send a facsimile transmission to (202)
906–6518; or send an e-mail to
infocollection.comments@ots.treas.gov.
OTS will post comments and the related
index on the OTS Internet site at https://
www.ots.treas.gov. In addition,
interested persons may inspect the
comments at the Public Reading Room,
1700 G Street, NW., by appointment. To
make an appointment, call (202) 906–
5922, send an e-mail to
public.info@ots.treas.gov, or send a
facsimile transmission to (202) 906–
7755.
NCUA: You may submit comments by
any of the following methods (Please
send comments by one method only):
• Federal eRulemaking Portal: https://
www.regulations.gov. Follow the
instructions for submitting comments.
• NCUA Web Site: https://
www.ncua.gov/
RegulationsOpinionsLaws/
proposedregs/proposedregs.html.
Follow the instructions for submitting
comments.
• E-mail: Address to
regcomments@ncua.gov. Include ‘‘[Your
name] Comments on Notice of Proposed
Rulemaking Part 717, Procedures to
Enhance the Accuracy and Integrity of
Information Furnished to Consumer
Reporting Agencies under Section 312
of the Fair and Accurate Credit
Transactions Act’’ in the e-mail subject
line.
• Fax: (703) 518–6319. Use the
subject line described above for e-mail.
• Mail: Address to Neil McNamara,
Deputy Chief Information Officer,
National Credit Union Administration,
1775 Duke Street, Alexandria, VA
22314–3428.
• Hand Delivery/Courier: Same as
mail address.
Additionally, you should send a copy of
your comments to the OMB Desk Officer
for the Agencies, by mail to U.S. Office
of Management and Budget, 725 17th
Street, NW., 10235, Washington, DC
20503, or by fax to (202) 395–6974.
FTC: Comments should refer to
‘‘Furnisher Rules, Project No. R611017,’’
and may be submitted by any of the
following methods. However, if the
comment contains any material for
which confidential treatment is
requested, it must be filed in paper
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form, and the first page of the document
must be clearly labeled
‘‘Confidential.’’ 30
• E-mail: Comments filed in
electronic form should be submitted by
clicking on the following Web link:
https://secure.commentworks.com/ftcFACTAfurnishers and following the
instructions on the Web-based form. To
ensure that the Commission considers
an electronic comment, you must file it
on the Web-based form at https://
secure.commentworks.com/ftcFACTAfurnishers.
• Federal eRulemaking Portal: If this
notice appears at https://
www.regulations.gov, you may also file
an electronic comment through that
Web site. The Commission will consider
all comments that regulations.gov
forwards to it.
• Mail or Hand Delivery: A comment
filed in paper form should include
‘‘Furnisher Rules: Project No. R611017,’’
both in the text and on the envelope and
should be mailed or delivered, with two
complete copies, to the following
address: Federal Trade Commission/
Office of the Secretary, Room H–135
(Annex M), 600 Pennsylvania Avenue,
NW., Washington, DC 20580. Because
paper mail in the Washington area and
at the Commission is subject to delay,
please consider submitting your
comments in electronic form, as
prescribed above. The FTC is requesting
that any comment filed in paper form be
sent by courier or overnight service, if
possible.
Comments on any proposed filing,
recordkeeping, or disclosure
requirements that are subject to
paperwork burden review under the
Paperwork Reduction Act should
additionally be submitted to: Office of
Management and Budget, Attention:
Desk Officer for the Federal Trade
Commission. Comments should be
submitted via facsimile to (202) 395–
6974 because U.S. Postal Mail is subject
to lengthy delays due to heightened
security precautions.
The FTC Act and other laws the
Commission administers permit the
collection of public comments to
consider and use in this proceeding as
appropriate. All timely and responsive
public comments, whether filed in
paper or electronic form, will be
considered by the Commission, and will
30 Commission Rule 4.2(d), 16 CFR 4.2(d). The
comment must be accompanied by an explicit
request for confidential treatment, including the
factual and legal basis for the request, and must
identify the specific portions of the comment to be
withheld from the public record. The request will
be granted or denied by the Commission’s General
Counsel, consistent with applicable law and the
public interest. See Commission Rule 4.9(c), 16 CFR
4.9(c).
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be available to the public on the FTC
Web site, to the extent practicable, at
https://www.ftc.gov/os/
publiccomments.htm. As a matter of
discretion, the FTC makes every effort to
remove home contact information for
individuals from the public comments it
receives before placing those comments
on the FTC Web site. More information,
including routine uses permitted by the
Privacy Act, may be found in the FTC’s
privacy policy, at https://www.ftc.gov/
ftc/privacy.htm.
Proposed Information Collection
Title of Information Collection:
Accuracy and Integrity of Information
Furnished to Consumer Reporting
Agencies.
Frequency of Response: On occasion.
Affected Public:
OCC: National banks, Federal
branches and agencies of foreign banks,
and their respective operating
subsidiaries that are not functionally
regulated within the meaning of section
5(c)(5) of the Bank Holding Company
Act of 1956, as amended (12 U.S.C.
1844(c)(5)).
Board: State member banks,
uninsured state agencies and branches
of foreign banks, commercial lending
companies owned or controlled by
foreign banks, and Edge and agreement
corporations.
FDIC: Insured nonmember banks,
insured state branches of foreign banks,
and certain subsidiaries of these
entities.
OTS: Savings associations and certain
of their subsidiaries.
NCUA: Federally-chartered credit
unions.
FTC: Businesses that furnish
information to a consumer reporting
agency, and are subject to
administrative enforcement by the FTC
pursuant to section 621(a)(1) of the
FCRA (15 U.S.C. 1681s(a)(1).
Abstract: Proposed section .42(a) 31
would require a furnisher to implement
reasonable written policies and
procedures regarding the accuracy and
integrity of information relating to
consumers that it provides to a CRA.
Furnishers already have an ongoing
responsibility under section 623 of the
FCRA for accurate reporting, which has
been in place for several years, long
before the FACT Act. This proposed
rule would require furnishers to put into
writing policies and procedures that
address their section 312
responsibilities regarding the accuracy
and integrity of information. Furnishers’
accuracy and integrity policies and
31 For purposes of the FTC regulations, this
proposed section is 16 CFR 660.3(a).
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procedures may include their existing
policies and procedures that are
reasonable and appropriate. The
Agencies estimate it would take
furnishers a total of 21 hours per
institution to comply with this
requirement.
Proposed section .43(a) 32 would
allow consumers to initiate disputes
directly with the furnishers, instead of
using the existing FCRA process
through the CRAs. This gives consumers
a new way to dispute consumer report
information; instead of having to go
through a CRA, consumers would have
the right to go directly to the furnisher
in certain circumstances. Furnishers
already have affirmative responsibilities
to research and respond and, if
necessary, make any corrections when a
dispute is initiated by consumers
through a CRA. Under this proposed
rule, furnishers would have to follow a
substantially similar process for
disputes consumers submit directly to
furnishers. Furnishers would need to
amend their procedures to ensure that
disputes received directly from
consumers are handled the same way as
complaints from CRAs. The Agencies
estimate that furnishers would have to
devote four hours per institution to
amend their procedures in this manner.
Proposed section _.43(e)(2) 33
incorporates the section 312
requirement that a furnisher must notify
a consumer by mail or other means (if
authorized by the consumer) within five
business days after making a
determination that a dispute is frivolous
or irrelevant. Proposed section
_.43(e)(3) 34 incorporates the content
requirements of such notices as
specified by section 312. The Agencies
estimate that furnishers would have to
devote four hours per institution to
implement this notice requirement,
including the time necessary to develop
policies and procedures regarding the
provision of the notices to consumers
and to initially prepare the notices.
With respect to estimating the
potential burden associated with
providing the notices to consumers, the
Agencies received one comment on the
ANPR from a financial institution
stating that it is estimated that 50% of
disputes received are frivolous or
irrelevant. In contrast, one trade
association commented that in only
25% of disputes is the information in
the consumer report being challenged
verified as correct; thus, even assuming
that every time the information in the
consumer report is verified as correct
32 16
CFR 660.4(a) in the FTC regulations.
CFR 660.4(e)(2) in the FTC regulations.
34 CFR 660.4(e)(3) in the FTC regulations.
33 16
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the underlying dispute was frivolous or
irrelevant, a maximum of 25% of
disputes could be frivolous or
irrelevant. The Agencies are also aware
that a significant number of furnishers
are already providing consumers with a
written notice in response to direct
disputes. Further, commenters from
both industry and consumer groups
observed that disputes filed with CRAs
from credit repair organizations have
been particularly likely to be rejected,
though they disagreed on the reasons.
Considering all of these comments and
information, and taking into account
that direct disputes from credit repair
organizations are prohibited by section
623(a)(8)(G) of the FCRA, the Agencies
believe it is reasonable to estimate that
the number of written notices that
furnishers provide to consumers in
response to direct disputes that are
frivolous or irrelevant would increase
by 10%. The Agencies estimate that
furnishers would devote five minutes
per notice to provide a notice to a
consumer.
Estimated Burden: 35
Thus, the burden associated with this
collection of information may be
summarized as follows.
OCC
Number of respondents: 1,800.
Number of frivolous or irrelevant
dispute notices: 312,335.
Estimated burden per notice: 5
minutes.
Estimated burden per respondent: 21
hours to implement written policies and
procedures and training associated with
the written policies and procedures, 4
hours to amend procedures for handling
complaints received directly from
consumers, 4 hours to implement the
new dispute notice requirement.
Total estimated annual burden:
78,228 hours.
Board
In accordance with the PRA (44
U.S.C. 3506; 5 CFR part 1320, Appendix
A.1), the Board has reviewed the
proposed rule under its authority
delegated by OMB. The proposed
information collections associated with
this rulemaking, if approved, will be
incorporated into the Recordkeeping
and Disclosure Requirements
Associated with Regulation V (Fair
Credit Reporting) and will be assigned
OMB No. 7100–0308. The burden
estimates provided below pertain only
to the information collections associated
with this proposed rulemaking.
35 The Estimated Burden section reflects the
views of all of the Agencies except the FTC, which
has prepared a separate analysis.
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Number of respondents: 1,172.
Number of frivolous or irrelevant
dispute notices: 116,582.
Estimated burden per respondent: 21
hours to implement written policies and
procedures and training associated with
the written policies and procedures, 4
hours to amend procedures for handling
complaints received directly from
consumers, 4 hours to implement the
new dispute notice requirement, and 5
minutes per notice for distribution.
Total estimated annual burden:
43,703 hours.
FDIC
Number of respondents: 5,260.
Number of frivolous or irrelevant
dispute notices: 24,198.
Estimated burden per respondent to
implement written policies and
procedures regarding accuracy and
integrity and the frivolous or irrelevant
dispute notice: 29 hours.
Estimated burden per frivolous or
irrelevant dispute notice: 5 minutes.
Total estimated annual burden:
154,557 hours.
OTS
Number of respondents: 829.
Number of frivolous or irrelevant
dispute notices: 15,001.
Estimated burden per respondent: 21
hours to implement written policies and
procedures and training associated with
the written policies and procedures, 4
hours to amend procedures for handling
complaints received directly from
consumers, 4 hours to implement the
new dispute notice requirement, and 5
minutes per notice for distribution.
Total estimated annual burden:
25,286 hours.
NCUA
Number of respondents: 5,103.
Estimated burden per respondent: 29
hours.
Number of frivolous or irrelevant
dispute notices: 3,044.
Estimated burden per notice: 5
minutes.
Total estimated annual burden:
148,241 hours.
FTC 36
Section 660.3:
Estimated Hours Burden:
As discussed above, the proposed
regulations would require furnishers to
establish and implement reasonable
written policies and procedures
regarding the accuracy and integrity of
36 Due to the varied nature of the entities subject
to the jurisdiction of the FTC, this Estimated
Burden section reflects only the view of the FTC.
The banking regulatory agencies have jointly
prepared a separate analysis.
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the information relating to consumers
that it furnishes to a CRA. The proposed
regulations would define ‘‘furnisher’’ to
mean an entity other than an individual
consumer that furnishes information
relating to consumers to one or more
CRAs, except when it provides
information to a CRA solely to obtain a
consumer report for a permissible
purpose under the FCRA.37 Given the
broad scope of furnishers, it is difficult
to determine precisely the number of
furnishers that are subject to the FTC’s
jurisdiction. Nonetheless, FTC staff
estimates that the proposed regulations
in section 660.3 will affect
approximately 6,133 furnishers subject
to the FTC’s jurisdiction.38 The
Commission invites comment and
information about the categories and
number of furnishers subject to its
jurisdiction. As detailed below, FTC
staff estimates that the average annual
information collection burden during
the three-year period for which OMB
clearance is sought will be 51,000 hours
(rounded to the nearest thousand). The
estimated annual labor cost associated
with this burden is $1,985,000 (rounded
to the nearest thousand).
The proposed regulations are drafted
in a flexible manner that allows entities
to establish and implement different
types of written policies and procedures
based upon the nature, size, complexity,
and scope of their activities. A furnisher
may include any of its existing policies
and procedures in place to ensure the
accuracy of information. The
Commission believes that many entities
have already implemented a significant
portion of the policies and procedures
required by the proposed rule. Entities
have had an ongoing requirement under
Section 623 of the FCRA to provide
accurate information when they choose
to furnish data to consumer reporting
agencies. The written policies and
procedures proposed in the rule would
formalize the processes and controls
necessary for accurate reporting.
Accordingly, FTC staff estimates that
entities will require 21 hours to
establish and implement written
policies and procedures, including the
incremental time to train staff to
implement these policies and
procedures, with an annual recurring
burden of 2 hours.
37 15
U.S.C. 1681b(a).
estimate is derived from the number of
furnishers reporting to the three nationwide CRAs
(approximately 18,000), minus the number of
entities subject to jurisdiction by the federal
financial agencies and the NCUA (14,167
combined), and adding the number of furnishers to
medical information bureaus (approximately 500)
and the number of insurance companies furnishing
information to other types of CRAs (approximately
1,800).
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38 This
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FTC staff estimates that the proposed
regulations implementing section 623(e)
affect 6,133 furnishers subject to the
FTC’s jurisdiction at an average annual
burden of 8.33 hours per entity [average
annual burden over 3-year clearance
period for establishment and
implementation of written policies and
procedures (25 hours/3)], for a
cumulative total of 51,000 hours
(rounded to the nearest thousand).
Estimated Cost Burden:
The FTC staff derived labor costs by
applying appropriate estimated hourly
cost figures to the burden hours
described above. It is difficult to
calculate with precision the labor costs
associated with the proposed
regulations, as they entail varying
compensation levels of management
and/or technical staff among companies
of different sizes. In calculating the cost
figures, staff assumes that managerial
and/or professional technical personnel
will draft the written policies and
procedures and train staff, at an hourly
rate of $38.93.39
Based on the above estimates and
assumptions, the total annual labor
costs for all categories of covered
entities under the proposed regulations
in section 660.3 are $1,985,000
(rounded to the nearest thousand)
[(51,000 hours × $38.93)].
Section 660.4:
Estimated Hours Burden:
The proposed regulations would also
require entities that furnish information
about consumers to respond to direct
disputes from consumers. FTC staff
estimates that the proposed regulations
in section 660.4 will also affect
approximately 6,133 furnishers subject
to the FTC’s jurisdiction. As detailed
below, FTC staff estimates that the
average annual information collection
burden during the three-year period for
which OMB clearance is sought will be
17,000 hours (rounded to the nearest
thousand). The estimated annual labor
cost associated with this burden is
$641,000 (rounded to the nearest
thousand).
FTC staff estimates that it will take
furnishers four hours to amend their
procedures to ensure that disputes
received directly from consumers are
handled the same way as complaints
from CRAs. FTC staff believes that
furnishers of information to CRAs will
have automated the process of
responding to direct disputes in the first
year of the clearance, therefore, there
will be no annual recurring burden. FTC
39 This cost is derived from the median hourly
wage from the 2006 National Occupational
Employment and Wage Estimates by the Bureau of
Labor Statistics for management occupations.
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staff estimates that it will take
furnishers four hours in the first year to
implement the requirement to notify a
consumer by mail or other means (if
authorized by the consumer) within five
business days after making a
determination that a dispute is frivolous
or irrelevant. FTC staff believes that
furnishers will also automate this
process in the first year of clearance, so
there will be no annual recurring
burden.
FTC staff further estimates that to
prepare and distribute a notice to a
consumer after a furnisher determines
that a dispute is frivolous or irrelevant
will require approximately five minutes
per notice. FTC staff projects that
furnishers under its jurisdiction would
receive 5,430 frivolous or irrelevant
disputes requiring a notice each year.40
Accordingly, FTC staff estimates it will
take furnishers 452 hours for each of the
three years for which OMB clearance is
sought. The estimated annual labor cost
associated with this burden is $6,102.
Estimated Cost Burden:
The FTC staff derived labor costs by
applying appropriate estimated hourly
cost figures to the burden hours
described above. It is difficult to
calculate with precision the labor costs
associated with the proposed
regulations, as they entail varying
compensation levels of different types of
support staff among companies of
different sizes. Nonetheless, in
calculating the cost figures, staff
assumes managerial and/or professional
technical personnel will amend
procedures to ensure that disputes
received directly from consumers are
handled the same way as complaints
from CRAs and will implement the
requirement to notify a consumer by
mail or other means, after making a
determination that a dispute is frivolous
or irrelevant, at an hourly rate of
$38.93.41 Staff assumes that
administrative support personnel will
provide the required notices to
consumers, at an hourly rate of $13.50.42
Based on the above estimates and
assumptions, the total average annual
labor costs for all categories of covered
40 This number is derived from an estimate of
disputes per year that relate to information
provided by an entity under the FTC’s jurisdiction
and the Agencies’ estimated 10% increase of the
number of written notices that furnishers will
provide to consumers in response to direct disputes
that are frivolous or irrelevant.
41 This cost is derived from the median hourly
wage from the 2006 National Occupational
Employment and Wage Estimates by the Bureau of
Labor Statistics for management occupations.
42 This cost is derived from the median hourly
wage from the 2006 National Occupational
Employment and Wage Estimates by the Bureau of
Labor Statistics for office and administrative
support occupations.
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entities under the proposed regulations
in section 660.4 are $641,000 (rounded
to the nearest thousand) [((1.33 + 1.33
hours) × 6,133 × $38.93) + $6102].
B. Regulatory Flexibility Act
OCC: The Regulatory Flexibility Act
(5 U.S.C. 601—612) (RFA) requires an
agency to either provide an Initial
Regulatory Flexibility Analysis with a
proposed rule or certify that the
proposed rule will not have a significant
economic impact on a substantial
number of small entities. For purposes
of the RFA and OCC-regulated entities,
a ‘‘small entity’’ is a national bank with
assets of $165 million or less (small
national bank). Based on its analysis
and for the reason stated below, OCC
certifies that this proposed rule will not
have a significant economic impact on
a substantial number of small entities.
Based on two tests used to evaluate the
impact of the proposed rule (compliance
costs as a percent of labor costs and
compliance costs as a percent of noninterest expenses) the OCC estimates
that the proposed rule would have a
significant economic impact on 7 of 948
small national banks (.074 percent); the
OCC does not consider this to be a
substantial number of small entities.
jlentini on PROD1PC65 with PROPOSALS2
1. Reasons for Proposed Rule
The FACT Act amends the FCRA and
was enacted, in part, for the purpose of
enhancing the accuracy and integrity of
information furnished to CRAs. Section
312 of the FACT Act generally requires
the Agencies to issue guidelines for use
by furnishers regarding the accuracy
and integrity of the information about
consumers that they furnish to
consumer reporting agencies and
prescribe regulations requiring
furnishers to establish reasonable
policies and procedures for
implementing the guidelines. Section
312 also requires the Agencies to
prescribe regulations identifying the
circumstances under which a furnisher
must reinvestigate disputes about the
accuracy of information contained in a
consumer report based on a direct
request from a consumer. OCC is issuing
this proposed rule to implement section
312 of the FACT Act.
2. Statement of Objectives and Legal
Basis
The objectives of the proposed rule
are described in the SUPPLEMENTARY
INFORMATION section. In sum, the
objectives are: (1) To implement the
general statutory provision that requires
the Agencies to issue guidelines for use
by furnishers regarding the accuracy
and integrity of the information about
consumers that they furnish to
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consumer reporting agencies and
prescribe regulations requiring
furnishers to establish reasonable
policies and procedures for
implementing the guidelines and (2) to
fulfill the statutory mandate requiring
the Agencies to prescribe regulations
identifying the circumstances under
which a furnisher must reinvestigate
disputes about the accuracy of
information contained in a consumer
report based on a direct request from a
consumer. The legal bases for the
proposed rule are the National Bank Act
found at 12 U.S.C. 1 et seq., 24
(Seventh), 481, and 484; the Depository
Institutions Deregulation and Monetary
Control Act of 1980 found at 12 U.S.C.
93a; the Federal Deposit Insurance Act
found at 12 U.S.C. 1818; and the Fair
Credit Reporting Act found at 15 U.S.C.
1681 et seq.
3. Description and Estimate of Small
Entities Affected by the Final Rule
The proposed rule would apply to
national banks, Federal branches and
agencies of foreign banks, and any of
their operating subsidiaries that are not
functionally regulated within the
meaning of section 5(c)(5) of the Bank
Holding Company Act of 1956, as
amended (12 U.S.C. 1844(c)(5))
(national banks).
OCC estimates that its proposed rule
would apply to 948 small national
banks with assets of $165 million or
less.
4. Projected Recordkeeping, Reporting,
and Other Compliance Requirements
The compliance requirements of the
proposed rules are described in the
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION above.
In general, the proposal would require
each furnisher subject to the rule to
establish and implement reasonable
policies and procedures regarding the
accuracy and integrity of the
information relating to consumers that it
furnishes to a consumer reporting
agency. Furnishers would be required to
consider the guidelines in Appendix E
to the proposed rule in developing these
policies and procedures and to
incorporate those guidelines that are
appropriate. The Agencies have sought
to reduce the burden associated with
these proposed accuracy and integrity
regulations and guidelines in several
ways. First, the proposed guidelines
provide that a furnisher may include in
its policies and procedures concerning
the accuracy and integrity of
information it furnishes to consumer
reporting agencies any of its existing
policies and procedures that are
relevant and appropriate. Furnishers
have a preexisting obligation under
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70961
Section 623 of the FCRA to provide
accurate information when they furnish
data to consumer reporting agencies.
The OCC believes that many furnishers
are likely to have existing policies and
procedures regarding accurate reporting
in order to satisfy their obligations
under section 623, and that these
policies and procedures could be
incorporated in the policies and
procedures required by the proposed
rule.
Furnishers subject to the proposed
rule also would be required, under
certain circumstances, to investigate
disputes concerning the accuracy of
information about the consumer
contained in a consumer report based
on a direct request of a consumer. While
the rule would require new procedural
requirements, the OCC believes that
investigating direct disputes will not
create significant additional burdens on
small institutions, for a number of
reasons.
First, most furnishers already
investigate similar disputes that are
provided to them by a consumer
reporting agency pursuant to the
existing dispute provisions contained in
section 611 of the FCRA.
Second, commenters on the ANPR
noted that many furnishers already
investigate direct disputes as a matter of
good customer relations, sound business
practices, or because they are required
to do so under other consumer
protection laws. National banks also
investigate disputes referred to them by
the OCC’s Customer Assistance Group
as well as other state and Federal
regulators.
Finally, the proposed rule does not
require investigation of direct disputes
when such disputes are frivolous or
irrelevant.
The OCC seeks information and
comment on any costs, compliance
requirements, or changes in operating
procedures arising from the application
of the proposed rule to small national
banks.
5. Identification of Duplicative,
Overlapping, or Conflicting Federal
Rules
The OCC is unable to identify any
statutes or rules, which would overlap
or conflict with the proposed regulation.
The OCC seeks comment and
information about any such statutes or
rules, as well as any other state, local,
or industry rules or policies that require
a covered institution to implement
business practices that would comply
with the requirements of the proposed
rule.
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6. Discussion of Significant Alternatives
As required by the FACT Act, the
proposed rules and guidelines apply to
all covered institutions, regardless of the
size of the institution. One approach to
minimizing the burden on small entities
would be to provide a specific
exemption for small institutions. The
OCC has no authority under section 312
of the FACT Act to grant an exception
that would remove small institutions
from the scope of the rule.
The proposed rule does, however,
provide substantial flexibility so that
any national bank, regardless of size,
may tailor its practices to its individual
needs. For example, to minimize burden
the proposal would permit institutions
to include in their accuracy and
integrity policies and procedures their
existing policies and procedures that are
relevant and appropriate. Furthermore,
OCC and the other Agencies have
attempted to minimize burden by:
Adopting consistent rules; proposing
and soliciting comment on two
approaches for defining the terms
‘‘accuracy’’ and ‘‘integrity’’;
incorporating into the proposed rule at
§ 41.42(a) a statement that policies and
procedures should be appropriate to the
nature, size, complexity, and scope of a
furnisher’s activities; and providing
furnishers with three options for
providing their direct disputes address
to consumers under proposed § 41.43(c).
The OCC welcomes comments on any
significant alternatives that are
consistent with section 312 of the FACT
Act.
Board: The Regulatory Flexibility Act
(RFA) (5 U.S.C. 601 et seq.) requires an
agency either to provide an initial
regulatory flexibility analysis with a
proposed rule or certify that the
proposed rule will not have a significant
economic impact on a substantial
number of small entities (defined for
purposes of the RFA to include
commercial banks and other depository
institutions with $165 million or less in
assets). The Board requests public
comment in the following areas.
jlentini on PROD1PC65 with PROPOSALS2
1. Reasons for the Proposed Rule
Section 312 of the FACT Act (which
amends section 623 of the FCRA)
requires the Agencies to issue
regulations and guidelines relating to
the responsibilities of furnishers of
information about consumers to
consumer reporting agencies for the
purpose of enhancing the accuracy and
integrity of the information furnished.
Specifically, the Agencies must: (i)
Establish and maintain guidelines for
use by furnishers regarding the accuracy
and integrity of the information relating
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to consumers that they furnish to
consumer reporting agencies, and
update those guidelines as often as
necessary; and (ii) prescribe regulations
requiring furnishers to establish
reasonable policies and procedures for
implementing the guidelines. In
addition, the Agencies must prescribe
joint regulations that identify the
circumstances, if any, under which
furnishers must investigate disputes
about the accuracy of the information
contained in a consumer report on the
consumer based on a direct request by
a consumer, rather than requiring
consumers to initiate a dispute through
a consumer reporting agency.
2. Statement of Objectives and Legal
Basis
The SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION
above contains this information. The
legal basis for the proposed rule is
section 312 of the FACT Act.
3. Description of Small Entities to
Which the Rule Applies
The proposed regulations would
apply to all banks that are members of
the Federal Reserve System (other than
national banks) and their respective
operating subsidiaries, branches and
Agencies of foreign banks (other than
Federal branches, Federal Agencies, and
insured State branches of foreign banks),
commercial lending companies owned
or controlled by foreign banks, and
organizations operating under section
25 or 25A of the Federal Reserve Act (12
U.S.C. 601 et seq., and 611 et seq.). The
Board’s proposed regulations would
apply to the following institutions
(numbers approximate): State member
banks (881), operating subsidiaries that
are not functionally regulated with in
the meaning of section 5(c)(5) of the
Bank Holding Company Act of 1956, as
amended (877), U.S. branches and
agencies of foreign banks (219),
commercial lending companies owned
or controlled by foreign banks (3), and
Edge and agreement corporations (64),
for a total of approximately 2,044
institutions. The Board estimates that
more than 1,448 of these institutions
could be considered small entities with
assets of $165 million or less.
All small entities covered by the
Board’s rule potentially could be subject
to the proposed rule. However, the
proposed rule would not impose any
requirements on small entities that do
not furnish information about
consumers to consumer reporting
agencies.
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4. Projected Reporting, Recordkeeping
and Other Compliance Requirements
The compliance requirements of the
proposed rules are described in the
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION above.
In general, the proposal would require
each furnisher subject to the rule to
establish and implement reasonable
policies and procedures regarding the
accuracy and integrity of the
information relating to consumers that it
furnishes to a consumer reporting
agency. Such furnishers would be
required to consider the guidelines in
Appendix E to the proposed rule in
developing these policies and
procedures, and to incorporate those
guidelines that are appropriate. The
Agencies have sought to reduce the
burden associated with these proposed
accuracy and integrity regulations and
guidelines in several ways. First, the
proposed guidelines provide that a
furnisher may include in its policies
and procedures concerning the accuracy
and integrity of information it furnishes
to consumer reporting agencies any of
its existing policies and procedures that
are relevant and appropriate. Furnishers
have a preexisting obligation under
Section 623 of the FCRA to provide
accurate information when they furnish
data to consumer reporting agencies.
The Board believes that many furnishers
are likely to have existing policies and
procedures regarding accurate reporting
in order to satisfy their obligations
under section 623, and that these
policies and procedures could be
incorporated in the policies and
procedures required by the proposed
rule.
Furnishers subject to the proposed
rule also would be required, under the
circumstances described in the
proposed rule, to investigate disputes
concerning the accuracy of information
about the consumer contained in a
consumer report based on a direct
request of a consumer. While the rule
would require new procedural
requirements, the Board believes that
investigating direct disputes will not
create significant additional burdens on
small institutions, for a number of
reasons. First, most furnishers already
investigate similar disputes upon
receipt from the relevant consumer
reporting agency pursuant to the
existing dispute provisions contained in
section 611 of the FCRA. Second,
commenters on the ANPR noted that
many furnishers already investigate
direct disputes as a matter of good
customer relations and sound business
practices or because they are required to
under other consumer protection laws.
Finally, the proposed rule does not
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require investigation of direct disputes
when such disputes are frivolous or
irrelevant.
The Board seeks information and
comment on any costs, compliance
requirements, or changes in operating
procedures arising from the application
of the proposed rule to small
institutions.
jlentini on PROD1PC65 with PROPOSALS2
5. Identification of Duplicative,
Overlapping, or Conflicting Federal
Rules
The Board has not identified any
federal statutes or regulations that
would duplicate, overlap, or conflict
with the proposed rule. The Board seeks
comment regarding any statutes or
regulations, including state or local
statutes or regulations, that would
duplicate, overlap, or conflict with the
proposed rule.
6. Discussion of Significant Alternatives
The proposed rule provides
substantial flexibility so that each
institution, regardless of its size, may
tailor its practices to its individual
needs. For example, as discussed above,
in order to minimize burden the
proposal would permit institutions to
include in their accuracy and integrity
policies and procedures any of their
existing policies and procedures that are
relevant and appropriate.
The Board welcomes comments on
any significant alternatives, consistent
with the requirements of section 312 of
the FACT Act, that would minimize the
impact of the proposed rule on small
entities.
FDIC: In accordance with the
Regulatory Flexibility Act (5 U.S.C.
601–612) (RFA), an agency must publish
an initial regulatory flexibility analysis
with its proposed rule, unless the
agency certifies that the rule will not
have a significant economic impact on
a substantial number of small entities
(defined for purposes of the RFA to
include banks with less than $165
million in assets). The FDIC hereby
certifies that the proposed rule would
not have a significant economic impact
on a substantial number of small
entities.
The proposed rule would apply to
most FDIC-insured state nonmember
banks, approximately 3,400 of which are
small entities. Under the proposed rule,
financial institutions that furnish
information about consumers to one or
more consumer reporting agencies must
have written policies and procedures
regarding the accuracy and integrity of
that information. The program must be
appropriate to the nature, size,
complexity and scope of the furnishing
activities. A furnisher may include any
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of its existing policies and procedures in
place to ensure the accuracy of
information. Institutions have had an
ongoing requirement under Section 623
of the FCRA to provide accurate
information when they choose to
furnish data to consumer reporting
agencies. The written policies and
procedures proposed in the rule would
formalize the processes and controls
necessary for accurate reporting.
Similarly, the proposed guidelines in
Section II of Appendix E of the
Regulation contain requirements that
were already in the FCRA. Federal
Financial Institutions Examination
Council examination procedures exist
and have been used for years to evaluate
compliance with the aspects of Section
623 of the FCRA. Based on our
examination of the financial institutions
we supervise, the FDIC believes that
many of these institutions have already
implemented a significant portion of the
policies and procedures required by the
proposed rule, whether under the
definition of ‘‘integrity’’ proposed in the
Regulatory Definition Approach or the
definition in the Guidelines Definition
Approach, as discussed in the
Supplementary Information above. The
process of furnishing information to
consumer reporting agencies is largely
automated. With regard to the two
alternatives concerning the ‘‘integrity’’
of information, the automated
furnishing systems already support for
the type of information that a furnisher
would provide under either approach.
Nonetheless, the FDIC specifically
requests comment and specific data on
the size of the incremental burden on
small banks in formalizing the policies
and procedures not currently included,
given the banks’ current practices and
compliance with existing requirements.
The proposed rule would also require
financial institutions that furnish
information about consumers to respond
to direct dispute requests from
consumers with regard to certain
perceived inaccuracies. While the rule
would require new procedural
requirements, including direct dispute
notices, the FDIC believes that
investigating direct disputes will not
create significant additional burdens on
small banks, for a number of reasons.
First, most furnishers are already
investigating similar disputes, which
under the current law are brought
directly to the relevant consumer
reporting agency, which then contacts
the furnisher for an investigation. Under
this procedure, furnishers are already
required to review all relevant
information provided by the consumer
reporting agency along with the notice;
report the results of the investigation to
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70963
the consumer reporting agency; if the
disputed information is found to be
incomplete or inaccurate, report those
results to all nationwide consumer
reporting agencies to which the
financial institution previously
provided the information; and if the
disputed information is incomplete,
inaccurate, or not verifiable by the
financial institution, promptly, for
purposes of reporting to the consumer
reporting agency modify the item of
information, delete the item of
information, or permanently block the
reporting of that item of information.
Second, many of these furnishers are
already investigating direct disputes as
a matter of good customer relations and
sound business practices or under other
consumer protection laws.
Third, the proposed rule does not
require investigation in cases that are
frivolous or irrelevant. Nonetheless, the
FDIC again specifically requests
comment and specific data on the size
of the incremental burden creating a
program would have on small banks,
given their current practices and
compliance with existing requirements.
OTS: The Regulatory Flexibility Act
(5 U.S.C. 601–612) (RFA) requires an
agency to either provide an Initial
Regulatory Flexibility Analysis with a
proposed rule or certify that the
proposed rule will not have a significant
economic impact on a substantial
number of small entities. For purposes
of the RFA and OTS-regulated entities,
a ‘‘small entity’’ is a savings association
with assets of $165 million or less
(small savings association). Based on its
analysis and for the reason stated below,
OTS certifies that this proposed rule
will not have a significant economic
impact on a substantial number of small
entities.
1. Reasons for Proposed Rule
The FACT Act amends the FCRA and
was enacted, in part, for the purpose of
enhancing the accuracy and integrity of
information furnished to CRAs. Section
312 of the FACT Act generally requires
the Agencies to issue guidelines for use
by furnishers regarding the accuracy
and integrity of the information about
consumers that they furnish to
consumer reporting agencies and
prescribe regulations requiring
furnishers to establish reasonable
policies and procedures for
implementing the guidelines. Section
312 also requires the Agencies to
prescribe regulations identifying the
circumstances under which a furnisher
must reinvestigate disputes about the
accuracy of information contained in a
consumer report based on a direct
request from a consumer. OTS is issuing
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this proposed rule to implement section
312 of the FACT Act.
2. Statement of Objectives and Legal
Basis
The objectives of the proposed rule
are described in the SUPPLEMENTARY
INFORMATION section. In sum, the
objectives are: (1) To implement the
general statutory provision that requires
the Agencies to issue guidelines for use
by furnishers regarding the accuracy
and integrity of the information about
consumers that they furnish to
consumer reporting agencies and
prescribe regulations requiring
furnishers to establish reasonable
policies and procedures for
implementing the guidelines and (2) to
fulfill the statutory mandate requiring
the Agencies to prescribe regulations
identifying the circumstances under
which a furnisher must reinvestigate
disputes about the accuracy of
information contained in a consumer
report based on a direct request from a
consumer. The primary legal basis for
the proposed rule is the Fair Credit
Reporting Act found at 15 U.S.C. 1681
et seq.
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3. Description and Estimate of Small
Entities Affected by the Final Rule
The proposed rule would apply to
savings associations and operating
subsidiaries of federal savings
associations that are not functionally
regulated within the meaning of section
5(c)(5) of the Bank Holding Company
Act of 1956, as amended (12 U.S.C.
1844(c)(5)).
OTS estimates that its proposed rule
would apply to 412 small savings
associations with assets of $165 million
or less.
4. Projected Recordkeeping, Reporting,
and Other Compliance Requirements
Under the proposed rule, financial
institutions that furnish information
about consumers to one or more
consumer reporting agencies must have
written policies and procedures
regarding the accuracy and integrity of
that information. The program must be
appropriate to the nature, size,
complexity and scope of the furnishing
activities. A furnisher may include any
of its existing policies and procedures in
place to ensure the accuracy of
information. Institutions have had an
ongoing requirement under Section 623
of the FCRA to provide accurate
information when they choose to
furnish data to consumer reporting
agencies. The written policies and
procedures proposed in the rule would
formalize the processes and controls
necessary for accurate reporting.
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Similarly, the proposed guidelines in
Section II of Appendix E of the
Regulation contain requirements that
were already in the FCRA. Federal
Financial Institutions Examination
Council examination procedures exist
and have been used for years to evaluate
compliance with the aspects of Section
623 of the FCRA. Based on our
examination of the financial institutions
we supervise, OTS believes that many of
these institutions have already
implemented a significant portion of the
policies and procedures required by the
proposed rule, whether under the
definition of ‘‘integrity’’ proposed in the
Regulatory Definition Approach or the
definition in the Guidelines Definition
Approach, as discussed in the
Supplementary Information above. The
process of furnishing information to
consumer reporting agencies is largely
automated. With regard to the two
alternatives concerning the ‘‘integrity’’
of information, the automated
furnishing systems already support the
type of information that a furnisher
would provide under either approach.
Nonetheless, OTS specifically
requests comment and specific data on
the size of the incremental burden on
small savings associations in
formalizing the policies and procedures
not currently included, given the
associations’ current practices and
compliance with existing requirements.
The proposed rule would also require
financial institutions that furnish
information about consumers to respond
to direct dispute requests from
consumers with regard to certain
perceived inaccuracies. While the rule
would require new procedural
requirements, including direct dispute
notices, OTS believes that investigating
direct disputes will not create
significant additional burdens on small
savings associations, for a number of
reasons.
First, most furnishers are already
investigating similar disputes, which
under the current law are brought
directly to the relevant consumer
reporting agency, which then contacts
the furnisher for an investigation. Under
this procedure, furnishers are already
required to review all relevant
information provided by the consumer
reporting agency along with the notice;
report the results of the investigation to
the consumer reporting agency; if the
disputed information is found to be
incomplete or inaccurate, report those
results to all nationwide consumer
reporting agencies to which the
financial institution previously
provided the information; and if the
disputed information is incomplete,
inaccurate, or not verifiable by the
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financial institution, promptly, for
purposes of reporting to the consumer
reporting agency modify the item of
information, delete the item of
information, or permanently block the
reporting of that item of information.
Second, many of these furnishers are
already investigating direct disputes as
a matter of good customer relations and
sound business practices. Many are also
investigating disputes brought to the
institution through OTS’s customer
complaint system.
Third, the proposed rule does not
require investigation for disputes that
are frivolous or irrelevant.
Fourth, savings associations already
have mechanisms and processes in
place to handle consumer complaints
brought under other laws such as the
Truth in Lending Act, Real Estate
Settlement Procedures Act, and
Electronic Funds Transfer Act. OTS
believes many of these mechanisms and
processes can be readily adapted to
handle consumer disputes about their
consumer reports.
Nonetheless, OTS specifically
requests comment and specific data on
the size of the incremental burden
creating a program would have on small
savings associations, given their current
practices and compliance with existing
requirements.
5. Identification of Duplicative,
Overlapping, or Conflicting Federal
Rules
OTS is unable to identify any statutes
or rules, which would overlap or
conflict with the proposed regulation.
OTS seeks comment and information
about any such statutes or rules, as well
as any other state, local, or industry
rules or policies that require a covered
institution to implement business
practices that would comply with the
requirements of the proposed rule.
6. Discussion of Significant Alternatives
As required by the FACT Act, the
proposed rules and guidelines apply to
all covered institutions, regardless of the
size of the institution. One approach to
minimizing the burden on small entities
would be to provide a specific
exemption for small institutions. OTS
has no authority under section 312 of
the FACT Act to grant an exception that
would remove small institutions from
the scope of the rule.
The proposed rule does, however,
provide substantial flexibility so that
any savings association, regardless of
size, may tailor its practices to its
individual needs. For example, to
minimize burden the proposal would
permit institutions to include in their
accuracy and integrity policies and
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procedures their existing policies and
procedures that are relevant and
appropriate. Furthermore, OTS and the
other Agencies have attempted to
minimize burden by: Adopting
consistent rules; proposing and
soliciting comment on two approaches
for defining the terms ‘‘accuracy’’ and
‘‘integrity’’; incorporating into the
proposed rule at § _.42(a) a statement
that policies and procedures must be
appropriate to the nature, size,
complexity, and scope of a furnisher’s
activities; and providing furnishers with
a three options for providing their direct
disputes address to consumers under
proposed § _.43(c).
OTS welcomes comments on any
significant alternatives that are
consistent with section 312.
NCUA: Under the RFA, NCUA must
publish an initial regulatory flexibility
analysis with its proposed rule, unless
NCUA certifies the rule will not have a
significant economic impact on a
substantial number of small entities. For
NCUA, these are federal credit unions
with less than $10 million in assets.
NCUA certifies this proposed rule
would not have a significant economic
impact on a substantial number of small
entities.
Under the proposed rule, federal
credit unions furnishing information
about consumers to consumer reporting
agencies (CRAs) must have a written
program on the information’s accuracy
and integrity. The program must be
appropriate to the nature, size,
complexity and scope of the furnishing
activities. The federal credit union can
include its existing policies and
procedures in its program under the
proposed rule. Federal credit unions
already are required under FCRA
section 623 to provide accurate
information when they furnish data to
CRAs. The proposed rule would
formalize the processes and controls for
accurate reporting. Likewise, the
proposed guidelines contain
requirements already in the FCRA
section 623.
Accordingly, NCUA requests
comment and specific data on any
additional burden on small federal
credit unions in making their current
accuracy and integrity programs
consistent with existing requirements.
The proposed rule would also require
federal credit unions that furnish
consumer information to CRAs to
respond to consumers’ direct dispute
requests to correct credit report
inaccuracies. The rule would require
new procedural requirements, including
direct dispute notices, but the NCUA
believes that investigating direct
disputes will not create significant
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additional burdens on small federal
credit unions, for the following reasons.
First, most furnishers already
investigate consumer dispute requests,
even if under the current law, the
consumers complain directly to the
relevant CRA, which then contacts the
federal credit union to investigate.
Currently, furnishers must review all
relevant information the CRA provides
with the notice; report the investigation
results to the CRA; if the disputed
information is determined to be
incomplete or inaccurate, report this to
all nationwide CRAs to which the
federal credit union previously
provided the information; and if the
disputed information is incomplete,
inaccurate, or not verifiable by the
federal credit union, promptly, for
purposes of reporting to the CRA,
modify the item of information, delete
the item of information, or permanently
block the reporting of that item of
information.
Second, many federal credit unions
already investigate direct disputes as
part of good member relations and
sound business practices or under other
consumer protection laws.
Third, the proposed rule does not
require investigation in cases that are
frivolous or irrelevant. Nonetheless,
NCUA specifically requests comment
and specific data on the size of the
incremental burden creating a program
would have on small federal credit
unions, given their current practices and
compliance with existing requirements.
FTC: The Regulatory Flexibility Act
(‘‘RFA’’), 5 U.S.C. 601–612, requires that
the Commission provide an Initial
Regulatory Flexibility Analysis
(‘‘IRFA’’) with a proposed rule and a
Final Regulatory Flexibility Analysis
(‘‘FRFA’’) with the final rule, unless the
Commission certifies that the rule will
not have a significant economic impact
on a substantial number of small
entities. See 5 U.S.C. 603–605.
Based on its analysis and for the
reasons stated below, the Commission
does not anticipate that the proposed
regulations will have a significant
economic impact on a substantial
number of small entities. This document
serves as notice to the Small Business
Administration of the FTC’s
certification of no effect. To ensure the
accuracy of this certification, however,
the Commission requests comments on
whether the proposed regulations will
have a significant impact on a
substantial number of small entities,
including specific information on the
number of entities that would be
covered by the proposed regulations, the
number of these companies that are
‘‘small entities,’’ and the average annual
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70965
burden for each entity. Although the
Commission certifies under the RFA
that the regulations proposed in this
notice would not, if promulgated, have
a significant economic impact on a
substantial number of small entities, the
Commission has determined,
nonetheless, that it is appropriate to
publish an IRFA in order to inquire into
the impact of the proposed regulations
on small entities. Therefore, the
Commission has prepared the following
analysis:
1. Description of the Reasons That
Action by the Agency Is Being Taken
The Federal Trade Commission is
charged with enforcing the requirements
of section 312 of the Fair and Accurate
Credit Transactions Act of 2003 (FACT
Act) (15 U.S.C. 1681a–2(a)(8) and
1681a–2(e)), which require the agency to
issue these proposed regulations.
2. Statement of the Objectives of, and
Legal Basis for, the Proposed
Regulations
The objectives of the proposed rule
are described in the SUPPLEMENTARY
INFORMATION section. In sum, the
objectives are: (1) To implement the
general statutory provision that requires
the Agencies to issue guidelines for use
by furnishers regarding the accuracy
and integrity of the information about
consumers that they furnish to
consumer reporting agencies and
prescribe regulations requiring
furnishers to establish reasonable
policies and procedures for
implementing the guidelines and (2) to
fulfill the statutory mandate requiring
the Agencies to prescribe regulations
identifying the circumstances under
which a furnisher must reinvestigate
disputes about the accuracy of
information contained in a consumer
report based on a direct request from a
consumer. The legal basis for the
proposed regulations is 15 U.S.C.
1681a–2(a)(8) and 1681a–2(e).
3. Small Entities To Which the Proposed
Rule Will Apply
The proposed rule would apply to ‘‘an
entity other than an individual
consumer that furnishes information
relating to consumers to one or more
consumer reporting agencies,’’ except
when it ‘‘provides information to a
consumer reporting agency solely to
obtain a consumer report in accordance
with sections 604(a) and (f) of the
FCRA.’’ In short, the rule would apply
to any entity that (1) is under the FTC’s
jurisdiction pursuant to the FCRA and
(2) furnishes information relating to
consumers to one or more consumer
reporting agencies.
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Generally, the proposed regulations
would apply to financial institutions,
creditors, and other entities that furnish
information relating to consumers to
consumer reporting agencies. In
particular, entities under FTC’s
jurisdiction covered by section 312
include state-chartered credit unions,
non-bank lenders, insurers, debt
collectors, and any other entity other
than an individual consumer that
furnishes information relating to
consumers to one or more consumer
reporting agencies. The available data is
not sufficient for the Commission to
realistically estimate the number of
entities the Commission regulates that
would be subject to the proposed rule
and that are small as defined by the
Small Business Administration.43 The
Commission invites comment and
information on the number and type of
small entities affected by the proposed
rule.
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4. Projected Reporting, Recordkeeping
and Other Compliance Requirements
Under the proposed rule, entities that
furnish information about consumers to
one or more consumer reporting
agencies must have written policies and
procedures regarding the accuracy and
integrity of that information. The
program must be appropriate to the
nature, size, complexity, and scope of
the furnishing activities. A furnisher
may include any of its existing policies
and procedures in place to ensure the
accuracy of information. Entities have
had an ongoing requirement under
Section 623 of the FCRA to provide
accurate information when they choose
to furnish data to consumer reporting
agencies. The written policies and
procedures proposed in the rule would
formalize the processes and controls
necessary for accurate reporting.
Similarly, the proposed guidelines in
Section II of Appendix A of the
Regulation contain requirements that
are already included in the FCRA.
Entities under the FTC’s jurisdiction
covered by this rule include statechartered credit unions, non-bank
lenders, insurers, debt collectors, and
any other entity other than an
individual consumer that furnishes
information relating to consumers to
one or more consumer reporting
agencies. In calculating costs, FTC staff
assumes that for all entities, managerial
43 The size standard to be considered a small
business for the majority of the non-bank creditors,
insurers, and debt collectors that are subject to the
Commission’s jurisdiction is to have average annual
receipts that are $6.5 million or less. A list of the
SBA’s size standards for all industries can be found
at https://www.sba.gov/idc/groups/public/
documents/sba_homepage/serv_sstd_tablepdf.pdf.
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and/or professional technical personnel
will draft the written policies and
procedures regarding the accuracy and
integrity of furnished information.
The Commission believes that many
entities have already implemented a
significant portion of the policies and
procedures required by the proposed
rule, whether under the definition of
‘‘integrity’’ proposed in the Regulatory
Definition Approach or the definition in
the Guidelines Definition Approach, as
discussed in the SUPPLEMENTARY
INFORMATION above. The process of
furnishing information to consumer
reporting agencies is often automated.
With regard to the two alternatives
concerning the ‘‘integrity’’ of
information, the automated furnishing
systems already support the type of
information that a furnisher would
provide under either approach.
Nonetheless, the Commission
specifically requests comment and
specific data on the size of the
incremental burden on small entities in
formalizing the policies and procedures
not currently included, given the
entities’ current practices and
compliance with existing requirements.
The proposed rule would also require
entities that furnish information about
consumers to respond to direct disputes
from consumers. The rule would require
new procedural requirements, including
direct dispute notices.
Entities under the FTC’s jurisdiction
covered by this rule include statechartered credit unions, non-bank
lenders, insurers, debt collectors, and
any other entity other than an
individual consumer that furnishes
information relating to consumers to
one or more consumer reporting
agencies. In calculating costs, FTC staff
assumes that managerial and/or
professional technical personnel will
adapt mechanisms and processes to
handle consumer disputes about their
consumer reports and administrative
support personnel will provide any
required notices to consumers.
The Commission believes that
investigating direct disputes will not
create significant additional burdens on
covered entities for a number of reasons.
First, most furnishers are already
investigating similar disputes, which
under the current law are brought
directly to the relevant consumer
reporting agency, which then contacts
the furnisher for an investigation. Under
this procedure, furnishers are already
required to review all relevant
information provided by the consumer
reporting agency along with the notice
of dispute; report the results of the
investigation to the consumer reporting
agency; if the disputed information is
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found to be incomplete or inaccurate,
report those results to all nationwide
consumer reporting agencies to which
the furnisher previously provided the
information; and if the disputed
information is incomplete, inaccurate,
or not verifiable by the financial
institution, promptly, for the purposes
of reporting to the consumer reporting
agency to modify the item of
information, delete the item of
information, or permanently block the
reporting of that item of information.
Second, many of these furnishers are
already investigating direct disputes as
a matter of good customer relations and
sound business practices.
Third, the proposed rule does not
require investigation for disputes that
are frivolous or irrelevant.
Fourth, many furnishers already have
mechanisms and processes in place to
handle consumer disputes brought
under other laws such as the Fair Debt
Collection Practices Act (15 U.S.C.
1692–1692p), Truth in Lending Act (15
U.S.C. 1601–1665b), Fair Credit Billing
Act (15 U.S.C. 1666–1666j), Real Estate
Settlement Procedures Act (12 U.S.C.
2601–2627), and Electronic Funds
Transfer Act (15 U.S.C. 1693–1693r).
The Commission believes that many of
these mechanisms and processes can be
readily adapted to handle consumer
disputes about their consumer reports.
Nonetheless, the Commission
specifically requests comment and
specific data on the size of the
incremental burden that creating a
program would have on small entities,
given their current practices and
compliance with existing requirements.
5. Duplicative, Overlapping, or
Conflicting Federal Rules
The Commission has not identified
any federal statutes, rules, or policies
that would duplicate, overlap, or
conflict with the proposed Rule. As
noted in Section 4, however,
compliance with some provisions of
other federal statutes will facilitate
compliance with the proposed rule by
furnishers of information to consumer
reporting agencies. The Commission
invites comment and information about
any statutes or rules that may duplicate,
overlap, or conflict with the proposed
Rule.
6. Significant Alternatives to the
Proposed Rule
The standards in the proposed Rule
are flexible so that a covered entity,
regardless of size, may tailor its
practices to its individual needs. For
example, to minimize the burden the
proposal would permit entities to
include in their accuracy and integrity
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policies and procedures their existing
policies and procedures that are
relevant and appropriate. Furthermore,
the FTC and other Agencies have
attempted to minimize the burden by:
adopting consistent rules; incorporating
into the proposed rule at § 660.3 a
statement that policies and procedures
should be appropriate to the nature,
size, complexity, and scope of a
furnisher’s activities; and providing
furnishers with three options for
providing their direct disputes address
to consumers under proposed § 660.4.
Nevertheless, the Commission seeks
comment and information on the need,
if any, for alternative compliance
methods that, consistent with the
statutory requirement, would reduce the
economic impact of the rule on small
entities.
If the comments filed in response to
this notice identify small entities that
are affected by the rule, as well as
alternative methods of compliance that
would reduce the economic impact of
the rule on such entities, the
Commission will consider the feasibility
of such alternatives and determine
whether they should be incorporated
into the final rule.
C. OCC and OTS Executive Order 12866
Determinations
The OCC and OTS each determined
that its portion of the proposed
rulemaking is not a significant
regulatory action under Executive Order
12866.
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D. OCC and OTS Executive Order 13132
Determinations
The OCC and the OTS each
determined that its portion of the
proposed rulemaking does not have any
federalism implications for purposes of
Executive Order 13132.
E. NCUA Executive Order 13132
Determination
Executive Order 13132 encourages
independent regulatory agencies to
consider the impact of their actions on
State and local interests. In adherence to
fundamental federalism principles, the
NCUA, an independent regulatory
agency as defined in 44 U.S.C. 3502(5)
voluntarily complies with the Executive
Order. The proposed rules and
guidelines apply only to federally
chartered credit unions and would not
have substantial direct effects on the
States, on the connection between the
national government and the States, or
on the distribution of power and
responsibilities among the various
levels of government. The NCUA has
determined that these proposed rules
and guidelines do not constitute a
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policy that has federalism implications
for purposes of the Executive Order.
F. OCC and OTS Unfunded Mandates
Reform Act of 1995 Determinations
Section 202 of the Unfunded
Mandates Reform Act of 1995, Public
Law 104–4 (Unfunded Mandates Act)
requires that an agency prepare a
budgetary impact statement before
promulgating a rule that includes a
Federal mandate that may result in
expenditure by State, local, and tribal
governments, in the aggregate, or by the
private sector, of $100 million or more
in any one year. If a budgetary impact
statement is required, section 205 of the
Unfunded Mandates Act also requires
an agency to identify and consider a
reasonable number of regulatory
alternatives before promulgating a rule.
The OCC and OTS each determined that
this proposed rule will not result in
expenditures by State, local, and tribal
governments, or by the private sector, of
$100 million or more. Accordingly,
neither the OCC nor the OTS has
prepared a budgetary impact statement
or specifically addressed the regulatory
alternatives considered.
G. NCUA: The Treasury and General
Government Appropriations Act, 1999—
Assessment of Federal Regulations and
Policies on Families
The NCUA has determined that this
proposed rule would not affect family
well-being within the meaning of
section 654 of the Treasury and General
Government Appropriations Act, 1999,
Pub. L. 105–277, 112 Stat. 2681 (1998).
VII. Solicitation of Comments on Use of
Plain Language
Section 722 of the Gramm-LeachBliley Act, Pub. L. 106–102, sec. 722,
113 Stat. 1338, 1471 (Nov. 12, 1999),
requires the OCC, Board, FDIC, and OTS
to use plain language in all proposed
and final rules published after January
1, 2000. Therefore, these agencies
specifically invite your comments on
how to make this proposal easier to
understand. For example:
• Have we organized the material to
suit your needs? If not, how could this
material be better organized?
• Are the requirements in the
proposed regulations and guidelines
clearly stated? If not, how could the
regulations and guidelines be more
clearly stated?
• Do the proposed regulations and
guidelines contain language or jargon
that is not clear? If so, which language
requires clarification?
• Would a different format (grouping
and order of sections, use of headings,
paragraphing) make the regulations and
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70967
guidelines easier to understand? If so,
what changes to the format would make
them easier to understand?
• What else could we do to make the
regulations and guidelines easier to
understand?
VIII. Communications by Outside
Parties to FTC Commissioners or Their
Advisors
Written communications and
summaries or transcripts of oral
communications respecting the merits
of this proceeding from any outside
party to any FTC Commissioner or FTC
Commissioner’s advisor will be placed
on the public record. See 16 CFR
1.26(b)(5).
List of Subjects
12 CFR Part 41
Banks, banking, Consumer protection,
National Banks, Reporting and
recordkeeping requirements.
12 CFR Part 222
Banks, banking, Holding companies,
state member banks.
12 CFR Part 334
Administrative practice and
procedure, Bank deposit insurance,
Banks, banking, Reporting and
recordkeeping requirements, Safety and
soundness.
12 CFR Part 571
Consumer protection, Credit, Fair
credit reporting, Privacy, Reporting and
recordkeeping requirements, Savings
associations.
12 CFR Part 717
Consumer protection, Credit unions,
Fair credit reporting, Privacy, Reporting
and recordkeeping requirements.
16 CFR Part 660
Consumer reports, Consumer
reporting agencies, Fair credit reporting,
Information furnishers, Identity theft,
Trade practices.
Department of the Treasury
Office of the Comptroller of the
Currency
12 CFR Chapter I
Authority and Issuance
For the reasons discussed in the joint
preamble, the Office of the Comptroller
of the Currency proposes to amend
chapter I of title 12 of the Code of
Federal Regulations by amending 12
CFR part 41 as follows:
PART 41—FAIR CREDIT REPORTING
1. Revise the authority citation for
part 41 to read as follows:
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Authority: 12 U.S.C. 1 et seq., 24 (Seventh),
93a, 481, 484, and 1818; 15 U.S.C. 1681a,
1681b, 1681c, 1681m, 1681s, 1681s–2,
1681s–3, 1681t, and 1681w; Sec. 214, Pub. L.
108–159, 117 Stat. 1952.
2. Add a new subpart E to part 41 to
read as follows:
Subpart E—Duties of Furnishers of
Information
Sec.
41.40 Scope.
41.41 Definitions.
41.42 Reasonable policies and procedures
concerning the accuracy and integrity of
furnished information.
41.43 Direct disputes.
Subpart E—Duties of Furnishers of
Information
§ 41.40
Scope.
This subpart applies to a national
bank, Federal branch and agency of a
foreign bank, and their respective
operating subsidiaries that are not
functionally regulated within the
meaning of section 5(c)(5) of the Bank
Holding Company Act of 1956, as
amended (12 U.S.C. 1844(c)(5)).
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§ 41.41
Definitions.
For purposes of this subpart and
Appendix E of this part, the following
definitions apply:
Regulatory Definition Approach for
Defining ‘‘Accuracy’’ and ‘‘Integrity’’
Follows
(a) Accuracy means that any
information that a furnisher provides to
a consumer reporting agency about an
account or other relationship with the
consumer reflects without error the
terms of and liability for the account or
other relationship and the consumer’s
performance and other conduct with
respect to the account or other
relationship.
(b) Integrity means that any
information that a furnisher provides to
a consumer reporting agency about an
account or other relationship with the
consumer does not omit any term, such
as a credit limit or opening date, of that
account or other relationship, the
absence of which can reasonably be
expected to contribute to an incorrect
evaluation by a user of a consumer
report of a consumer’s creditworthiness,
credit standing, credit capacity,
character, general reputation, personal
characteristics, or mode of living.
(c) Furnisher means an entity other
than an individual consumer that
furnishes information relating to
consumers to one or more consumer
reporting agencies. An entity is not a
furnisher when it provides information
to a consumer reporting agency solely to
obtain a consumer report in accordance
with sections 604(a) and (f) of the FCRA.
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(d) Identity theft has the same
meaning as in 16 CFR 603.2(a).
(e) Direct dispute means a dispute
submitted directly to a furnisher by a
consumer concerning the accuracy of
any information contained in a
consumer report relating to the
consumer.
§ 41.42 Reasonable policies and
procedures concerning the accuracy and
integrity of furnished information.
(a) Policies and procedures. Each
furnisher must establish and implement
reasonable written policies and
procedures regarding the accuracy and
integrity of the information relating to
consumers that it furnishes to a
consumer reporting agency. The policies
and procedures must be appropriate to
the nature, size, complexity, and scope
of each furnisher’s activities.
(b) Guidelines. Each furnisher must
consider the guidelines in Appendix E
of this part in developing its policies
and procedures required by this section,
and incorporate those guidelines that
are appropriate.
(c) Reviewing and updating policies
and procedures. Each furnisher must
review its policies and procedures
required by this section periodically and
update them as necessary to ensure their
continued effectiveness.
§ 41.43
Direct disputes.
(a) General rule. Except as otherwise
provided in this section, a furnisher
must investigate a direct dispute if it
relates to:
(1) The consumer’s liability for a
credit account or other debt with the
furnisher, such as direct disputes
relating to whether there is or has been
identity theft or fraud against the
consumer, whether there is individual
or joint liability on an account, or
whether the consumer is an authorized
user of a credit account;
(2) The terms of a credit account or
other debt with the furnisher, such as
direct disputes relating to the type of
account, principal balance, scheduled
payment amount on an account, or the
amount of the reported credit limit on
an open-end account;
(3) The consumer’s performance or
other conduct concerning an account or
other relationship with the furnisher,
such as direct disputes relating to the
current payment status, high balance,
date a payment was made, the amount
of a payment made, or the date an
account was opened or closed; or
(4) Any other information contained
in a consumer report regarding an
account or other relationship with the
furnisher that bears on the consumer’s
creditworthiness, credit standing, credit
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capacity, character, general reputation,
personal characteristics, or mode of
living.
(b) Exceptions. The requirements of
paragraph (a) of this section do not
apply to a furnisher if:
(1) The direct dispute relates to:
(i) The consumer’s identifying
information (other than a direct dispute
relating to a consumer’s liability for a
credit account or other debt with the
furnisher, as provided in paragraph
(a)(1) of this section) such as name(s),
date of birth, Social Security number,
telephone number(s), or address(es);
(ii) The identity of past or present
employers;
(iii) Inquiries or requests for a
consumer report;
(iv) Information derived from public
records, such as judgments,
bankruptcies, liens, and other legal
matters (unless provided by a furnisher
with an account or other relationship
with the consumer); or
(v) Information related to fraud alerts
or active duty alerts; or
(2) The direct dispute is submitted by,
is prepared on behalf of the consumer
by, or is submitted on a form supplied
to the consumer by, a credit repair
organization, as defined in 15 U.S.C.
1679a(3), or an entity that would be a
credit repair organization, but for 15
U.S.C. 1679a(3)(B)(i).
(c) Direct dispute address. A furnisher
is required to investigate a direct
dispute only if a consumer submits a
dispute notice to the furnisher at:
(1) The address of a furnisher
provided by a furnisher and set forth on
a consumer report relating to the
consumer;
(2) An address clearly and
conspicuously specified by the
furnisher for submitting direct disputes
that is provided to the consumer in
writing or electronically (if the
consumer has agreed to the electronic
delivery of information from the
furnisher); or
(3) Any business address of the
furnisher if the furnisher has not so
specified and provided an address for
submitting direct disputes under
paragraph (c)(2) of this section.
(d) Direct dispute notice contents. A
dispute notice must include:
(1) The name, address, and telephone
number of the consumer;
(2) Sufficient information to identify
the account or other relationship that is
in dispute, such as an account number;
(3) The specific information that the
consumer is disputing and an
explanation of the basis for the dispute;
and
(4) All supporting documentation or
other information reasonably required
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by the furnisher to substantiate the basis
of the dispute. This documentation may
include, for example: A copy of the
consumer report that contains the
allegedly inaccurate information; a
police report; a fraud or identity theft
affidavit; a court order; or account
statements.
(e) Frivolous or irrelevant disputes. (1)
A furnisher is not required to investigate
a direct dispute if the furnisher has
reasonably determined that the dispute
is frivolous or irrelevant. A dispute may
be frivolous or irrelevant if:
(i) The consumer did not provide
sufficient information to investigate the
disputed information as required by
paragraph (d) of this section;
(ii) The direct dispute is substantially
the same as a dispute previously
submitted by or on behalf of the
consumer, either directly to the
furnisher or through a consumer
reporting agency, with respect to which
the furnisher has already satisfied the
applicable requirements of the Act or
this section; provided, however, that a
direct dispute is not substantially the
same as a dispute previously submitted
if the dispute includes information
listed in paragraph (d) of this section
that had not previously been provided
to the furnisher; or
(iii) The furnisher is not required to
investigate the direct dispute under this
section.
(2) Notice of determination. Upon
making a determination that a dispute is
frivolous or irrelevant, the furnisher
must notify the consumer of the
determination not later than five
business days after making the
determination, by mail or, if authorized
by the consumer for that purpose, by
any other means available to the
furnisher.
(3) Contents of notice of
determination that a dispute is frivolous
or irrelevant. A notice of determination
that a dispute is frivolous or irrelevant
must include the reasons for such
determination and identify any
information required to investigate the
disputed information, which notice may
consist of a standardized form
describing the general nature of such
information.
3. Add a new appendix E to read as
follows:
Appendix E to Part 41—Interagency
Guidelines Concerning the Accuracy
and Integrity of Information Furnished
to Consumer Reporting Agencies
The OCC encourages voluntary furnishing
of information to consumer reporting
agencies. Section 41.42 of this part requires
each furnisher to establish and implement
reasonable written policies and procedures
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concerning the accuracy and integrity of the
information it furnishes to consumer
reporting agencies. Under § 41.42(b), the
furnisher must consider the guidelines set
forth below in developing these policies and
procedures. In establishing these policies and
procedures, a furnisher may include any of
its existing policies and procedures that are
relevant and appropriate.
I. Nature, Scope, and Objectives of Policies
and Procedures
A. Nature and Scope. Section 41.42(a) of
this part requires that a furnisher’s policies
and procedures be appropriate to the nature,
size, complexity, and scope of the furnisher’s
activities. The furnisher’s policies and
procedures should reflect, for example:
1. The types of business activities in which
the furnisher engages;
2. The nature and frequency of the
information the furnisher provides to
consumer reporting agencies; and
3. The technology used by the furnisher to
furnish information to consumer reporting
agencies.
Regulatory Definition Approach for
Paragraph B Follows
B. Objectives. A furnisher should have
written policies and procedures reasonably
designed to accomplish the following
objectives:
1. Ensure that the information it furnishes
about accounts or other relationships with a
consumer:
(a) Accurately identifies the appropriate
consumer;
(b) Accurately reports the terms of those
accounts or other relationships; and
(c) Accurately reports the consumer’s
performance and other conduct with respect
to the account or other relationship with the
consumer;
2. Ensure that the information it furnishes
about accounts or other relationships with a
consumer avoids misleading a consumer
report user as to the consumer’s
creditworthiness, credit standing, credit
capacity, character, general reputation,
personal characteristics, or mode of living;
3. Ensure that it conducts reasonable
investigations of consumer disputes about
the accuracy or integrity of information in
consumer reports and takes appropriate
actions based on the outcome of such
investigations;
4. Ensure that it updates information it
furnishes as necessary to reflect the current
status of the consumer’s account or other
relationship, including:
(a) Any transfer of an account (e.g., by sale
or assignment for collection) to a third party;
and
(b) Any cure of the consumer’s failure to
abide by the terms of the account or other
relationship;
5. Ensure that the information it furnishes
about accounts or other relationships with a
consumer is reported in a form and manner
that is designed to minimize the likelihood
that the information, although accurate, may
be erroneously reflected in a consumer
report, for example, by ensuring that the
information is reported with appropriate
identifying information about the consumer
to whom it pertains, in a standardized and
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clearly understandable form and manner, and
with a date specifying the time period to
which the information pertains; and
6. Ensure that the information it furnishes
about accounts or other relationships with a
consumer is substantiated by the furnisher’s
own records.
Guidelines Definition Approach for
Paragraph B Follows
B. Objectives. A furnisher should have
written policies and procedures reasonably
designed to accomplish the following
objectives:
1. Ensure that the information it furnishes
about accounts or other relationships with a
consumer is accurate. Accuracy means that
any information that a furnisher provides to
a consumer reporting agency about an
account or other relationship with the
consumer reflects without error the terms of
and liability for the account or other
relationship and the consumer’s performance
and other conduct with respect to the
account or other relationship;
2. Ensure that the information it furnishes
about accounts or other relationships with a
consumer is furnished with integrity.
Integrity means that any information that a
furnisher provides to a consumer reporting
agency about an account or other relationship
with the consumer is:
(i) Reported in a form and manner that is
designed to minimize the likelihood that the
information, although accurate, may be
erroneously reflected in a consumer report,
for example, by ensuring that the information
is:
(A) Reported with appropriate identifying
information about the consumer to whom it
pertains;
(B) Reported in a standardized and clearly
understandable form and manner; and
(C) Reported with a date specifying the
time period to which the information
pertains; and
(ii) Substantiated by the furnisher’s own
records;
3. Ensure that it conducts reasonable
investigations of consumer disputes about
the accuracy or integrity of information in
consumer reports and takes appropriate
actions based on the outcome of such
investigations; and
4. Ensure that it updates information it
furnishes as necessary to reflect the current
status of the consumer’s account or other
relationship, including:
(a) Any transfer of an account (e.g., by sale
or assignment for collection) to a third party;
and
(b) Any cure of the consumer’s failure to
abide by the terms of the account or other
relationship.
II. Accuracy and Integrity Duties of
Furnishers Under the FCRA
A furnisher’s policies and procedures
should address compliance with all
applicable requirements imposed on the
furnisher under the FCRA, including the
duties to:1
1 This is not a complete listing of furnisher duties
relating to accuracy and integrity. Furnishers
should consult the FCRA to determine what
additional duties may apply.
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A. Promptly notify the consumer reporting
agency of the furnisher’s determination that
furnished information is not complete or
accurate, for a furnisher that regularly and in
the ordinary course of business furnishes
information; provide any corrections, or any
additional information, that is necessary to
make the furnished information complete
and accurate; and not thereafter furnish
information that remains incomplete or
inaccurate. 15 U.S.C. 1681s–2(a)(2).
B. Provide notice of a dispute by a
consumer about the accuracy or
completeness of information furnished to a
consumer reporting agency. 15 U.S.C. 1681s–
2(a)(3).
C. Report voluntary closure of a credit
account by the consumer in information
regularly furnished for the period in which
the credit account is closed, for a furnisher
that regularly and in the ordinary course of
business furnishes information about
consumer credit accounts. 15 U.S.C. 1681s–
2(a)(4).
D. Notify the consumer reporting agency of
the date of delinquency on an account not
later than 90 days after the furnisher
furnishes information to the consumer
reporting agency regarding action taken on
the delinquent account (including placement
for collection, charge to profit or loss, or any
similar action). Date of delinquency means
the month and year of the commencement of
the delinquency on the account that
immediately preceded the action. 15 U.S.C.
1681s–2(a)(5).
E. Have in place reasonable procedures to
respond to any notification that the furnisher
receives from a consumer reporting agency
under section 605B of the FCRA, relating to
the blocking of information resulting from
identity theft and to prevent the refurnishing
of such blocked information. 15 U.S.C.
1681s–2(a)(6)(A).
F. Not furnish to a consumer reporting
agency information that purports to relate to
the consumer if the consumer submits an
identity theft report to the furnisher (at the
address specified by that furnisher for
receiving such reports) stating that such
information maintained by that furnisher
resulted from identity theft. (This restriction
does not apply if the furnisher subsequently
knows or is informed by the consumer that
the information is correct.) 15 U.S.C. 1681s–
2(a)(6)(B).
G. After receiving a notice of dispute from
a consumer reporting agency, in a timely
manner: Conduct an investigation; review all
relevant information the consumer reporting
agency provides; report the results of the
investigation to the consumer reporting
agency; report incomplete or inaccurate
information to all nationwide consumer
reporting agencies to which it reported the
information; and modify, delete, or
permanently block incomplete or inaccurate
information or information that cannot be
verified. 15 U.S.C. 1681s–2(b).
H. Investigate direct disputes as required
by 12 CFR 41.43 and 15 U.S.C. 1681s–2(a)(8).
III. Establishing and Implementing Policies
and Procedures
In establishing and implementing its
policies and procedures, a furnisher should:
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A. Identify practices or activities of the
furnisher that can compromise the accuracy
and integrity of information furnished to
consumer reporting agencies, such as by:
1. Reviewing its existing practices and
activities, including the technological means
and other methods it uses to furnish
information to consumer reporting agencies
and the frequency and timing of its
furnishing of information, such as through an
audit;
2. Reviewing historical records relating to
accuracy or integrity or to disputes, or other
information relating to the accuracy and
integrity of information provided by the
furnisher to consumer reporting agencies and
the types of errors, omissions, or other
problems that may have affected the accuracy
and integrity of information it has furnished
about consumers to consumer reporting
agencies; and
3. Obtaining feedback from consumer
reporting agencies, consumers, the
furnisher’s staff, or other appropriate parties.
B. Evaluate the effectiveness of existing
policies and procedures of the furnisher
regarding the accuracy and integrity of
information furnished to consumer reporting
agencies; consider whether new, additional,
or different policies and procedures are
necessary; and consider whether
implementation of existing policies and
procedures should be modified to enhance
the accuracy and integrity of information
about consumers furnished to consumer
reporting agencies.
C. Evaluate the effectiveness of specific
methods (including technological means) the
furnisher uses to provide information to
consumer reporting agencies; how those
methods may affect the accuracy and
integrity of the information it provides to
consumer reporting agencies; and whether
new, additional, or different methods
(including technological means) should be
used to provide information to consumer
reporting agencies to enhance the accuracy
and integrity of that information.
IV. Specific Components of Policies and
Procedures
A furnisher’s policies and procedures
should address the following:
A. Establishing and implementing a system
for furnishing information about consumers
to consumer reporting agencies that is
appropriate to the nature, size, complexity,
and scope of the furnisher’s business
operations.
B. Using standard data reporting formats
and standard procedures for compiling and
furnishing data, where feasible, such as the
electronic transmission of information about
consumers to consumer reporting agencies.
C. Ensuring that the furnisher maintains its
own records for a reasonable period of time,
not less than any applicable recordkeeping
requirement, in order to substantiate the
accuracy of any information about consumers
it furnishes that is subject to a direct dispute.
D. Establishing and implementing
appropriate internal controls regarding the
accuracy and integrity of information about
consumers furnished to consumer reporting
agencies, such as by implementing standard
procedures, verifying random samples, and
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conducting regular reviews of information
provided to consumer reporting agencies.
E. Training staff that participates in
activities related to the furnishing of
information about consumers to consumer
reporting agencies to implement the policies
and procedures.
F. Providing for appropriate and effective
oversight of relevant service providers whose
activities may affect the accuracy and
integrity of information about consumers
furnished to consumer reporting agencies to
ensure compliance with the policies and
procedures.
G. Furnishing information about
consumers to consumer reporting agencies
following mergers, portfolio acquisitions or
sales, or other acquisitions or transfers of
accounts or other debts in a manner that
prevents re-aging of information, duplicative
reporting, or other problems affecting the
accuracy or integrity of the information
furnished.
H. Attempting to obtain the information
listed in § 41.43(d) from a consumer before
determining that the consumer’s dispute is
frivolous or irrelevant.
I. Ensuring that deletions, updates, and
corrections furnished to consumer reporting
agencies are reflected in business systems to
avoid furnishing erroneous information.
J. Conducting investigations of direct
disputes in a manner that promotes the
efficient resolution of such disputes.
K. Ensuring that technological and other
means of communication with consumer
reporting agencies are designed to prevent
duplicative reporting of accounts, erroneous
association of information with the wrong
consumer(s), and other occurrences that may
compromise the accuracy and integrity of
information contained in consumer reports.
L. Providing consumer reporting agencies
with sufficient identifying information in the
furnisher’s possession about each consumer
about whom information is furnished to
enable the consumer reporting agency
properly to identify the consumer.
M. Conducting a periodic evaluation of its
own practices, consumer reporting agency
practices of which the furnisher is aware,
investigations of disputed information,
corrections of inaccurate information, means
of communication, and other factors that may
affect the accuracy and integrity of
information furnished to consumer reporting
agencies.
Board of Governors of the Federal
Reserve System
12 CFR Chapter II
Authority and Issuance
For the reasons set forth in the joint
preamble, part 222 of title 12, chapter II,
of the Code of Federal Regulations is
proposed to be amended as follows:
PART 222—FAIR CREDIT REPORTING
(REGULATION V)
1. The authority citation for part 222
continues to read as follows:
Authority: 15 U.S.C. 1681a, 1681b, 1681c,
1681m, 1681s, 1681s–2, 1681s–3, 1681t, and
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1681w; Secs. 3 and 214, Pub. L. 108–159, 117
Stat. 1952.
2. A new Subpart E is added to part
222 to read as follows:
Subpart E—Duties of Furnishers of
Information
Sec.
222.40 Scope.
222.41 Definitions.
222.42 Reasonable policies and procedures
concerning the accuracy and integrity of
furnished information.
222.43 Direct disputes.
Subpart E—Duties of Furnishers of
Information
§ 222.40
Scope.
Subpart E of this part applies to
member banks of the Federal Reserve
System (other than national banks) and
their respective operating subsidiaries
that are not functionally regulated
within the meaning of section 5(c)(5) of
the Bank Holding Company Act, as
amended (12 U.S.C. 1844(c)(5)),
branches and Agencies of foreign banks
(other than Federal branches, Federal
Agencies, and insured State branches of
foreign banks), commercial lending
companies owned or controlled by
foreign banks, and organizations
operating under section 25 or 25A of the
Federal Reserve Act (12 U.S.C. 601 et
seq., and 611 et seq.).
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§ 222.41
Definitions.
For purposes of this subpart and
Appendix E of this part, the following
definitions apply:
Regulatory Definition Approach for
Defining ‘‘Accuracy’’ and ‘‘Integrity’’
Follows:
(a) Accuracy means that any
information that a furnisher provides to
a consumer reporting agency about an
account or other relationship with the
consumer reflects without error the
terms of and liability for the account or
other relationship and the consumer’s
performance and other conduct with
respect to the account or other
relationship.
(b) Integrity means that any
information that a furnisher provides to
a consumer reporting agency about an
account or other relationship with the
consumer does not omit any term, such
as a credit limit or opening date, of that
account or other relationship, the
absence of which can reasonably be
expected to contribute to an incorrect
evaluation by a user of a consumer
report of a consumer’s creditworthiness,
credit standing, credit capacity,
character, general reputation, personal
characteristics, or mode of living.
(c) Furnisher means an entity other
than an individual consumer that
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furnishes information relating to
consumers to one or more consumer
reporting agencies. An entity is not a
furnisher when it provides information
to a consumer reporting agency solely to
obtain a consumer report in accordance
with sections 604(a) and (f) of the FCRA.
(d) Identity theft has the same
meaning as in 16 CFR 603.2(a).
(e) Direct dispute means a dispute
submitted directly to a furnisher by a
consumer concerning the accuracy of
any information contained in a
consumer report relating to the
consumer.
§ 222.42 Reasonable policies and
procedures concerning the accuracy and
integrity of furnished information.
(a) Policies and procedures. Each
furnisher must establish and implement
reasonable written policies and
procedures regarding the accuracy and
integrity of the information relating to
consumers that it furnishes to a
consumer reporting agency. The policies
and procedures must be appropriate to
the nature, size, complexity, and scope
of each furnisher’s activities.
(b) Guidelines. Each furnisher must
consider the guidelines in Appendix E
of this part in developing its policies
and procedures required by this section,
and incorporate those guidelines that
are appropriate.
(c) Reviewing and updating policies
and procedures. Each furnisher must
review its policies and procedures
required by this section periodically and
update them as necessary to ensure their
continued effectiveness.
§ 222.43
Direct disputes.
(a) General rule. Except as otherwise
provided in this section, a furnisher
must investigate a direct dispute if it
relates to:
(1) The consumer’s liability for a
credit account or other debt with the
furnisher, such as direct disputes
relating to whether there is or has been
identity theft or fraud against the
consumer, whether there is individual
or joint liability on an account, or
whether the consumer is an authorized
user of a credit account;
(2) The terms of a credit account or
other debt with the furnisher, such as
direct disputes relating to the type of
account, principal balance, scheduled
payment amount on an account, or the
amount of the reported credit limit on
an open-end account;
(3) The consumer’s performance or
other conduct concerning an account or
other relationship with the furnisher,
such as direct disputes relating to the
current payment status, high balance,
date a payment was made, the amount
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of a payment made, or the date an
account was opened or closed; or
(4) Any other information contained
in a consumer report regarding an
account or other relationship with the
furnisher that bears on the consumer’s
creditworthiness, credit standing, credit
capacity, character, general reputation,
personal characteristics, or mode of
living.
(b) Exceptions. The requirements of
paragraph (a) of this section do not
apply to a furnisher if:
(1) The direct dispute relates to:
(i) The consumer’s identifying
information (other than a direct dispute
relating to a consumer’s liability for a
credit account or other debt with the
furnisher, as provided in paragraph
(a)(1) of this section) such as name(s),
date of birth, Social Security number,
telephone number(s), or address(es);
(ii) The identity of past or present
employers;
(iii) Inquiries or requests for a
consumer report;
(iv) Information derived from public
records, such as judgments,
bankruptcies, liens, and other legal
matters (unless provided by a furnisher
with an account or other relationship
with the consumer); or
(v) Information related to fraud alerts
or active duty alerts; or
(2) The direct dispute is submitted by,
is prepared on behalf of the consumer
by, or is submitted on a form supplied
to the consumer by, a credit repair
organization, as defined in 15 U.S.C.
1679a(3), or an entity that would be a
credit repair organization, but for 15
U.S.C. 1679a(3)(B)(i).
(c) Direct dispute address. A furnisher
is required to investigate a direct
dispute only if a consumer submits a
dispute notice to the furnisher at:
(1) The address of a furnisher
provided by a furnisher and set forth on
a consumer report relating to the
consumer;
(2) An address clearly and
conspicuously specified by the
furnisher for submitting direct disputes
that is provided to the consumer in
writing or electronically (if the
consumer has agreed to the electronic
delivery of information from the
furnisher); or
(3) Any business address of the
furnisher if the furnisher has not so
specified and provided an address for
submitting direct disputes under
paragraph (c)(2) of this section.
(d) Direct dispute notice contents. A
dispute notice must include:
(1) The name, address, and telephone
number of the consumer;
(2) Sufficient information to identify
the account or other relationship that is
in dispute, such as an account number;
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(3) The specific information that the
consumer is disputing and an
explanation of the basis for the dispute;
and
(4) All supporting documentation or
other information reasonably required
by the furnisher to substantiate the basis
of the dispute. This documentation may
include, for example: a copy of the
consumer report that contains the
allegedly inaccurate information; a
police report; a fraud or identity theft
affidavit; a court order; or account
statements.
(e) Frivolous or irrelevant disputes. (1)
A furnisher is not required to investigate
a direct dispute if the furnisher has
reasonably determined that the dispute
is frivolous or irrelevant. A dispute may
be frivolous or irrelevant if:
(i) The consumer did not provide
sufficient information to investigate the
disputed information as required by
paragraph (d) of this section;
(ii) The direct dispute is substantially
the same as a dispute previously
submitted by or on behalf of the
consumer, either directly to the
furnisher or through a consumer
reporting agency, with respect to which
the furnisher has already satisfied the
applicable requirements of the Act or
this section; provided, however, that a
direct dispute is not substantially the
same as a dispute previously submitted
if the dispute includes information
listed in paragraph (d) of this section
that had not previously been provided
to the furnisher; or
(iii) The furnisher is not required to
investigate the direct dispute under this
section.
(2) Notice of determination. Upon
making a determination that a dispute is
frivolous or irrelevant, the furnisher
must notify the consumer of the
determination not later than five
business days after making the
determination, by mail or, if authorized
by the consumer for that purpose, by
any other means available to the
furnisher.
(3) Contents of notice of
determination that a dispute is frivolous
or irrelevant. A notice of determination
that a dispute is frivolous or irrelevant
must include the reasons for such
determination and identify any
information required to investigate the
disputed information, which may notice
consist of a standardized form
describing the general nature of such
information.
3. A new Appendix E is added to part
222 to read as follows:
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Appendix E to Part 222—Interagency
Guidelines Concerning the Accuracy
and Integrity of Information Furnished
to Consumer Reporting Agencies
The Board encourages voluntary furnishing
of information to consumer reporting
agencies. Section 222.42 of this part requires
each furnisher to establish and implement
reasonable written policies and procedures
concerning the accuracy and integrity of the
information it furnishes to consumer
reporting agencies. Under § 222.42(b), the
furnisher must consider the guidelines set
forth below in developing these policies and
procedures. In establishing these policies and
procedures, a furnisher may include any of
its existing policies and procedures that are
relevant and appropriate.
I. Nature, Scope, and Objectives of Policies
and Procedures
A. Nature and Scope. Section 222.42(a) of
this part requires that a furnisher’s policies
and procedures be appropriate to the nature,
size, complexity, and scope of the furnisher’s
activities. The furnisher’s policies and
procedures should reflect, for example:
1. The types of business activities in which
the furnisher engages;
2. The nature and frequency of the
information the furnisher provides to
consumer reporting agencies; and
3. The technology used by the furnisher to
furnish information to consumer reporting
agencies.
Regulatory Definition Approach for
Paragraph B Follows:
B. Objectives. A furnisher should have
written policies and procedures reasonably
designed to accomplish the following
objectives:
1. Ensure that the information it furnishes
about accounts or other relationships with a
consumer:
(a) Accurately identifies the appropriate
consumer;
(b) Accurately reports the terms of those
accounts or other relationships; and
(c) Accurately reports the consumer’s
performance and other conduct with respect
to the account or other relationship with the
consumer;
2. Ensure that the information it furnishes
about accounts or other relationships with a
consumer avoids misleading a consumer
report user as to the consumer’s
creditworthiness, credit standing, credit
capacity, character, general reputation,
personal characteristics, or mode of living;
3. Ensure that it conducts reasonable
investigations of consumer disputes about
the accuracy or integrity of information in
consumer reports and takes appropriate
actions based on the outcome of such
investigations;
4. Ensure that it updates information it
furnishes as necessary to reflect the current
status of the consumer’s account or other
relationship, including:
(a) Any transfer of an account (e.g., by sale
or assignment for collection) to a third party;
and
(b) Any cure of the consumer’s failure to
abide by the terms of the account or other
relationship;
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5. Ensure that the information it furnishes
about accounts or other relationships with a
consumer is reported in a form and manner
that is designed to minimize the likelihood
that the information, although accurate, may
be erroneously reflected in a consumer
report, for example, by ensuring that the
information is reported with appropriate
identifying information about the consumer
to whom it pertains, in a standardized and
clearly understandable form and manner, and
with a date specifying the time period to
which the information pertains; and
6. Ensure that the information it furnishes
about accounts or other relationships with a
consumer is substantiated by the furnisher’s
own records.
Guidelines Definition Approach for
Paragraph B Follows:
B. Objectives. A furnisher should have
written policies and procedures reasonably
designed to accomplish the following
objectives:
1. Ensure that the information it furnishes
about accounts or other relationships with a
consumer is accurate. Accuracy means that
any information that a furnisher provides to
a consumer reporting agency about an
account or other relationship with the
consumer reflects without error the terms of
and liability for the account or other
relationship and the consumer’s performance
and other conduct with respect to the
account or other relationship;
2. Ensure that the information it furnishes
about accounts or other relationships with a
consumer is furnished with integrity.
Integrity means that any information that a
furnisher provides to a consumer reporting
agency about an account or other relationship
with the consumer is:
(i) Reported in a form and manner that is
designed to minimize the likelihood that the
information, although accurate, may be
erroneously reflected in a consumer report,
for example, by ensuring that the information
is:
(A) Reported with appropriate identifying
information about the consumer to whom it
pertains;
(B) Reported in a standardized and clearly
understandable form and manner; and
(C) Reported with a date specifying the
time period to which the information
pertains; and
(ii) Substantiated by the furnisher’s own
records;
3. Ensure that it conducts reasonable
investigations of consumer disputes about
the accuracy or integrity of information in
consumer reports and takes appropriate
actions based on the outcome of such
investigations; and
4. Ensure that it updates information it
furnishes as necessary to reflect the current
status of the consumer’s account or other
relationship, including:
(a) Any transfer of an account (e.g., by sale
or assignment for collection) to a third party;
and
(b) Any cure of the consumer’s failure to
abide by the terms of the account or other
relationship.
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II. Accuracy and Integrity Duties of
Furnishers Under the FCRA
A furnisher’s policies and procedures
should address compliance with all
applicable requirements imposed on the
furnisher under the FCRA, including the
duties to: 1
A. Promptly notify the consumer reporting
agency of the furnisher’s determination that
furnished information is not complete or
accurate, for a furnisher that regularly and in
the ordinary course of business furnishes
information; provide any corrections, or any
additional information, that is necessary to
make the furnished information complete
and accurate; and not thereafter furnish
information that remains incomplete or
inaccurate. 15 U.S.C. 1681s–2(a)(2).
B. Provide notice of a dispute by a
consumer about the accuracy or
completeness of information furnished to a
consumer reporting agency. 15 U.S.C. 1681s–
2(a)(3).
C. Report voluntary closure of a credit
account by the consumer in information
regularly furnished for the period in which
the credit account is closed, for a furnisher
that regularly and in the ordinary course of
business furnishes information about
consumer credit accounts. 15 U.S.C. 1681s–
2(a)(4).
D. Notify the consumer reporting agency of
the date of delinquency on an account not
later than 90 days after the furnisher
furnishes information to the consumer
reporting agency regarding action taken on
the delinquent account (including placement
for collection, charge to profit or loss, or any
similar action). Date of delinquency means
the month and year of the commencement of
the delinquency on the account that
immediately preceded the action. 15 U.S.C.
1681s–2(a)(5).
E. Have in place reasonable procedures to
respond to any notification that the furnisher
receives from a consumer reporting agency
under section 605B of the FCRA, relating to
the blocking of information resulting from
identity theft and to prevent the refurnishing
of such blocked information. 15 U.S.C.
1681s–2(a)(6)(A).
F. Not furnish to a consumer reporting
agency information that purports to relate to
the consumer if the consumer submits an
identity theft report to the furnisher (at the
address specified by that furnisher for
receiving such reports) stating that such
information maintained by that furnisher
resulted from identity theft. (This restriction
does not apply if the furnisher subsequently
knows or is informed by the consumer that
the information is correct.) 15 U.S.C. 1681s–
2(a)(6)(B).
G. After receiving a notice of dispute from
a consumer reporting agency, in a timely
manner: Conduct an investigation; review all
relevant information the consumer reporting
agency provides; report the results of the
investigation to the consumer reporting
agency; report incomplete or inaccurate
information to all nationwide consumer
1 This
is not a complete listing of furnisher duties
relating to accuracy and integrity. Furnishers
should consult the FCRA to determine what
additional duties may apply.
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Jkt 214001
reporting agencies to which it reported the
information; and modify, delete, or
permanently block incomplete or inaccurate
information or information that cannot be
verified. 15 U.S.C. 1681s–2(b).
H. Investigate direct disputes as required
by 12 CFR 222.43 and 15 U.S.C. 1681s–
2(a)(8).
III. Establishing and Implementing Policies
and Procedures
In establishing and implementing its
policies and procedures, a furnisher should:
A. Identify practices or activities of the
furnisher that can compromise the accuracy
and integrity of information furnished to
consumer reporting agencies, such as by:
1. Reviewing its existing practices and
activities, including the technological means
and other methods it uses to furnish
information to consumer reporting agencies
and the frequency and timing of its
furnishing of information, such as through an
audit;
2. Reviewing historical records relating to
accuracy or integrity or to disputes, or other
information relating to the accuracy and
integrity of information provided by the
furnisher to consumer reporting agencies and
the types of errors, omissions, or other
problems that may have affected the accuracy
and integrity of information it has furnished
about consumers to consumer reporting
agencies; and
3. Obtaining feedback from consumer
reporting agencies, consumers, the
furnisher’s staff, or other appropriate parties.
B. Evaluate the effectiveness of existing
policies and procedures of the furnisher
regarding the accuracy and integrity of
information furnished to consumer reporting
agencies; consider whether new, additional,
or different policies and procedures are
necessary; and consider whether
implementation of existing policies and
procedures should be modified to enhance
the accuracy and integrity of information
about consumers furnished to consumer
reporting agencies.
C. Evaluate the effectiveness of specific
methods (including technological means) the
furnisher uses to provide information to
consumer reporting agencies; how those
methods may affect the accuracy and
integrity of the information it provides to
consumer reporting agencies; and whether
new, additional, or different methods
(including technological means) should be
used to provide information to consumer
reporting agencies to enhance the accuracy
and integrity of that information.
IV. Specific Components of Policies and
Procedures
A furnisher’s policies and procedures
should address the following:
A. Establishing and implementing a system
for furnishing information about consumers
to consumer reporting agencies that is
appropriate to the nature, size, complexity,
and scope of the furnisher’s business
operations.
B. Using standard data reporting formats
and standard procedures for compiling and
furnishing data, where feasible, such as the
electronic transmission of information about
consumers to consumer reporting agencies.
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70973
C. Ensuring that the furnisher maintains its
own records for a reasonable period of time,
not less than any applicable recordkeeping
requirement, in order to substantiate the
accuracy of any information about consumers
it furnishes that is subject to a direct dispute.
D. Establishing and implementing
appropriate internal controls regarding the
accuracy and integrity of information about
consumers furnished to consumer reporting
agencies, such as by implementing standard
procedures, verifying random samples, and
conducting regular reviews of information
provided to consumer reporting agencies.
E. Training staff that participates in
activities related to the furnishing of
information about consumers to consumer
reporting agencies to implement the policies
and procedures.
F. Providing for appropriate and effective
oversight of relevant service providers whose
activities may affect the accuracy and
integrity of information about consumers
furnished to consumer reporting agencies to
ensure compliance with the policies and
procedures.
G. Furnishing information about
consumers to consumer reporting agencies
following mergers, portfolio acquisitions or
sales, or other acquisitions or transfers of
accounts or other debts in a manner that
prevents re-aging of information, duplicative
reporting, or other problems affecting the
accuracy or integrity of the information
furnished.
H. Attempting to obtain the information
listed in § 222.43(d) of this part from a
consumer before determining that the
consumer’s dispute is frivolous or irrelevant.
I. Ensuring that deletions, updates, and
corrections furnished to consumer reporting
agencies are reflected in business systems to
avoid furnishing erroneous information.
J. Conducting investigations of direct
disputes in a manner that promotes the
efficient resolution of such disputes.
K. Ensuring that technological and other
means of communication with consumer
reporting agencies are designed to prevent
duplicative reporting of accounts, erroneous
association of information with the wrong
consumer(s), and other occurrences that may
compromise the accuracy and integrity of
information contained in consumer reports.
L. Providing consumer reporting agencies
with sufficient identifying information in the
furnisher’s possession about each consumer
about whom information is furnished to
enable the consumer reporting agency
properly to identify the consumer.
M. Conducting a periodic evaluation of its
own practices, consumer reporting agency
practices of which the furnisher is aware,
investigations of disputed information,
corrections of inaccurate information, means
of communication, and other factors that may
affect the accuracy and integrity of
information furnished to consumer reporting
agencies.
Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation
12 CFR Chapter III
Authority and Issuance
For the reasons discussed in the joint
preamble, the Federal Deposit Insurance
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Federal Register / Vol. 72, No. 239 / Thursday, December 13, 2007 / Proposed Rules
Corporation proposes to amend chapter
III of title 12 of the Code of Federal
Regulations by amending 12 CFR part
334 as follows:
PART 334—FAIR CREDIT REPORTING
1. The authority citation for part 334
is revised to read as follows:
Authority: 12 U.S.C. 1818, 1819 (Tenth),
and 1831p–1; 15 U.S.C. 1681a, 1681b, 1681c,
1681m, 1681s, 1681s–2, 1681s–3, 1681t,
1681w, and 6801 et seq.; Pub. L. 108–159,
117 Stat. 1952.
2. Add subpart E to part 334 to read
as follows:
Subpart E—Duties of Furnishers of
Information
Sec.
334.40 Scope.
334.41 Definitions.
334.42 Reasonable policies and procedures
concerning the accuracy and integrity of
furnished information.
334.43 Direct disputes.
Subpart E—Duties of Furnishers of
Information
§ 334.40
Scope.
This subpart applies to a financial
institution or creditor that is an insured
state nonmember bank, insured state
licensed branch of a foreign bank, or a
subsidiary of such entities (except
dealers, persons providing insurance,
investment companies, and investment
advisers).
jlentini on PROD1PC65 with PROPOSALS2
§ 334.41
Definitions.
For purposes of this subpart and
Appendix E of this part, the following
definitions apply:
Regulatory Definition Approach for
Defining ‘‘Accuracy’’ and ‘‘Integrity’’
Follows:
(a) Accuracy means that any
information that a furnisher provides to
a consumer reporting agency about an
account or other relationship with the
consumer that reflects without error the
terms of and liability for the account or
other relationship and the consumer’s
performance and other conduct with
respect to the account or other
relationship.
(b) Integrity means that any
information that a furnisher provides to
a consumer reporting agency about an
account or other relationship with the
consumer does not omit any term, such
as a credit limit or opening date, of that
account or other relationship, the
absence of which can reasonably be
expected to contribute to an incorrect
evaluation by a user of a consumer
report of a consumer’s creditworthiness,
credit standing, credit capacity,
character, general reputation, personal
characteristics, or mode of living.
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(c) Furnisher means an entity that
furnishes information relating to
consumers to one or more consumer
reporting agencies. An entity is not a
furnisher when it provides information
to a consumer reporting agency solely to
obtain a consumer report in accordance
with sections 604(a) and (f) of the FCRA.
(d) Identity theft has the same
meaning as in 16 CFR 603.2(a).
(e) Direct dispute means a dispute
submitted directly to a furnisher by a
consumer concerning the accuracy of
any information contained in a
consumer report relating to the
consumer.
§ 334.42 Reasonable policies and
procedures concerning the accuracy and
integrity of furnished information.
(a) Policies and procedures. Each
furnisher must establish and implement
reasonable written policies and
procedures regarding the accuracy and
integrity of the information relating to
consumers that it furnishes to a
consumer reporting agency. The policies
and procedures must be appropriate to
the nature, size, complexity, and scope
of each furnisher’s activities.
(b) Guidelines. Each furnisher must
consider the guidelines in Appendix E
of this part in developing its policies
and procedures required by this section,
and incorporate those guidelines that
are appropriate.
(c) Reviewing and updating policies
and procedures. Each furnisher must
review its policies and procedures
required by this section periodically and
update them as necessary to ensure their
continued effectiveness.
§ 334.43
Direct disputes.
(a) General rule. Except as otherwise
provided in this section, a furnisher
must investigate a direct dispute if it
relates to:
(1) The consumer’s liability for a
credit account or other debt with the
furnisher, such as direct disputes
relating to whether there is or has been
identity theft or fraud against the
consumer, whether there is individual
or joint liability on an account, or
whether the consumer is an authorized
user of a credit account;
(2) The terms of a credit account or
other debt with the furnisher, such as
direct disputes relating to the type of
account, principal balance, scheduled
payment amount on an account, or the
amount of the reported credit limit on
an open-end account;
(3) The consumer’s performance or
other conduct concerning an account or
other relationship with the furnisher,
such as direct disputes relating to the
current payment status, high balance,
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date a payment was made, the amount
of a payment made, or the date an
account was opened or closed; or
(4) Any other information contained
in a consumer report regarding an
account or other relationship with the
furnisher that bears on the consumer’s
credit worthiness, credit standing, credit
capacity, character, general reputation,
personal characteristics, or mode of
living.
(b) Exceptions. The requirements of
paragraph (a) of this section do not
apply to a furnisher if:
(1) The direct dispute relates to:
(i) The consumer’s identifying
information (other than a direct dispute
relating to a consumer’s liability for a
credit account or other debt with the
furnisher, as provided in paragraph
(a)(1) of this section) such as name(s),
date of birth, Social Security number,
telephone number(s), or address(es);
(ii) The identity of past or present
employers;
(iii) Inquiries or requests for a
consumer report;
(iv) Information derived from public
records, such as judgments,
bankruptcies, liens, and other legal
matters; or
(v) Information related to fraud alerts
or active duty alerts; or
(2) The direct dispute is submitted by,
is prepared on behalf of the consumer
by, or is submitted on a form supplied
to the consumer by, a credit repair
organization, as defined in 15 U.S.C.
1679a(3), or an entity that would be a
credit repair organization, but for 15
U.S.C. 1679a(3)(B)(i).
(c) Direct dispute address. A furnisher
is required to investigate a direct
dispute only if a consumer submits a
dispute notice to the furnisher at:
(1) The address of a furnisher
provided by a furnisher and set forth on
a consumer report relating to the
consumer;
(2) An address clearly and
conspicuously specified by the
furnisher for submitting direct disputes
that is provided to the consumer in
writing or electronically (if the
consumer has agreed to the electronic
delivery of information from the
furnisher); or
(3) Any business address of the
furnisher if the furnisher has not so
specified and provided an address for
submitting direct disputes under
paragraph (c)(2) of this section.
(d) Direct dispute notice contents. A
dispute notice must include:
(1) The name, address, and telephone
number of the consumer;
(2) Sufficient information to identify
the account or other relationship that is
in dispute, such as an account number;
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(3) The specific information that the
consumer is disputing and an
explanation of the basis for the dispute;
and
(4) All supporting documentation or
other information reasonably required
by the furnisher to substantiate the basis
of the dispute. This documentation may
include, for example: a copy of the
consumer report that contains the
allegedly inaccurate information; a
police report; a fraud or identity theft
affidavit; a court order; or account
statements.
(e) Frivolous or irrelevant disputes. (1)
A furnisher is not required to investigate
a direct dispute if the furnisher has
reasonably determined that the dispute
is frivolous or irrelevant. A dispute may
be frivolous or irrelevant if:
(i) The consumer did not provide
sufficient information to investigate the
disputed information as required by
paragraph (d) of this section;
(ii) The direct dispute is substantially
the same as a dispute previously
submitted by or on behalf of the
consumer, either directly to the
furnisher or through a consumer
reporting agency, with respect to which
the furnisher has already satisfied the
applicable requirements of the Act or
this section; provided, however, that a
direct dispute is not substantially the
same as a dispute previously submitted
if the dispute includes information
listed in paragraph (d) of this section
that had not previously been provided
to the furnisher; or
(iii) The furnisher is not required to
investigate the direct dispute under this
section.
(2) Notice of determination. Upon
making a determination that a dispute is
frivolous or irrelevant, the furnisher
must notify the consumer of the
determination not later than five
business days after making the
determination, by mail or, if authorized
by the consumer for that purpose, by
any other means available to the
furnisher.
(3) Contents of notice of
determination that a dispute is frivolous
or irrelevant. A notice of determination
that a dispute is frivolous or irrelevant
must include the reasons for such
determination and identify any
information required to investigate the
disputed information, which may
consist of a standardized form
describing the general nature of such
information.
3. Add Appendix E to part 334 to read
as follows:
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Appendix E to Part 334—Interagency
Guidelines Concerning the Accuracy
and Integrity of Information Furnished
to Consumer Reporting Agencies
The FDIC encourages voluntary furnishing
of information to consumer reporting
agencies. Section 334.42 of this part requires
each furnisher to establish and implement
reasonable written policies and procedures
concerning the accuracy and integrity of the
information it furnishes to consumer
reporting agencies. Under § 334.42(b), the
furnisher must consider the guidelines set
forth below in developing these policies and
procedures. In establishing these policies and
procedures, a furnisher may include any of
its existing policies and procedures that are
relevant and appropriate.
I. Nature, Scope, and Objectives of Policies
and Procedures
A. Nature and Scope. Section 334.42(a) of
this part requires that a furnisher’s policies
and procedures be appropriate to the nature,
size, complexity, and scope of the furnisher’s
activities. The furnisher’s policies and
procedures should reflect, for example:
1. The types of business activities in which
the furnisher engages;
2. The nature and frequency of the
information the furnisher provides to
consumer reporting agencies; and
3. The technology used by the furnisher to
furnish information to consumer reporting
agencies.
Regulatory Definition Approach for
Paragraph B Follows:
B. Objectives. A furnisher should have
written policies and procedures reasonably
designed to accomplish the following
objectives:
1. Ensure that the information it furnishes
about accounts or other relationships with a
consumer:
(a) Accurately identifies the appropriate
consumer;
(b) Accurately reports the terms of those
accounts or other relationships;
(c) Accurately reports the consumer’s
performance and other conduct with respect
to the account or other relationship with the
consumer;
2. Ensure that the information it furnishes
about accounts or other relationships with a
consumer avoids misleading a consumer
report user as to the consumer’s
creditworthiness, credit standing, credit
capacity, character, general reputation,
personal characteristics, or mode of living;
3. Ensure that it conducts reasonable
investigations of consumer disputes about
the accuracy or integrity of information in
consumer reports and takes appropriate
actions based on the outcome of such
investigations;
4. Ensure that it updates information it
furnishes as necessary to reflect the current
status of the consumer’s account or other
relationship, including:
(a) Any transfer of an account (e.g., by sale
or assignment for collection) to a third party;
and
(b) Any cure of the consumer’s failure to
abide by the terms of the account or other
relationship;
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5. Ensure that the information it furnishes
about accounts or other relationships with a
consumer is reported in a form and manner
that is designed to minimize the likelihood
that the information, although accurate, may
be erroneously reflected in a consumer
report, for example, by ensuring that the
information is reported with appropriate
identifying information about the consumer
to which it pertains, in a standardized and
clearly understandable form and manner,
with a date specifying the time period to
which the information pertains; and
6. Ensure that the information it furnishes
about accounts or other relationships with a
furnisher is substantiated by the furnisher’s
own records.
Guidelines Definition Approach for
Paragraph B Follows:
B. Objectives. A furnisher should have
written policies and procedures reasonably
designed to accomplish the following
objectives:
1. Ensure that the information it furnishes
about accounts or other relationships with a
consumer is accurate. Accuracy means that
any information that a furnisher provides to
a consumer reporting agency about an
account or other relationship with the
consumer reflects without error the terms of
and liability for the account or other
relationship and the consumer’s performance
and other conduct with respect to the
account or other relationship;
2. Ensure that the information it furnishes
about accounts or other relationships with a
consumer is furnished with integrity.
Integrity means that any information that a
furnisher provides to a consumer reporting
agency about an account or other relationship
with the consumer is:
(i) Reported in a form and manner that is
designed to minimize the likelihood that the
information, although accurate, may be
erroneously reflected in a consumer report,
for example, by ensuring that the information
is:
(A) Reported with appropriate identifying
information about the consumer to whom it
pertains;
(B) Reported in a standardized and clearly
understandable form and manner; and
(C) Reported with a date specifying the
time period to which the information
pertains; and
(ii) Substantiated by the furnisher’s own
records;
3. Ensure that it conducts reasonable
investigations of consumer disputes about
the accuracy or integrity of information in
consumer reports and takes appropriate
actions based on the outcome of such
investigations; and
4. Ensure that it updates information it
furnishes as necessary to reflect the current
status of the consumer’s account or other
relationship, including:
(a) Any transfer of an account (e.g., by sale
or assignment for collection) to a third party;
and
(b) Any cure of the consumer’s failure to
abide by the terms of the account or other
relationship.
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Federal Register / Vol. 72, No. 239 / Thursday, December 13, 2007 / Proposed Rules
II. Accuracy and Integrity Duties of
Furnishers Under the FCRA
A furnisher’s policies and procedures
should address compliance with all
applicable requirements imposed on the
furnisher under the FCRA, including the
duties to: 1
A. Promptly notify the consumer reporting
agency of the furnisher’s determination that
furnished information is not complete or
accurate, for a furnisher that regularly and in
the ordinary course of business furnishes
information; provide any corrections, or any
additional information, that is necessary to
make the furnished information complete
and accurate; and not thereafter furnish
information that remains incomplete or
inaccurate. 15 U.S.C. 1681s–2(a)(2).
B. Provide notice of a dispute by a
consumer about the accuracy or
completeness of information furnished to a
consumer reporting agency. 15 U.S.C. 1681s–
2(a)(3).
C. Report voluntary closure of a credit
account by the consumer in information
regularly furnished for the period in which
the credit account is closed, for a furnisher
that regularly and in the ordinary course of
business furnishes information about
consumer credit accounts. 15 U.S.C. 1681s–
2(a)(4).
D. Notify the consumer reporting agency of
the date of delinquency on an account not
later than 90 days after the furnisher
furnishes information to the consumer
reporting agency regarding action taken on
the delinquent account (including placement
for collection, charge to profit or loss, or any
similar action). Date of delinquency means
the month and year of the commencement of
the delinquency on the account that
immediately preceded the action. 15 U.S.C.
1681s–2(a)(5).
E. Have in place reasonable procedures to
respond to any notification that the furnisher
receives from a consumer reporting agency
under section 605B of the FCRA, relating to
the blocking of information resulting from
identity theft and to prevent the refurnishing
of such blocked information. 15 U.S.C.
1681s–2(a)(6)(A).
F. Not furnish to a consumer reporting
agency information that purports to relate to
the consumer if the consumer submits an
identity theft report to the furnisher (at the
address specified by that furnisher for
receiving such reports) stating that such
information maintained by that furnisher
resulted from identity theft. (This restriction
does not apply if the furnisher subsequently
knows or is informed by the consumer that
the information is correct.) 15 U.S.C. 1681s–
2(a)(6)(B).
G. After receiving a notice of dispute from
a consumer reporting agency, in a timely
manner: Conduct an investigation; review all
relevant information the consumer reporting
agency provides; report the results of the
investigation to the consumer reporting
agency; report incomplete or inaccurate
information to all nationwide consumer
1 This
is not a complete listing of furnisher duties
relating to accuracy and integrity. Furnishers
should consult the FCRA to determine what
additional duties may apply.
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reporting agencies to which it reported the
information; and modify, delete, or
permanently block incomplete or inaccurate
information or information that cannot be
verified. 15 U.S.C. 1681s–2(b).
H. Investigate direct disputes as required
by 12 CFR 334.43 and 15 U.S.C.
1681s–2(a)(8).
III. Establishing and Implementing Policies
and Procedures
In establishing and implementing its
policies and procedures, a furnisher should:
A. Identify practices or activities of the
furnisher that can compromise the accuracy
and integrity of information furnished to
consumer reporting agencies, such as by:
1. Reviewing its existing practices and
activities, including the technological means
and other methods it uses to furnish
information to consumer reporting agencies
and the frequency and timing of its
furnishing of information, such as through an
audit;
2. Reviewing historical records relating to
accuracy or integrity or to disputes, or other
information relating to the accuracy and
integrity of information provided by the
furnisher to consumer reporting agencies and
the types of errors, omissions, or other
problems that may have affected the accuracy
and integrity of information it has furnished
about consumers to consumer reporting
agencies; and
3. Obtaining feedback from consumer
reporting agencies, consumers, the
furnisher’s staff, or other appropriate parties.
B. Evaluate the effectiveness of existing
policies and procedures of the furnisher
regarding the accuracy and integrity of
information furnished to consumer reporting
agencies; consider whether new, additional,
or different policies and procedures are
necessary; and consider whether
implementation of existing policies and
procedures should be modified to enhance
the accuracy and integrity of information
about consumers furnished to consumer
reporting agencies.
C. Evaluate the effectiveness of specific
methods (including technological means) the
furnisher uses to provide information to
consumer reporting agencies; how those
methods may affect the accuracy and
integrity of the information it provides to
consumer reporting agencies; and whether
new, additional, or different methods
(including technological means) should be
used to provide information to consumer
reporting agencies to enhance the accuracy
and integrity of that information.
IV. Specific Components of Policies and
Procedures
A furnisher’s policies and procedures
should address the following:
A. Establishing and implementing a system
for furnishing information about consumers
to consumer reporting agencies that is
appropriate to the nature, size, complexity,
and scope of the furnisher’s business
operations.
B. Using standard data reporting formats
and standard procedures for compiling and
furnishing data, where feasible, such as the
electronic transmission of information about
consumers to consumer reporting agencies.
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C. Ensuring that the furnisher maintains its
own records for a reasonable period of time,
not less than any applicable recordkeeping
requirement, in order to substantiate the
accuracy of any information about consumers
it furnishes that is subject to a direct dispute.
D. Establishing and implementing
appropriate internal controls regarding the
accuracy and integrity of information about
consumers furnished to consumer reporting
agencies, such as by implementing standard
procedures, verifying random samples, and
conducting regular reviews of information
provided to consumer reporting agencies.
E. Training staff that participates in
activities related to the furnishing of
information about consumers to consumer
reporting agencies to implement the policies
and procedures.
F. Providing for appropriate and effective
oversight of relevant service providers whose
activities may affect the accuracy and
integrity of information about consumers
furnished to consumer reporting agencies to
ensure compliance with the policies and
procedures.
G. Furnishing information about
consumers to consumer reporting agencies
following mergers, portfolio acquisitions or
sales, or other acquisitions or transfers of
accounts or other debts in a manner that
prevents re-aging of information, duplicative
reporting, or other problems affecting the
accuracy or integrity of the information
furnished.
H. Attempting to obtain the information
listed in § _.43(d) from a consumer before
determining that the consumer’s dispute is
frivolous or irrelevant.
I. Ensuring that deletions, updates, and
corrections furnished to consumer reporting
agencies are reflected in business systems to
avoid furnishing erroneous information.
J. Conducting investigations of direct
disputes in a manner that promotes the
efficient resolution of such disputes.
K. Ensuring that technological and other
means of communication with consumer
reporting agencies are designed to prevent
duplicative reporting of accounts, erroneous
association of information with the wrong
consumer(s), and other occurrences that may
compromise the accuracy and integrity of
information contained in consumer reports.
L. Providing consumer reporting agencies
with sufficient identifying information in the
furnisher’s possession about each consumer
about whom information is furnished to
enable the consumer reporting agency
properly to identify the consumer.
M. Conducting a periodic evaluation of its
own practices, consumer reporting agency
practices, investigations of disputed
information, corrections of inaccurate
information, means of communication, and
other factors that may affect the accuracy and
integrity of information furnished to
consumer reporting agencies.
Department of the Treasury
Office of Thrift Supervision
12 CFR Chapter V
Authority and Issuance
For the reasons discussed in the joint
preamble, the Office of Thrift
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Federal Register / Vol. 72, No. 239 / Thursday, December 13, 2007 / Proposed Rules
Supervision proposes to amend chapter
V of title 12 of the Code of Federal
Regulations by amending 12 CFR part
571 as follows:
PART 571—FAIR CREDIT REPORTING
1. The authority citation for part 571
is revised to read as follows:
Authority: 12 U.S.C. 1462a, 1463, 1464,
1467a, 1828, 1831p–1, and 1881–1884; 15
U.S.C. 1681b, 1681c, 1681m, 1681s, 1681s–2,
1681s–3, 1681t, and 1681w; 15 U.S.C. 6801
and 6805; Sec. 214 Pub. L. 108–159, 117 Stat.
1952.
Subpart A—General Provisions
2. Amend § 571.1 by adding a new
paragraph (b)(5) to read as follows:
§ 571.1
Purpose and scope.
*
*
*
*
*
(b) * * *
(5) The scope of subpart E of this part
is stated in § 571.40 of this part.
*
*
*
*
*
3. Add a new Subpart E to part 571
to read as follows:
Subpart E—Duties of Furnishers of
Information
Sec.
571.40 Scope.
571.41 Definitions.
571.42 Reasonable policies and procedures
concerning the accuracy and integrity of
furnished information.
571.43 Direct disputes.
Subpart E—Duties of Furnishers of
Information
§ 571.40
Scope.
Subpart C of this part applies to
savings associations whose deposits are
insured by the Federal Deposit
Insurance Corporation or, in accordance
with § 559.3(h)(1) of this chapter,
federal savings association operating
subsidiaries that are not functionally
regulated within the meaning of section
5(c)(5) of the Bank Holding Company
Act of 1956, as amended (12 U.S.C.
1844(c)(5).
jlentini on PROD1PC65 with PROPOSALS2
§ 571.41
Definitions.
For purposes of this subpart and
Appendix E of this part, the following
definitions apply:
Regulatory Definition Approach for
Defining ‘‘Accuracy’’ and ‘‘Integrity’’
Follows:
(a) Accuracy means that any
information that a furnisher provides to
a consumer reporting agency about an
account or other relationship with the
consumer reflects without error the
terms of and liability for the account or
other relationship and the consumer’s
performance and other conduct with
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respect to the account or other
relationship.
(b) Integrity means that any
information that a furnisher provides to
a consumer reporting agency about an
account or other relationship with the
consumer does not omit any term, such
as a credit limit or opening date, of that
account or other relationship, the
absence of which can reasonably be
expected to contribute to an incorrect
evaluation by a user of a consumer
report of a consumer’s creditworthiness,
credit standing, credit capacity,
character, general reputation, personal
characteristics, or mode of living.
(c) Furnisher means an entity other
than an individual consumer that
furnishes information relating to
consumers to one or more consumer
reporting agencies. An entity is not a
furnisher when it provides information
to a consumer reporting agency solely to
obtain a consumer report in accordance
with sections 604(a) and (f) of the FCRA.
(d) Identity theft has the same
meaning as in 16 CFR 603.2(a).
(e) Direct dispute means a dispute
submitted directly to a furnisher by a
consumer concerning the accuracy of
any information contained in a
consumer report relating to the
consumer.
§ 571.42 Reasonable policies and
procedures concerning the accuracy and
integrity of furnished information.
(a) Policies and procedures. Each
furnisher must establish and implement
reasonable written policies and
procedures regarding the accuracy and
integrity of the information relating to
consumers that it furnishes to a
consumer reporting agency. The policies
and procedures must be appropriate to
the nature, size, complexity, and scope
of each furnisher’s activities.
(b) Guidelines. Each furnisher must
consider the guidelines in Appendix E
of this part in developing its policies
and procedures required by this section,
and incorporate those guidelines that
are appropriate.
(c) Reviewing and updating policies
and procedures. Each furnisher must
review its policies and procedures
required by this section periodically and
update them as necessary to ensure their
continued effectiveness.
§ 571.43
Direct disputes.
(a) General rule. Except as otherwise
provided in this section, a furnisher
must investigate a direct dispute if it
relates to:
(1) The consumer’s liability for a
credit account or other debt with the
furnisher, such as direct disputes
relating to whether there is or has been
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70977
identity theft or fraud against the
consumer, whether there is individual
or joint liability on an account, or
whether the consumer is an authorized
user of a credit account;
(2) The terms of a credit account or
other debt with the furnisher, such as
direct disputes relating to the credit
limit on an open-end account, type of
account, principal balance, scheduled
payment amount on an account, or the
amount of the reported credit limit on
an open-end account;
(3) The consumer’s performance or
other conduct concerning an account or
other relationship with the furnisher,
such as direct disputes relating to the
current payment status, high balance,
date a payment was made, the amount
of a payment made, or the date an
account was opened or closed; or
(4) Any other information contained
in a consumer report regarding an
account or other relationship with the
furnisher that bears on the consumer’s
creditworthiness, credit standing, credit
capacity, character, general reputation,
personal characteristics, or mode of
living.
(b) Exceptions. The requirements of
paragraph (a) of this section do not
apply to a furnisher if:
(1) The direct dispute relates to:
(i) The consumer’s identifying
information (other than a direct dispute
relating to a consumer’s liability for a
credit account or other debt with the
furnisher, as provided in paragraph
(a)(1) of this section) such as name(s),
date of birth, Social Security number,
telephone number(s), or address(es);
(ii) The identity of past or present
employers;
(iii) Inquiries or requests for a
consumer report;
(iv) Information derived from public
records, such as judgments,
bankruptcies, liens, and other legal
matters (unless provided by a furnisher
with an account or other relationship
with the consumer); or
(v) Information related to fraud alerts
or active duty alerts; or
(2) The direct dispute is submitted by,
is prepared on behalf of the consumer
by, or is submitted on a form supplied
to the consumer by, a credit repair
organization, as defined in 15 U.S.C.
1679a(3), or an entity that would be a
credit repair organization, but for 15
U.S.C. 1679a(3)(B)(i).
(c) Direct dispute address. A furnisher
is required to investigate a direct
dispute only if a consumer submits a
dispute notice to the furnisher at:
(1) The address of a furnisher
provided by a furnisher and set forth on
a consumer report relating to the
consumer;
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(2) An address clearly and
conspicuously specified by the
furnisher for submitting direct disputes
that is provided to the consumer in
writing or electronically (if the
consumer has agreed to the electronic
delivery of information from the
furnisher); or
(3) Any business address of the
furnisher if the furnisher has not so
specified and provided an address for
submitting direct disputes under
paragraph (c)(2) of this section.
(d) Direct dispute notice contents. A
dispute notice must include:
(1) The name, address, and telephone
number of the consumer;
(2) Sufficient information to identify
the account or other relationship that is
in dispute, such as an account number;
(3) The specific information that the
consumer is disputing and an
explanation of the basis for the dispute;
and
(4) All supporting documentation or
other information reasonably required
by the furnisher to substantiate the basis
of the dispute. This documentation may
include, for example: A copy of the
consumer report that contains the
allegedly inaccurate information; a
police report; a fraud or identity theft
affidavit; a court order; or account
statements.
(e) Frivolous or irrelevant disputes. (1)
A furnisher is not required to investigate
a direct dispute if the furnisher has
reasonably determined that the dispute
is frivolous or irrelevant. A dispute may
be frivolous or irrelevant if:
(i) The consumer did not provide
sufficient information to investigate the
disputed information as required by
paragraph (d) of this section;
(ii) The direct dispute is substantially
the same as a dispute previously
submitted by or on behalf of the
consumer, either directly to the
furnisher or through a consumer
reporting agency, with respect to which
the furnisher has already satisfied the
applicable requirements of the Act or
this section; provided, however, that a
direct dispute is not substantially the
same as a dispute previously submitted
if the dispute includes information
listed in paragraph (d) of this section
that had not previously been provided
to the furnisher; or
(iii) The furnisher is not required to
investigate the direct dispute under this
section.
(2) Notice of determination. Upon
making a determination that a dispute is
frivolous or irrelevant, the furnisher
must notify the consumer of the
determination not later than five
business days after making the
determination by mail or, if authorized
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by the consumer for that purpose, by
any other means available to the
furnisher.
(3) Contents of notice of
determination that a dispute is frivolous
or irrelevant. A notice of determination
that a dispute is frivolous or irrelevant
must include the reasons for such
determination and identify any
information required to investigate the
disputed information, which may
consist of a standardized form
describing the general nature of such
information.
4. Add a new Appendix E to part 571
to read as follows:
Appendix E to Part 571—Interagency
Guidelines Concerning the Accuracy
and Integrity of Information Furnished
to Consumer Reporting Agencies
OTS encourages voluntary furnishing of
information to consumer reporting agencies.
Section 571.42 of this part requires each
furnisher to establish and implement
reasonable written policies and procedures
concerning the accuracy and integrity of the
information it furnishes to consumer
reporting agencies. Under § 571.42(b) of this
part, the furnisher must consider the
guidelines set forth below in developing
these policies and procedures. In establishing
these policies and procedures, a furnisher
may include any of its existing policies and
procedures that are relevant and appropriate.
I. Nature, Scope, and Objectives of Policies
and Procedures
A. Nature and Scope. Section 571.42(a) of
this part requires that a furnisher’s policies
and procedures be appropriate to the nature,
size, complexity, and scope of the furnisher’s
activities. The furnisher’s policies and
procedures should reflect, for example:
1. The types of business activities in which
the furnisher engages;
2. The nature and frequency of the
information the furnisher provides to
consumer reporting agencies; and
3. The technology used by the furnisher to
furnish information to consumer reporting
agencies.
Regulatory Definition Approach for
Paragraph B Follows:
B. Objectives. A furnisher should have
written policies and procedures reasonably
designed to accomplish the following
objectives:
1. Ensure that the information it furnishes
about accounts or other relationships with a
consumer:
(a) Accurately identifies the appropriate
consumer;
(b) Accurately reports the terms of those
accounts or other relationships; and
(c) Accurately reports the consumer’s
performance and other conduct with respect
to the account or other relationship with the
consumer;
2. Ensure that the information it furnishes
about accounts or other relationships with a
consumer avoids misleading a consumer
report user as to the consumer’s
creditworthiness, credit standing, credit
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capacity, character, general reputation,
personal characteristics, or mode of living;
3. Ensure that it conducts reasonable
investigations of consumer disputes about
the accuracy or integrity of information in
consumer reports and takes appropriate
actions based on the outcome of such
investigations;
4. Ensure that it updates information it
furnishes as necessary to reflect the current
status of the consumer’s account or other
relationship, including:
(a) Any transfer of an account (e.g., by sale
or assignment for collection) to a third party;
and
(b) Any cure of the consumer’s failure to
abide by the terms of the account or other
relationship;
5. Ensure that the information it furnishes
about accounts or other relationships with a
consumer is reported in a form and manner
that is designed to minimize the likelihood
that the information, although accurate, may
be erroneously reflected in a consumer
report, for example, by ensuring that the
information is reported with appropriate
identifying information about the consumer
to whom it pertains, in a standardized and
clearly understandable form and manner, and
with a date specifying the time period to
which the information pertains; and
6. Ensure that the information it furnishes
about accounts or other relationships with a
consumer is substantiated by the furnisher’s
own records.
Guidelines Definition Approach for
Paragraph B Follows:
B. Objectives. A furnisher should have
written policies and procedures reasonably
designed to accomplish the following
objectives:
1. Ensure that the information it furnishes
about accounts or other relationships with a
consumer is accurate. Accuracy means that
any information that a furnisher provides to
a consumer reporting agency about an
account or other relationship with the
consumer reflects without error the terms of
and liability for the account or other
relationship and the consumer’s performance
and other conduct with respect to the
account or other relationship;
2. Ensure that the information it furnishes
about accounts or other relationships with a
consumer is furnished with integrity.
Integrity means that any information that a
furnisher provides to a consumer reporting
agency about an account or other relationship
with the consumer is:
(i) Reported in a form and manner that is
designed to minimize the likelihood that the
information, although accurate, may be
erroneously reflected in a consumer report,
for example, by ensuring that the information
is:
(A) Reported with appropriate identifying
information about the consumer to whom it
pertains;
(B) Reported in a standardized and clearly
understandable form and manner; and
(C) Reported with a date specifying the
time period to which the information
pertains; and
(ii) Substantiated by the furnisher’s own
records;
3. Ensure that it conducts reasonable
investigations of consumer disputes about
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the accuracy or integrity of information in
consumer reports and takes appropriate
actions based on the outcome of such
investigations; and
4. Ensure that it updates information it
furnishes as necessary to reflect the current
status of the consumer’s account or other
relationship, including:
(a) Any transfer of an account (e.g., by sale
or assignment for collection) to a third party;
and
(b) Any cure of the consumer’s failure to
abide by the terms of the account or other
relationship.
II. Accuracy and Integrity Duties of
Furnishers Under the FCRA
A furnisher’s policies and procedures
should address compliance with all
applicable requirements imposed on the
furnisher under the FCRA, including the
duties to: 1
A. Promptly notify the consumer reporting
agency of the furnisher’s determination that
furnished information is not complete or
accurate, for a furnisher that regularly and in
the ordinary course of business furnishes
information; provide any corrections, or any
additional information, that is necessary to
make the furnished information complete
and accurate; and not thereafter furnish
information that remains incomplete or
inaccurate. 15 U.S.C. 1681s–2(a)(2).
B. Provide notice of a dispute by a
consumer about the accuracy or
completeness of information furnished to a
consumer reporting agency. 15 U.S.C. 1681s–
2(a)(3).
C. Report voluntary closure of a credit
account by the consumer in information
regularly furnished for the period in which
the credit account is closed, for a furnisher
that regularly and in the ordinary course of
business furnishes information about
consumer credit accounts. 15 U.S.C. 1681s–
2(a)(4).
D. Notify the consumer reporting agency of
the date of delinquency on an account not
later than 90 days after the furnisher
furnishes information to the consumer
reporting agency regarding action taken on
the delinquent account (including placement
for collection, charge to profit or loss, or any
similar action). Date of delinquency means
the month and year of the commencement of
the delinquency on the account that
immediately preceded the action. 15 U.S.C.
1681s–2(a)(5).
E. Have in place reasonable procedures to
respond to any notification that the furnisher
receives from a consumer reporting agency
under section 605B of the FCRA, relating to
the blocking of information resulting from
identity theft and to prevent the refurnishing
of such blocked information. 15 U.S.C.
1681s–2(a)(6)(A).
F. Not furnish to a consumer reporting
agency information that purports to relate to
the consumer if the consumer submits an
identity theft report to the furnisher (at the
address specified by that furnisher for
receiving such reports) stating that such
1 This is not a complete listing of furnisher duties
relating to accuracy and integrity. Furnishers
should consult the FCRA to determine what
additional duties may apply.
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Jkt 214001
information maintained by that furnisher
resulted from identity theft. (This restriction
does not apply if the furnisher subsequently
knows or is informed by the consumer that
the information is correct.) 15 U.S.C. 1681s–
2(a)(6)(B).
G. After receiving a notice of dispute from
a consumer reporting agency, in a timely
manner: Conduct an investigation; review all
relevant information the consumer reporting
agency provides; report the results of the
investigation to the consumer reporting
agency; report incomplete or inaccurate
information to all nationwide consumer
reporting agencies to which it reported the
information; and modify, delete, or
permanently block incomplete or inaccurate
information or information that cannot be
verified. 15 U.S.C. 1681s–2(b).
H. Investigate direct disputes as required
by § 571.43 of this part and 15 U.S.C. 1681s–
2(a)(8).
III. Establishing and Implementing Policies
and Procedures
In establishing and implementing its
policies and procedures, a furnisher should:
A. Identify practices or activities of the
furnisher that can compromise the accuracy
and integrity of information furnished to
consumer reporting agencies, such as by:
1. Reviewing its existing practices and
activities, including the technological means
and other methods it uses to furnish
information to consumer reporting agencies
and the frequency and timing of its
furnishing of information, such as through an
audit;
2. Reviewing historical records relating to
accuracy or integrity or to disputes, or other
information relating to the accuracy and
integrity of information provided by the
furnisher to consumer reporting agencies and
the types of errors, omissions, or other
problems that may have affected the accuracy
and integrity of information it has furnished
about consumers to consumer reporting
agencies; and
3. Obtaining feedback from consumer
reporting agencies, consumers, the
furnisher’s staff, or other appropriate parties.
B. Evaluate the effectiveness of existing
policies and procedures of the furnisher
regarding the accuracy and integrity of
information furnished to consumer reporting
agencies; consider whether new, additional,
or different policies and procedures are
necessary; and consider whether
implementation of existing policies and
procedures should be modified to enhance
the accuracy and integrity of information
about consumers furnished to consumer
reporting agencies.
C. Evaluate the effectiveness of specific
methods (including technological means) the
furnisher uses to provide information to
consumer reporting agencies; how those
methods may affect the accuracy and
integrity of the information it provides to
consumer reporting agencies; and whether
new, additional, or different methods
(including technological means) should be
used to provide information to consumer
reporting agencies to enhance the accuracy
and integrity of that information.
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IV. Specific Components of Policies and
Procedures
A furnisher’s policies and procedures
should address the following:
A. Establishing and implementing a system
for furnishing information about consumers
to consumer reporting agencies that is
appropriate to the nature, size, complexity,
and scope of the furnisher’s business
operations.
B. Using standard data reporting formats
and standard procedures for compiling and
furnishing data, where feasible, such as the
electronic transmission of information about
consumers to consumer reporting agencies.
C. Ensuring that the furnisher maintains its
own records for a reasonable period of time,
not less than any applicable recordkeeping
requirement, in order to substantiate the
accuracy of any information about consumers
it furnishes that is subject to a direct dispute.
D. Establishing and implementing
appropriate internal controls regarding the
accuracy and integrity of information about
consumers furnished to consumer reporting
agencies, such as by implementing standard
procedures, verifying random samples, and
conducting regular reviews of information
provided to consumer reporting agencies.
E. Training staff that participates in
activities related to the furnishing of
information about consumers to consumer
reporting agencies to implement the policies
and procedures.
F. Providing for appropriate and effective
oversight of relevant service providers whose
activities may affect the accuracy and
integrity of information about consumers
furnished to consumer reporting agencies to
ensure compliance with the policies and
procedures.
G. Furnishing information about
consumers to consumer reporting agencies
following mergers, portfolio acquisitions or
sales, or other acquisitions or transfers of
accounts or other debts in a manner that
prevents re-aging of information, duplicative
reporting, or other problems affecting the
accuracy or integrity of the information
furnished.
H. Attempting to obtain the information
listed in § 571.43(d) of this part from a
consumer before determining that the
consumer’s dispute is frivolous or irrelevant.
I. Ensuring that deletions, updates, and
corrections furnished to consumer reporting
agencies are reflected in business systems to
avoid furnishing erroneous information.
J. Conducting investigations of direct
disputes in a manner that promotes the
efficient resolution of such disputes.
K. Ensuring that technological and other
means of communication with consumer
reporting agencies are designed to prevent
duplicative reporting of accounts, erroneous
association of information with the wrong
consumer(s), and other occurrences that may
compromise the accuracy and integrity of
information contained in consumer reports.
L. Providing consumer reporting agencies
with sufficient identifying information in the
furnisher’s possession about each consumer
about whom information is furnished to
enable the consumer reporting agency
properly to identify the consumer.
M. Conducting a periodic evaluation of its
own practices, consumer reporting agency
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practices of which the furnisher is aware,
investigations of disputed information,
corrections of inaccurate information, means
of communication, and other factors that may
affect the accuracy and integrity of
information furnished to consumer reporting
agencies.
National Credit Union Administration
12 CFR Chapter VII
Authority and Issuance
For the reasons discussed in the joint
preamble, the National Credit Union
Administration proposes to amend
chapter VII of title 12 of the Code of
Federal Regulations by amending 12
CFR part 717 as follows:
PART 717—FAIR CREDIT REPORTING
1. Revise the authority citation for
part 717 to read as follows:
Authority: 12 U.S.C. 1751 et seq.; 15 U.S.C.
1681a, 1681b, 1681c, 1681m, 1681s, 1681s–
1, 1681t, 1681w, 6801 and 6805; Public Law
108–159, 117 Stat. 1952.
account or other relationship, the
absence of which can reasonably be
expected to contribute to an incorrect
evaluation by a user of a consumer
report of a consumer’s creditworthiness,
credit standing, credit capacity,
character, general reputation, personal
characteristics, or mode of living.
(c) Furnisher means an entity other
than an individual consumer that
furnishes information relating to
consumers to one or more consumer
reporting agencies. An entity is not a
furnisher when it provides information
to a consumer reporting agency solely to
obtain a consumer report in accordance
with sections 604(a) and (f) of the FCRA.
(d) Identity theft has the same
meaning as in 16 CFR 603.2(a).
(e) Direct dispute means a dispute
submitted directly to a furnisher by a
consumer concerning the accuracy of
any information contained in a
consumer report relating to the
consumer.
2. Add a new subpart E to part 717 to
read as follows:
§ 717.42 Reasonable policies and
procedures concerning the accuracy and
integrity of furnished information.
Subpart E—Duties of Furnishers of
Information
Sec.
717.40 Scope.
717.41 Definitions.
717.42 Reasonable policies and procedures
concerning the accuracy and integrity of
furnished information.
717.43 Direct disputes.
(a) Policies and procedures. Each
furnisher must establish and implement
reasonable written policies and
procedures regarding the accuracy and
integrity of the information relating to
consumers that it furnishes to a
consumer reporting agency. The policies
and procedures must be appropriate to
the nature, size, complexity, and scope
of each furnisher’s activities.
(b) Guidelines. Each furnisher must
consider the guidelines in Appendix E
of this part in developing its policies
and procedures required by this section,
and incorporate those guidelines that
are appropriate.
(c) Reviewing and updating policies
and procedures. Each furnisher must
review its policies and procedures
required by this section periodically and
update them as necessary to ensure their
continued effectiveness.
Subpart E—Duties of Furnishers of
Information
§ 717.40
Scope.
This subpart applies to a federal
credit union that furnishes information
to a consumer reporting agency.
jlentini on PROD1PC65 with PROPOSALS2
§ 717.41
Definitions.
For purposes of this subpart and
Appendix E of this part, the following
definitions apply:
Regulatory Definition Approach for
Defining ‘‘Accuracy’’ and ‘‘Integrity’’
Follows:
(a) Accuracy means that any
information that a furnisher provides to
a consumer reporting agency about an
account or other relationship with the
consumer reflects without error the
terms of and liability for the account or
other relationship and the consumer’s
performance and other conduct with
respect to the account or other
relationship.
(b) Integrity means that any
information that a furnisher provides to
a consumer reporting agency about an
account or other relationship with the
consumer does not omit any term, such
as a credit limit or opening date, of that
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§ 717.43
Direct disputes.
(a) General rule. Except as otherwise
provided in this section, a furnisher
must investigate a direct dispute if it
relates to:
(1) The consumer’s liability for a
credit account or other debt with the
furnisher, such as direct disputes
relating to whether there is or has been
identity theft or fraud against the
consumer, whether there is individual
or joint liability on an account, or
whether the consumer is an authorized
user of a credit account;
(2) The terms of a credit account or
other debt with the furnisher, such as
direct disputes relating to the type of
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account, principal balance, scheduled
payment amount on an account, or the
amount of the reported credit limit on
an open-end account;
(3) The consumer’s performance or
other conduct concerning an account or
other relationship with the furnisher,
such as direct disputes relating to the
current payment status, high balance,
date a payment was made, the amount
of a payment made, or the date an
account was opened or closed; or
(4) Any other information contained
in a consumer report regarding an
account or other relationship with the
furnisher that bears on the consumer’s
creditworthiness, credit standing, credit
capacity, character, general reputation,
personal characteristics, or mode of
living.
(b) Exceptions. The requirements of
paragraph (a) of this section do not
apply to a furnisher if:
(1) The direct dispute relates to:
(i) The consumer’s identifying
information (other than a direct dispute
relating to a consumer’s liability for a
credit account or other debt with the
furnisher, as provided in paragraph
(a)(1) of this section) such as name(s),
date of birth, Social Security number,
telephone number(s), or address(es);
(ii) The identity of past or present
employers;
(iii) Inquiries or requests for a
consumer report;
(iv) Information derived from public
records, such as judgments,
bankruptcies, liens, and other legal
matters (unless provided by a furnisher
with an account or other relationship
with the consumer); or
(v) Information related to fraud alerts
or active duty alerts; or
(2) The direct dispute is submitted by,
is prepared on behalf of the consumer
by, or is submitted on a form supplied
to the consumer by, a credit repair
organization, as defined in 15 U.S.C.
1679a(3), or an entity that would be a
credit repair organization, but for 15
U.S.C. 1679a(3)(B)(i).
(c) Direct dispute address. A furnisher
is required to investigate a direct
dispute only if a consumer submits a
dispute notice to the furnisher at:
(1) The address of a furnisher
provided by a furnisher and set forth on
a consumer report relating to the
consumer;
(2) An address clearly and
conspicuously specified by the
furnisher for submitting direct disputes
that is provided to the consumer in
writing or electronically (if the
consumer has agreed to the electronic
delivery of information from the
furnisher); or
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(3) Any business address of the
furnisher if the furnisher has not so
specified and provided an address for
submitting direct disputes under
paragraph (c)(2) of this section.
(d) Direct dispute notice contents. A
dispute notice must include:
(1) The name, address, and telephone
number of the consumer;
(2) Sufficient information to identify
the account or other relationship that is
in dispute, such as an account number;
(3) The specific information that the
consumer is disputing and an
explanation of the basis for the dispute;
and
(4) All supporting documentation or
other information reasonably required
by the furnisher to substantiate the basis
of the dispute. This documentation may
include, for example: a copy of the
consumer report that contains the
allegedly inaccurate information; a
police report; a fraud or identity theft
affidavit; a court order; or account
statements.
(e) Frivolous or irrelevant disputes. (1)
A furnisher is not required to investigate
a direct dispute if the furnisher has
reasonably determined that the dispute
is frivolous or irrelevant. A dispute may
be frivolous or irrelevant if:
(i) The consumer did not provide
sufficient information to investigate the
disputed information as required by
paragraph (d) of this section;
(ii) The direct dispute is substantially
the same as a dispute previously
submitted by or on behalf of the
consumer, either directly to the
furnisher or through a consumer
reporting agency, with respect to which
the furnisher has already satisfied the
applicable requirements of the Act or
this section; provided, however, that a
direct dispute is not substantially the
same as a dispute previously submitted
if the dispute includes information
listed in paragraph (d) of this section
that had not previously been provided
to the furnisher; or
(iii) The furnisher is not required to
investigate the direct dispute under this
section.
(2) Notice of determination. Upon
making a determination that a dispute is
frivolous or irrelevant, the furnisher
must notify the consumer of the
determination not later than five
business days after making the
determination by mail or, if authorized
by the consumer for that purpose, by
any other means available to the
furnisher.
(3) Contents of notice of
determination that a dispute is frivolous
or irrelevant. A notice of determination
that a dispute is frivolous or irrelevant
must include the reasons for such
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determination and identify any
information required to investigate the
disputed information, which notice may
consist of a standardized form
describing the general nature of such
information.
3. Add a new appendix E to read as
follows:
Appendix E to Part 717—Interagency
Guidelines Concerning the Accuracy
and Integrity of Information Furnished
to Consumer Reporting Agencies
The NCUA encourages voluntary
furnishing of information to consumer
reporting agencies. Section 717.42 of this part
requires each furnisher to establish and
implement reasonable written policies and
procedures concerning the accuracy and
integrity of the information it furnishes to
consumer reporting agencies. Under
§ 717.42(b), the furnisher must consider the
guidelines set forth below in developing
these policies and procedures. In establishing
these policies and procedures, a furnisher
may include any of its existing policies and
procedures that are relevant and appropriate.
I. Nature, Scope, and Objectives of Policies
and Procedures
A. Nature and Scope. Section 717.42(a) of
this part requires that a furnisher’s policies
and procedures be appropriate to the nature,
size, complexity, and scope of the furnisher’s
activities. The furnisher’s policies and
procedures should reflect, for example:
1. The types of business activities in which
the furnisher engages;
2. The nature and frequency of the
information the furnisher provides to
consumer reporting agencies; and
3. The technology used by the furnisher to
furnish information to consumer reporting
agencies.
Regulatory Definition Approach for
Paragraph B Follows:
B. Objectives. A furnisher should have
written policies and procedures reasonably
designed to accomplish the following
objectives:
1. Ensure that the information it furnishes
about accounts or other relationships with a
consumer:
(a) Accurately identifies the appropriate
consumer;
(b) Accurately reports the terms of those
accounts or other relationships; and
(c) Accurately reports the consumer’s
performance and other conduct with respect
to the account or other relationship with the
consumer;
2. Ensure that the information it furnishes
about accounts or other relationships with a
consumer avoids misleading a consumer
report user as to the consumer’s
creditworthiness, credit standing, credit
capacity, character, general reputation,
personal characteristics, or mode of living;
3. Ensure that it conducts reasonable
investigations of consumer disputes about
the accuracy or integrity of information in
consumer reports and takes appropriate
actions based on the outcome of such
investigations;
4. Ensure that it updates information it
furnishes as necessary to reflect the current
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70981
status of the consumer’s account or other
relationship, including:
(a) Any transfer of an account (e.g., by sale
or assignment for collection) to a third party;
and
(b) Any cure of the consumer’s failure to
abide by the terms of the account or other
relationship;
5. Ensure that the information it furnishes
about accounts or other relationships with a
consumer is reported in a form and manner
that is designed to minimize the likelihood
that the information, although accurate, may
be erroneously reflected in a consumer
report, for example, by ensuring that the
information is reported with appropriate
identifying information about the consumer
to whom it pertains, in a standardized and
clearly understandable form and manner, and
with a date specifying the time period to
which the information pertains; and
6. Ensure that the information it furnishes
about accounts or other relationships with a
consumer is substantiated by the furnisher’s
own records.
Guidelines Definition Approach for
Paragraph B Follows:
B. Objectives. A furnisher should have
written policies and procedures reasonably
designed to accomplish the following
objectives:
1. Ensure that the information it furnishes
about accounts or other relationships with a
consumer is accurate. Accuracy means that
any information that a furnisher provides to
a consumer reporting agency about an
account or other relationship with the
consumer reflects without error the terms of
and liability for the account or other
relationship and the consumer’s performance
and other conduct with respect to the
account or other relationship;
2. Ensure that the information it furnishes
about accounts or other relationships with a
consumer is furnished with integrity.
Integrity means that any information that a
furnisher provides to a consumer reporting
agency about an account or other relationship
with the consumer is:
(i) Reported in a form and manner that is
designed to minimize the likelihood that the
information, although accurate, may be
erroneously reflected in a consumer report,
for example, by ensuring that the information
is:
(A) Reported with appropriate identifying
information about the consumer to whom it
pertains;
(B) Reported in a standardized and clearly
understandable form and manner; and
(C) Reported with a date specifying the
time period to which the information
pertains; and
(ii) Substantiated by the furnisher’s own
records;
3. Ensure that it conducts reasonable
investigations of consumer disputes about
the accuracy or integrity of information in
consumer reports and takes appropriate
actions based on the outcome of such
investigations; and
4. Ensure that it updates information it
furnishes as necessary to reflect the current
status of the consumer’s account or other
relationship, including:
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(a) Any transfer of an account (e.g., by sale
or assignment for collection) to a third party;
and
(b) Any cure of the consumer’s failure to
abide by the terms of the account or other
relationship.
II. Accuracy and Integrity Duties of
Furnishers Under the FCRA
A furnisher’s policies and procedures
should address compliance with all
applicable requirements imposed on the
furnisher under the FCRA, including the
duties to: 1
A. Promptly notify the consumer reporting
agency of the furnisher’s determination that
furnished information is not complete or
accurate, for a furnisher that regularly and in
the ordinary course of business furnishes
information; provide any corrections, or any
additional information, that is necessary to
make the furnished information complete
and accurate; and not thereafter furnish
information that remains incomplete or
inaccurate. 15 U.S.C. 1681s–2(a)(2).
B. Provide notice of a dispute by a
consumer about the accuracy or
completeness of information furnished to a
consumer reporting agency. 15 U.S.C. 1681s–
2(a)(3).
C. Report voluntary closure of a credit
account by the consumer in information
regularly furnished for the period in which
the credit account is closed, for a furnisher
that regularly and in the ordinary course of
business furnishes information about
consumer credit accounts. 15 U.S.C. 1681s–
2(a)(4).
D. Notify the consumer reporting agency of
the date of delinquency on an account not
later than 90 days after the furnisher
furnishes information to the consumer
reporting agency regarding action taken on
the delinquent account (including placement
for collection, charge to profit or loss, or any
similar action). Date of delinquency means
the month and year of the commencement of
the delinquency on the account that
immediately preceded the action. 15 U.S.C.
1681s–2(a)(5).
E. Have in place reasonable procedures to
respond to any notification that the furnisher
receives from a consumer reporting agency
under section 605B of the FCRA, relating to
the blocking of information resulting from
identity theft and to prevent the refurnishing
of such blocked information. 15 U.S.C.
1681s–2(a)(6)(A).
F. Not furnish to a consumer reporting
agency information that purports to relate to
the consumer if the consumer submits an
identity theft report to the furnisher (at the
address specified by that furnisher for
receiving such reports) stating that such
information maintained by that furnisher
resulted from identity theft. (This restriction
does not apply if the furnisher subsequently
knows or is informed by the consumer that
the information is correct.) 15 U.S.C. 1681s–
2(a)(6)(B).
G. After receiving a notice of dispute from
a consumer reporting agency, in a timely
1 This is not a complete listing of furnisher duties
relating to accuracy and integrity. Furnishers
should consult the FCRA to determine what
additional duties may apply.
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manner: Conduct an investigation; review all
relevant information the consumer reporting
agency provides; report the results of the
investigation to the consumer reporting
agency; report incomplete or inaccurate
information to all nationwide consumer
reporting agencies to which it reported the
information; and modify, delete, or
permanently block incomplete or inaccurate
information or information that cannot be
verified. 15 U.S.C. 1681s–2(b).
H. Investigate direct disputes as required
by 12 CFR 717.43 and 15 U.S.C. 1681s–
2(a)(8).
III. Establishing and Implementing Policies
and Procedures
In establishing and implementing its
policies and procedures, a furnisher should:
A. Identify practices or activities of the
furnisher that can compromise the accuracy
and integrity of information furnished to
consumer reporting agencies, such as by:
1. Reviewing its existing practices and
activities, including the technological means
and other methods it uses to furnish
information to consumer reporting agencies
and the frequency and timing of its
furnishing of information, such as through an
audit;
2. Reviewing historical records relating to
accuracy or integrity or to disputes, or other
information relating to the accuracy and
integrity of information provided by the
furnisher to consumer reporting agencies and
the types of errors, omissions, or other
problems that may have affected the accuracy
and integrity of information it has furnished
about consumers to consumer reporting
agencies; and
3. Obtaining feedback from consumer
reporting agencies, consumers, the
furnisher’s staff, or other appropriate parties.
B. Evaluate the effectiveness of existing
policies and procedures of the furnisher
regarding the accuracy and integrity of
information furnished to consumer reporting
agencies; consider whether new, additional,
or different policies and procedures are
necessary; and consider whether
implementation of existing policies and
procedures should be modified to enhance
the accuracy and integrity of information
about consumers furnished to consumer
reporting agencies.
C. Evaluate the effectiveness of specific
methods (including technological means) the
furnisher uses to provide information to
consumer reporting agencies; how those
methods may affect the accuracy and
integrity of the information it provides to
consumer reporting agencies; and whether
new, additional, or different methods
(including technological means) should be
used to provide information to consumer
reporting agencies to enhance the accuracy
and integrity of that information.
IV. Specific Components of Policies and
Procedures
A furnisher’s policies and procedures
should address the following:
A. Establishing and implementing a system
for furnishing information about consumers
to consumer reporting agencies that is
appropriate to the nature, size, complexity,
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and scope of the furnisher’s business
operations.
B. Using standard data reporting formats
and standard procedures for compiling and
furnishing data, where feasible, such as the
electronic transmission of information about
consumers to consumer reporting agencies.
C. Ensuring that the furnisher maintains its
own records for a reasonable period of time,
not less than any applicable recordkeeping
requirement, in order to substantiate the
accuracy of any information about consumers
it furnishes that is subject to a direct dispute.
D. Establishing and implementing
appropriate internal controls regarding the
accuracy and integrity of information about
consumers furnished to consumer reporting
agencies, such as by implementing standard
procedures, verifying random samples, and
conducting regular reviews of information
provided to consumer reporting agencies.
E. Training staff that participates in
activities related to the furnishing of
information about consumers to consumer
reporting agencies to implement the policies
and procedures.
F. Providing for appropriate and effective
oversight of relevant service providers whose
activities may affect the accuracy and
integrity of information about consumers
furnished to consumer reporting agencies to
ensure compliance with the policies and
procedures.
G. Furnishing information about
consumers to consumer reporting agencies
following mergers, portfolio acquisitions or
sales, or other acquisitions or transfers of
accounts or other debts in a manner that
prevents re-aging of information, duplicative
reporting, or other problems affecting the
accuracy or integrity of the information
furnished.
H. Attempting to obtain the information
listed in § 717.43(d) from a consumer before
determining that the consumer’s dispute is
frivolous or irrelevant.
I. Ensuring that deletions, updates, and
corrections furnished to consumer reporting
agencies are reflected in business systems to
avoid furnishing erroneous information.
J. Conducting investigations of direct
disputes in a manner that promotes the
efficient resolution of such disputes.
K. Ensuring that technological and other
means of communication with consumer
reporting agencies are designed to prevent
duplicative reporting of accounts, erroneous
association of information with the wrong
consumer(s), and other occurrences that may
compromise the accuracy and integrity of
information contained in consumer reports.
L. Providing consumer reporting agencies
with sufficient identifying information in the
furnisher’s possession about each consumer
about whom information is furnished to
enable the consumer reporting agency
properly to identify the consumer.
M. Conducting a periodic evaluation of its
own practices, consumer reporting agency
practices of which the furnisher is aware,
investigations of disputed information,
corrections of inaccurate information, means
of communication, and other factors that may
affect the accuracy and integrity of
information furnished to consumer reporting
agencies.
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Federal Trade Commission
16 CFR Chapter I
Authority and Issuance
For the reasons discussed in the joint
preamble, the Federal Trade
Commission proposes to add part 660 to
title 16 of the Code of Federal
Regulations as follows:
PART 660—DUTIES OF FURNISHERS
OF INFORMATION TO CONSUMER
REPORTING AGENCIES
Sec.
660.1 Scope.
660.2 Definitions.
660.3 Reasonable policies and procedures
concerning the accuracy and integrity of
furnisher information.
660.4 Direct disputes.
Appendix A to Part 660—Interagency
Guidelines Concerning the Accuracy and
Integrity of Information Furnished to
Consumer Reporting Agencies
Authority: 15 U.S.C. 1681s–2(a)(8) and
1681s–2(e); Sec. 312, Pub. L. 108–159, 117
Stat. 1989.
§ 660.1
Scope.
This part applies to furnishers of
information to consumer reporting
agencies that are subject to
administrative enforcement of the FCRA
by the Federal Trade Commission
pursuant to 15 U.S.C.
1681s(a)(1)(referred to as ‘‘furnishers’’).
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§ 660.2
Definitions.
For purposes of this part and
Appendix A of this part, the following
definitions apply: Regulatory Definition
Approach for Defining ‘‘Accuracy’’ and
‘‘Integrity’’ Follows:
(a) Accuracy means that any
information that a furnisher provides to
a consumer reporting agency about an
account or other relationship with the
consumer reflects without error the
terms of and liability for the account or
other relationship and the consumer’s
performance and other conduct with
respect to the account or other
relationship.
(b) Integrity means that any
information that a furnisher provides to
a consumer reporting agency about an
account or other relationship with the
consumer does not omit any term, such
as a credit limit or opening date, of that
account or other relationship, the
absence of which can reasonably be
expected to contribute to an incorrect
evaluation by a user of a consumer
report of a consumer’s creditworthiness,
credit standing, credit capacity,
character, general reputation, personal
characteristics, or mode of living.
(c) Furnisher means an entity other
than an individual consumer that
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furnishes information relating to
consumers to one or more consumer
reporting agencies. An entity is not a
furnisher when it provides information
to a consumer reporting agency solely to
obtain a consumer report in accordance
with sections 604(a) and (f) of the FCRA.
(d) Identity theft has the same
meaning as in 16 CFR 603.2(a).
(e) Direct dispute means a dispute
submitted directly to a furnisher by a
consumer concerning the accuracy of
any information contained in a
consumer report relating to the
consumer.
§ 660.3 Reasonable policies and
procedures concerning the accuracy and
integrity of furnished information.
(a) Policies and procedures. Each
furnisher must establish and implement
reasonable written policies and
procedures regarding the accuracy and
integrity of the information relating to
consumers that it furnishes to a
consumer reporting agency. The policies
and procedures must be appropriate to
the nature, size, complexity, and scope
of each furnisher’s activities.
(b) Guidelines. Each furnisher must
consider the guidelines in Appendix A
of this part in developing its policies
and procedures required by this section,
and incorporate those guidelines that
are appropriate.
(c) Reviewing and updating policies
and procedures. Each furnisher must
review its policies and procedures
required by this section periodically and
update them as necessary to ensure their
continued effectiveness.
§ 660.4
Direct disputes.
(a) General rule. Except as otherwise
provided in this section, a furnisher
must investigate a direct dispute if it
relates to:
(1) The consumer’s liability for a
credit account or other debt with the
furnisher, such as direct disputes
relating to whether there is or has been
identity theft or fraud against the
consumer, whether there is individual
or joint liability on an account, or
whether the consumer is an authorized
user of a credit account;
(2) The terms of a credit account or
other debt with the furnisher, such as
direct disputes relating to the credit
limit on an open-end account, type of
account, principal balance, scheduled
payment amount on an account, or the
amount of the reported credit limit on
an open-end account;
(3) The consumer’s performance or
other conduct concerning an account or
other relationship with the furnisher,
such as direct disputes relating to the
current payment status, high balance,
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date a payment was made, the amount
of a payment made, or the date an
account was opened or closed; or
(4) Any other information contained
in a consumer report regarding an
account or other relationship with the
furnisher that bears on the consumer’s
creditworthiness, credit standing, credit
capacity, character, general reputation,
personal characteristics, or mode of
living.
(b) Exceptions. The requirements of
paragraph (a) of this section do not
apply to a furnisher if:
(1) The direct dispute relates to:
(i) The consumer’s identifying
information (other than a direct dispute
relating to a consumer’s liability for a
credit account or other debt with the
furnisher, as provided in paragraph
(a)(1) of this section) such as name(s),
date of birth, Social Security number,
telephone number(s), or address(es);
(ii) The identity of past or present
employers;
(iii) Inquiries or requests for a
consumer report;
(iv) Information derived from public
records, such as judgments,
bankruptcies, liens, and other legal
matters (unless provided by a furnisher
with an account or other relationship
with the consumer); or
(v) Information related to fraud alerts
or active duty alerts; or
(2) The direct dispute is submitted by,
is prepared on behalf of the consumer
by, or is submitted on a form supplied
to the consumer by, a credit repair
organization, as defined in 15 U.S.C.
1679a(3), or an entity that would be a
credit repair organization, but for 15
U.S.C. 1679a(3)(B)(i).
(c) Direct dispute address. A furnisher
is required to investigate a direct
dispute only if a consumer submits a
dispute notice to the furnisher at:
(1) The address of a furnisher
provided by a furnisher and set forth on
a consumer report relating to the
consumer;
(2) An address clearly and
conspicuously specified by the
furnisher for submitting direct disputes
that is provided to the consumer in
writing or electronically (if the
consumer has agreed to the electronic
delivery of information from the
furnisher); or
(3) Any business address of the
furnisher if the furnisher has not so
specified and provided an address for
submitting direct disputes under
paragraph (c)(2) of this section.
(d) Direct dispute notice contents. A
dispute notice must include:
(1) The name, address, and telephone
number of the consumer;
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(2) Sufficient information to identify
the account or other relationship that is
in dispute, such as an account number;
(3) The specific information that the
consumer is disputing and an
explanation of the basis for the dispute;
and
(4) All supporting documentation or
other information reasonably required
by the furnisher to substantiate the basis
of the dispute. This documentation may
include, for example: a copy of the
consumer report that contains the
allegedly inaccurate information; a
police report; a fraud or identity theft
affidavit; a court order; or account
statements.
(e) Frivolous or irrelevant disputes. (1)
A furnisher is not required to investigate
a direct dispute if the furnisher has
reasonably determined that the dispute
is frivolous or irrelevant. A dispute may
be frivolous or irrelevant if:
(i) The consumer did not provide
sufficient information to investigate the
disputed information as required by
paragraph (d) of this section;
(ii) The direct dispute is substantially
the same as a dispute previously
submitted by or on behalf of the
consumer, either directly to the
furnisher or through a consumer
reporting agency, with respect to which
the furnisher has already satisfied the
applicable requirements of the Act or
this section; provided, however, that a
direct dispute is not substantially the
same as a dispute previously submitted
if the dispute includes information
listed in paragraph (d) of this section
that had not previously been provided
to the furnisher; or
(iii) The furnisher is not required to
investigate the direct dispute under this
section.
(2) Notice of determination. Upon
making a determination that a dispute is
frivolous or irrelevant, the furnisher
must notify the consumer of the
determination not later than five
business days after making the
determination, by mail or, if authorized
by the consumer for that purpose, by
any other means available to the
furnisher.
(3) Contents of notice of
determination that a dispute is frivolous
or irrelevant. A notice of determination
that a dispute is frivolous or irrelevant
must include the reasons for such
determination and identify any
information required to investigate the
disputed information, which may
consist of a standardized form
describing the general nature of such
information.
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Appendix A to Part 660—Interagency
Guidelines Concerning the Accuracy
and Integrity of Information Furnished
to Consumer Reporting Agencies
The Commission encourages voluntary
furnishing of information to consumer
reporting agencies. Section 660.3 of this part
requires each furnisher to establish and
implement reasonable written policies and
procedures concerning the accuracy and
integrity of the information it furnishes to
consumer reporting agencies. Under
§ 660.3(b) of this part, the furnisher must
consider the guidelines set forth below in
developing these policies and procedures. In
establishing these policies and procedures, a
furnisher may include any of its existing
policies and procedures that are relevant and
appropriate.
I. Nature, Scope, and Objectives of Policies
and Procedures
A. Nature and Scope. Section 660.3(a) of
this part requires that a furnisher’s policies
and procedures be appropriate to the nature,
size, complexity, and scope of the furnisher’s
activities. The furnisher’s policies and
procedures should reflect, for example:
1. The types of business activities in which
the furnisher engages;
2. The nature and frequency of the
information the furnisher provides to
consumer reporting agencies; and
3. The technology used by the furnisher to
furnish information to consumer reporting
agencies.
Regulatory Definition Approach for
Paragraph B Follows:
B. Objectives. A furnisher should have
written policies and procedures reasonably
designed to accomplish the following
objectives:
1. Ensure that the information it furnishes
about accounts or other relationships with a
consumer:
(a) Accurately identifies the appropriate
consumer;
(b) Accurately reports the terms of those
accounts or other relationships; and
(c) Accurately reports the consumer’s
performance and other conduct with respect
to the account or other relationship with the
consumer;
2. Ensure that the information it furnishes
about accounts or other relationships with a
consumer avoids misleading a consumer
report user as to the consumer’s
creditworthiness, credit standing, credit
capacity, character, general reputation,
personal characteristics, or mode of living;
3. Ensure that it conducts reasonable
investigations of consumer disputes about
the accuracy or integrity of information in
consumer reports and takes appropriate
actions based on the outcome of such
investigations;
4. Ensure that it updates information it
furnishes as necessary to reflect the current
status of the consumer’s account or other
relationship, including:
(a) Any transfer of an account (e.g., by sale
or assignment for collection) to a third party;
and
(b) Any cure of the consumer’s failure to
abide by the terms of the account or other
relationship;
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5. Ensure that the information it furnishes
about accounts or other relationships with a
consumer is reported in a form and manner
that is designed to minimize the likelihood
that the information, although accurate, may
be erroneously reflected in a consumer
report, for example, by ensuring that the
information is reported with appropriate
identifying information about the consumer
to whom it pertains, in a standardized and
clearly understandable form and manner, and
with a date specifying the time period to
which the information pertains; and
6. Ensure that the information it furnishes
about accounts or other relationships with a
consumer is substantiated by the furnisher’s
own records.
Guidelines Definition Approach for
Paragraph B Follows:
B. Objectives. A furnisher should have
written policies and procedures reasonably
designed to accomplish the following
objectives:
1. Ensure that the information it furnishes
about accounts or other relationships with a
consumer is accurate. Accuracy means that
any information that a furnisher provides to
a consumer reporting agency about an
account or other relationship with the
consumer reflects without error the terms of
and liability for the account or other
relationship and the consumer’s performance
and other conduct with respect to the
account or other relationship;
2. Ensure that the information it furnishes
about accounts or other relationships with a
consumer is furnished with integrity.
Integrity means that any information that a
furnisher provides to a consumer reporting
agency about an account or other relationship
with the consumer is:
(i) Reported in a form and manner that is
designed to minimize the likelihood that the
information, although accurate, may be
erroneously reflected in a consumer report,
for example, by ensuring that the information
is:
(A) Reported with appropriate identifying
information about the consumer to whom it
pertains;
(B) Reported in a standardized and clearly
understandable form and manner; and
(C) Reported with a date specifying the
time period to which the information
pertains; and
(ii) Substantiated by the furnisher’s own
records;
3. Ensure that it conducts reasonable
investigations of consumer disputes about
the accuracy or integrity of information in
consumer reports and takes appropriate
actions based on the outcome of such
investigations; and
4. Ensure that it updates information it
furnishes as necessary to reflect the current
status of the consumer’s account or other
relationship, including:
(a) Any transfer of an account (e.g., by sale
or assignment for collection) to a third party;
and
(b) Any cure of the consumer’s failure to
abide by the terms of the account or other
relationship.
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II. Accuracy and Integrity Duties of
Furnishers Under the FCRA
A furnisher’s policies and procedures
should address compliance with all
applicable requirements imposed on the
furnisher under the FCRA, including the
duties to: 1
A. Promptly notify the consumer reporting
agency of the furnisher’s determination that
furnished information is not complete or
accurate, for a furnisher that regularly and in
the ordinary course of business furnishes
information; provide any corrections, or any
additional information, that is necessary to
make the furnished information complete
and accurate; and not thereafter furnish
information that remains incomplete or
inaccurate. 15 U.S.C. 1681s–2(a)(2).
B. Provide notice of a dispute by a
consumer about the accuracy or
completeness of information furnished to a
consumer reporting agency. 15 U.S.C. 1681s–
2(a)(3).
C. Report voluntary closure of a credit
account by the consumer in information
regularly furnished for the period in which
the credit account is closed, for a furnisher
that regularly and in the ordinary course of
business furnishes information about
consumer credit accounts. 15 U.S.C. 1681s–
2(a)(4).
D. Notify the consumer reporting agency of
the date of delinquency on an account not
later than 90 days after the furnisher
furnishes information to the consumer
reporting agency regarding action taken on
the delinquent account (including placement
for collection, charge to profit or loss, or any
similar action). Date of delinquency means
the month and year of the commencement of
the delinquency on the account that
immediately preceded the action. 15 U.S.C.
1681s–2(a)(5).
E. Have in place reasonable procedures to
respond to any notification that the furnisher
receives from a consumer reporting agency
under section 605B of the FCRA, relating to
the blocking of information resulting from
identity theft and to prevent the refurnishing
of such blocked information. 15 U.S.C.
1681s–2(a)(6)(A).
F. Not furnish to a consumer reporting
agency information that purports to relate to
the consumer if the consumer submits an
identity theft report to the furnisher (at the
address specified by that furnisher for
receiving such reports) stating that such
information maintained by that furnisher
resulted from identity theft. (This restriction
does not apply if the furnisher subsequently
knows or is informed by the consumer that
the information is correct.) 15 U.S.C. 1681s–
2(a)(6)(B).
G. After receiving a notice of dispute from
a consumer reporting agency, in a timely
manner: Conduct an investigation; review all
relevant information the consumer reporting
agency provides; report the results of the
investigation to the consumer reporting
agency; report incomplete or inaccurate
information to all nationwide consumer
1 This is not a complete listing of furnisher duties
relating to accuracy and integrity. Furnishers
should consult the FCRA to determine what
additional duties may apply.
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17:43 Dec 12, 2007
Jkt 214001
reporting agencies to which it reported the
information; and modify, delete, or
permanently block incomplete or inaccurate
information or information that cannot be
verified. 15 U.S.C. 1681s–2(b).
H. Investigate direct disputes as required
by section 660.4 of this part and 15 U.S.C.
1681s–2(a)(8).
III. Establishing and Implementing Policies
and Procedures
In establishing and implementing its
policies and procedures, a furnisher should:
A. Identify practices or activities of the
furnisher that can compromise the accuracy
and integrity of information furnished to
consumer reporting agencies, such as by:
1. Reviewing its existing practices and
activities, including the technological means
and other methods it uses to furnish
information to consumer reporting agencies
and the frequency and timing of its
furnishing of information, such as through an
audit;
2. Reviewing historical records relating to
accuracy or integrity or to disputes, or other
information relating to the accuracy and
integrity of information provided by the
furnisher to consumer reporting agencies and
the types of errors, omissions, or other
problems that may have affected the accuracy
and integrity of information it has furnished
about consumers to consumer reporting
agencies; and
3. Obtaining feedback from consumer
reporting agencies, consumers, the
furnisher’s staff, or other appropriate parties.
B. Evaluate the effectiveness of existing
policies and procedures of the furnisher
regarding the accuracy and integrity of
information furnished to consumer reporting
agencies; consider whether new, additional,
or different policies and procedures are
necessary; and consider whether
implementation of existing policies and
procedures should be modified to enhance
the accuracy and integrity of information
about consumers furnished to consumer
reporting agencies.
C. Evaluate the effectiveness of specific
methods (including technological means) the
furnisher uses to provide information to
consumer reporting agencies; how those
methods may affect the accuracy and
integrity of the information it provides to
consumer reporting agencies; and whether
new, additional, or different methods
(including technological means) should be
used to provide information to consumer
reporting agencies to enhance the accuracy
and integrity of that information.
IV. Specific Components of Policies and
Procedures
A furnisher’s policies and procedures
should address the following:
A. Establishing and implementing a system
for furnishing information about consumers
to consumer reporting agencies that is
appropriate to the nature, size, complexity,
and scope of the furnisher’s business
operations.
B. Using standard data reporting formats
and standard procedures for compiling and
furnishing data, where feasible, such as the
electronic transmission of information about
consumers to consumer reporting agencies.
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70985
C. Ensuring that the furnisher maintains its
own records for a reasonable period of time,
not less than any applicable recordkeeping
requirement, in order to substantiate the
accuracy of any information about consumers
it furnishes that is subject to a direct dispute.
D. Establishing and implementing
appropriate internal controls regarding the
accuracy and integrity of information about
consumers furnished to consumer reporting
agencies, such as by implementing standard
procedures, verifying random samples, and
conducting regular reviews of information
provided to consumer reporting agencies.
E. Training staff that participates in
activities related to the furnishing of
information about consumers to consumer
reporting agencies to implement the policies
and procedures.
F. Providing for appropriate and effective
oversight of relevant service providers whose
activities may affect the accuracy and
integrity of information about consumers
furnished to consumer reporting agencies to
ensure compliance with the policies and
procedures.
G. Furnishing information about
consumers to consumer reporting agencies
following mergers, portfolio acquisitions or
sales, or other acquisitions or transfers of
accounts or other debts in a manner that
prevents re-aging of information, duplicative
reporting, or other problems affecting the
accuracy or integrity of the information
furnished.
H. Attempting to obtain the information
listed in § 660.4(d) of this part from a
consumer before determining that the
consumer’s dispute is frivolous or irrelevant.
I. Ensuring that deletions, updates, and
corrections furnished to consumer reporting
agencies are reflected in business systems to
avoid furnishing erroneous information.
J. Conducting investigations of direct
disputes in a manner that promotes the
efficient resolution of such disputes.
K. Ensuring that technological and other
means of communication with consumer
reporting agencies are designed to prevent
duplicative reporting of accounts, erroneous
association of information with the wrong
consumer(s), and other occurrences that may
compromise the accuracy and integrity of
information contained in consumer reports.
L. Providing consumer reporting agencies
with sufficient identifying information in the
furnisher’s possession about each consumer
about whom information is furnished to
enable the consumer reporting agency
properly to identify the consumer.
M. Conducting a periodic evaluation of its
own practices, consumer reporting agency
practices of which the furnisher is aware,
investigations of disputed information,
corrections of inaccurate information, means
of communication, and other factors that may
affect the accuracy and integrity of
information furnished to consumer reporting
agencies.
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Dated: November 2, 2007.
John C. Dugan,
Comptroller of the Currency.
By order of the Board of Governors of the
Federal Reserve System, November 28th,
2007.
Jennifer J. Johnson,
Secretary of the Board.
Dated at Washington, DC, the 5th day of
November, 2007.
Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation.
Valerie J. Best,
Assistant Executive Secretary.
Dated: November 2, 2007.
By the Office of Thrift Supervision.
John M. Reich,
Director.
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By the National Credit Union
Administration Board on November 5, 2007.
Mary Rupp,
Secretary of the Board.
By Direction of the Commission.
Donald S. Clark,
Secretary.
[FR Doc. E7–23549 Filed 12–12–07; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4810–33–P; 6210–01–P; 6714–10–P;
6720–01–P; 7535–01–P; 6750–01–P
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 72, Number 239 (Thursday, December 13, 2007)]
[Proposed Rules]
[Pages 70944-70986]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: E7-23549]
[[Page 70943]]
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Part II
Department of the Treasury
Office of the Comptroller of the Currency
12 CFR Part 41
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
Federal Reserve System
12 CFR Part 222
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation
12 CFR Part 334
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
Department of the Treasury
Office of Thrift Supervision
12 CFR Part 571
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
National Credit Union Administration
12 CFR Part 717
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
Federal Trade Commission
16 CFR Part 660
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
Section 312 of the Fair and Accurate Credit Transactions Act; Proposed
Rule
Federal Register / Vol. 72, No. 239 / Thursday, December 13, 2007 /
Proposed Rules
[[Page 70944]]
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
DEPARTMENT OF THE TREASURY
Office of the Comptroller of the Currency
12 CFR Part 41
[Docket ID OCC-2007-0019]
RIN 1557-AC89
FEDERAL RESERVE SYSTEM
12 CFR Part 222
[Docket No. R-1300]
FEDERAL DEPOSIT INSURANCE CORPORATION
12 CFR Part 334
RIN 3064-AC99
DEPARTMENT OF THE TREASURY
Office of Thrift Supervision
12 CFR Part 571
[Docket No. OTS-2007-0022]
RIN 1550-AC01
NATIONAL CREDIT UNION ADMINISTRATION
12 CFR Part 717
FEDERAL TRADE COMMISSION
16 CFR Part 660
RIN 3084-AA94
Interagency Notice of Proposed Rulemaking: Procedures To Enhance
the Accuracy and Integrity of Information Furnished to Consumer
Reporting Agencies Under Section 312 of the Fair and Accurate Credit
Transactions Act
AGENCIES: Office of the Comptroller of the Currency, Treasury (OCC);
Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System (Board); Federal
Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC); Office of Thrift Supervision,
Treasury (OTS); National Credit Union Administration (NCUA); and
Federal Trade Commission (FTC).
ACTION: Notice of proposed rulemaking.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: The OCC, Board, FDIC, OTS, NCUA, and FTC (Agencies) are
publishing for comment proposed regulations and guidelines to implement
the accuracy and integrity provisions in section 312 of the Fair and
Accurate Credit Transactions Act of 2003 (FACT Act).\1\ The proposed
regulations and guidelines would implement the requirement that the
Agencies issue guidelines for use by furnishers regarding the accuracy
and integrity of the information about consumers that they furnish to
consumer reporting agencies and prescribe regulations requiring
furnishers to establish reasonable policies and procedures for
implementing the guidelines. The Agencies also are publishing for
comment proposed regulations to implement the direct dispute provisions
in section 312. The proposed regulations would implement the
requirement that the Agencies issue regulations identifying the
circumstances under which a furnisher must reinvestigate disputes about
the accuracy of information contained in a consumer report based on a
direct request from a consumer.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ Pub. L. 108-159, 117 Stat. 1952 (Dec. 4, 2003).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
DATES: Comments must be submitted by February 11, 2008.
ADDRESSES: Because paper mail in the Washington, DC area and at the
Agencies is subject to delay, commenters are encouraged to submit
comments by e-mail, if possible. Commenters are also encouraged to use
the title ``Procedures to Enhance the Accuracy and Integrity of
Information Furnished to Consumer Reporting Agencies'' to facilitate
the organization and distribution of the comments. Comments submitted
to one or more of the Agencies will be made available to all of the
Agencies. Interested parties are invited to submit comments to:
OCC: You may submit comments by any of the following methods:
Federal eRulemaking Portal--``Regulations.gov'': Go to
https://www.regulations.gov, select ``Comptroller of the Currency'' from
the agency drop-down menu, then click ``Submit.'' In the ``Docket ID''
column, select ``OCC-2007-0019'' to submit or view public comments and
to view supporting and related materials for this notice of proposed
rulemaking. The ``User Tips'' link at the top of the Regulations.gov
home page provides information on using Regulations.gov, including
instructions for submitting or viewing public comments, viewing other
supporting and related materials, and viewing the docket after the
close of the comment period.
Mail: Office of the Comptroller of the Currency, 250 E
Street, SW., Mail Stop 1-5, Washington, DC 20219.
E-mail: regs.comments@occ.treas.gov.
Fax: (202) 874-4448.
Hand Delivery/Courier: 250 E Street, SW., Attn: Public
Information Room, Mail Stop 1-5, Washington, DC 20219.
Instructions: You must include ``OCC'' as the agency name and
``Docket Number OCC-2007-0019'' in your comment. In general, OCC will
enter all comments received into the docket and publish them on
Regulations.gov without change, including any business or personal
information that you provide such as name and address information, e-
mail addresses, or phone numbers. Comments received, including
attachments and other supporting materials, are part of the public
record and subject to public disclosure. Do not enclose any information
in your comment or supporting materials that you consider confidential
or inappropriate for public disclosure.
You may review comments and other related materials by any of the
following methods:
Viewing Comments Electronically: Go to https://
www.regulations.gov, select the ``Search for All Documents (Open and
Closed for Comment)'' option, select ``Comptroller of the Currency''
from the agency drop-down menu, then click ``Submit.'' In the ``Docket
ID'' column, select ``OCC-2007-0019'' to view public comments for this
notice of proposed rulemaking.
Viewing Comments Personally: You may personally inspect
and photocopy comments at the OCC's Public Information Room, 250 E
Street, SW., Washington, DC. You can make an appointment to inspect
comments by calling (202) 874-5043.
Docket: You may also view or request available background
documents and project summaries using the methods described above.
Board: You may submit comments, identified by Docket No. R-1300, by
any of the following methods:
Agency Web site: https://www.federalreserve.gov. Follow the
instructions for submitting comments at https://www.federalreserve.gov/
generalinfo/foia/ProposedRegs.cfm.
Federal eRulemaking Portal: https://www.regulations.gov.
Follow the instructions for submitting comments.
E-mail: regs.comments@federalreserve.gov. Include docket
number in the subject line of the message.
FAX: (202) 452-3819 or (202) 452-3102.
Mail: Jennifer J. Johnson, Secretary, Board of Governors
of the Federal Reserve System, 20th Street and Constitution Avenue,
NW., Washington, DC 20551.
All public comments are available from the Board's Web site at
www.federalreserve.gov/generalinfo/foia/ProposedRegs.cfm as submitted,
[[Page 70945]]
unless modified for technical reasons. Accordingly, your comments will
not be edited to remove any identifying or contact information. Public
comments may also be viewed electronically or in paper in Room MP-500
of the Board's Martin Building (20th and C Streets, NW.) between 9 a.m.
and 5 p.m. on weekdays.
FDIC: You may submit comments, identified by the RIN for this
rulemaking, by any of the following methods:
Agency Web site: https://www.fdic.gov/regulations/laws/
federal/propose.html. Follow instructions for submitting comments on
the Agency Web site.
Federal eRulemaking Portal: https://www.regulations.gov.
Follow the instructions for submitting comments.
E-Mail: Comments@FDIC.gov. Include the RIN number in the
subject line of the message.
Mail: Robert E. Feldman, Executive Secretary, Attention:
Comments, Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation, 550 17th Street, NW.,
Washington, DC 20429.
Hand Delivery/Courier: Guard station at the rear of the
550 17th Street Building (located on F Street) on business days between
7 a.m. and 5 p.m.
Public Inspection: All comments received will be posted without
change to https://www.fdic.gov/regulations/laws/federal/propose.html,
including any personal information provided. Comments may be inspected
and photocopied at the FDIC Public Information Center, Room E-1002,
3501 North Fairfax Drive, Arlington, VA 22226, between 9 a.m. and 5
p.m. (EST) on business days. Paper copies of public comments may be
ordered from the Public Information Center by telephone at (877) 275-
3342 or (703) 562-2200.
OTS: You may submit comments, identified by OTS-2007-0022, by any
of the following methods:
Federal eRulemaking Portal: Go to https://
www.regulations.gov, select ``Office of Thrift Supervision'' from the
agency drop-down menu, then click submit. Select Docket ID ``OTS-2007-
0022'' to submit or view public comments and to view supporting and
related materials for this notice of proposed rulemaking. The ``User
Tips'' link at the top of the page provides information on using
Regulations.gov, including instructions for submitting or viewing
public comments, viewing other supporting and related materials, and
viewing the docket after the close of the comment period.
Mail: Regulation Comments, Chief Counsel's Office, Office
of Thrift Supervision, 1700 G Street, NW., Washington, DC 20552,
Attention: OTS-2007-0022.
Fax: (202) 906-6518.
Hand Delivery/Courier: Guard's Desk, East Lobby Entrance,
1700 G Street, NW., from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. on business days, Attention:
Regulation Comments, Chief Counsel's Office, Attention: OTS-2007-0022.
Instructions: All submissions received must include the
agency name and docket number for this rulemaking. All comments
received will be entered into the docket and posted on Regulations.gov
without change, including any personal information provided. Comments,
including attachments and other supporting materials received are part
of the public record and subject to public disclosure. Do not enclose
any information in your comment or supporting materials that you
consider confidential or inappropriate for public disclosure.
Viewing Comments Electronically: Go to https://
www.regulations.gov, select ``Office of Thrift Supervision'' from the
agency drop-down menu, then click ``Submit.'' Select Docket ID ``OTS-
2007-0022'' to view public comments for this notice of proposed
rulemaking.
Viewing Comments On-Site: You may inspect comments at the
Public Reading Room, 1700 G Street, NW., by appointment. To make an
appointment for access, call (202) 906-5922, send an e-mail to
public.info@ots.treas.gov, or send a facsimile transmission to (202)
906-6518. (Prior notice identifying the materials you will be
requesting will assist us in serving you.) We schedule appointments on
business days between 10 a.m. and 4 p.m. In most cases, appointments
will be available the next business day following the date we receive a
request.
NCUA: You may submit comments by any of the following methods
(please send comments by one method only):
Federal eRulemaking Portal: https://www.regulations.gov.
Follow the instructions for submitting comments.
NCUA Web Site: https://www.ncua.gov/
RegulationsOpinionsLaws/proposed_regs/proposed_regs.html. Follow the
instructions for submitting comments.
E-mail: Address to regcomments@ncua.gov. Include ``[Your
name] Comments on Notice of Proposed Rulemaking Part 717, Procedures to
Enhance the Accuracy and Integrity of Information Furnished to Consumer
Reporting Agencies under Section 312 of the Fair and Accurate Credit
Transactions Act'' in the e-mail subject line.
Fax: (703) 518-6319. Use the subject line described above
for e-mail.
Mail: Address to Mary Rupp, Secretary of the Board,
National Credit Union Administration, 1775 Duke Street, Alexandria, VA
22314-3428.
Hand Delivery/Courier: Address to Mary Rupp, Secretary of
the Board, National Credit Union Administration. Deliver to guard
station in the lobby of 1775 Duke Street, Alexandria, VA 22314-3428, on
business days between 8 a.m. and 5 p.m.
All public comments are available on the agency's Web site at https://
www.ncua.gov/RegulationsOpinionsLaws/comments as submitted, except as
may not be possible for technical reasons. Public comments will not be
edited to remove any identifying or contact information. Paper copies
of comments may be inspected in NCUA's law library, at 1775 Duke
Street, Alexandria, VA 22314, by appointment weekdays between 9 a.m.
and 3 p.m. To make an appointment, call (703) 518-6546 or send an e-
mail to OGCMail@ncua.gov.
FTC: Comments should refer to ``Procedures to Enhance the Accuracy
and Integrity of Information Furnished to Consumer Reporting Agencies
under Section 312 of the Fair and Accurate Credit Transactions Act,
Project No. R611017,'' and may be submitted by any of the following
methods. Comments containing confidential material must be filed in
paper form, must be clearly labeled ``Confidential,'' and must comply
with Commission Rule 4.9(c).\2\
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\2\ The comment must be accompanied by an explicit request for
confidential treatment, including the factual and legal basis for
the request, and must identify the specific portions of the comment
to be withheld from the public record. The request will be granted
or denied by the Commission's General Counsel, consistent with
applicable law and the public interest. See Commission Rule 4.9(c),
16 CFR 4.9(c).
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E-mail: https://secure.commentworks.com/ftc-
FACTAfurnishers. To ensure that the Commission considers an electronic
comment, you must file it on the Web-based form found at this Web link
and follow the instructions on that form.
Federal eRulemaking Portal: https://www.regulations.gov.
You may visit this Web site to read this request for public comment and
to file an electronic comment. The Commission will consider all
comments that regulations.gov forwards to it.
Mail or Hand Delivery: A comment filed in paper form
should refer, both in the text and on the envelope, to the name and
project number identified above, and should be mailed or delivered to
the following address:
[[Page 70946]]
Federal Trade Commission/Office of the Secretary, Room 159-H (Annex C),
600 Pennsylvania Avenue, NW., Washington, DC 20580.
The FTC Act and other laws the Commission administers permit the
collection of public comments to consider and use in this proceeding as
appropriate. All timely and responsive public comments, whether filed
in paper or electronic form, will be considered by the Commission, and
will be available to the public on the FTC Web site, to the extent
practicable, at https://www.ftc.gov/os/publiccomments.htm. As a matter
of discretion, the FTC makes every effort to remove home contact
information for individuals from the public comments it receives before
placing those comments on the FTC Web site. More information, including
routine uses permitted by the Privacy Act, may be found in the FTC's
privacy policy, at https://www.ftc.gov/ftc/privacy.htm.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
OCC: Stephen Van Meter, Assistant Director, Community and Consumer
Law Division, (202) 874-5750; Patrick T. Tierney, Senior Attorney,
Legislative and Regulatory Activities Division, (202) 874-5090; or Paul
Utterback, National Bank Examiner, Compliance Policy, (202) 874-4428,
Office of the Comptroller of the Currency, 250 E Street, SW.,
Washington, DC 20219.
Board: David A. Stein, Counsel, Amy E. Burke, Attorney, or Jelena
McWilliams, Attorney, Division of Consumer and Community Affairs, (202)
452-3667 or (202) 452-2412; or Anne B. Zorc, Senior Attorney, (202)
452-3876, or Kara L. Handzlik, Attorney, (202) 452-3852, Legal
Division, Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System, 20th and C
Streets, NW., Washington, DC 20551.
FDIC: David P. Lafleur, Policy Analyst, (202) 898-6569, or John
Jackwood, Senior Policy Analyst, (202) 898-3991, Division of
Supervision and Consumer Protection; Richard M. Schwartz, Counsel,
(202) 898-7424, or Richard B. Foley, Counsel, (202) 898-3784, Legal
Division; 550 17th St., NW., Washington, DC 20429.
OTS: Suzanne McQueen, Consumer Regulations Analyst, Compliance and
Consumer Protection Division, (202) 906-6459; or Richard Bennett,
Senior Compliance Counsel, Regulations and Legislation Division, (202)
906-7409, at 1700 G Street, NW., Washington, DC 20552.
NCUA: Linda Dent or Regina Metz, Attorneys, Office of General
Counsel, phone (703) 518-6540 or fax (703) 518-6569, National Credit
Union Administration, 1775 Duke Street, Alexandria, VA 22314.
FTC: Clarke W. Brinckerhoff and Pavneet Singh, Attorneys, (202)
326-2252, Bureau of Consumer Protection, Federal Trade Commission, 600
Pennsylvania Avenue, NW., Washington, DC 20580.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
I. Introduction
The Fair Credit Reporting Act (FCRA), which was enacted in 1970,
sets standards for the collection, communication, and use of
information bearing on a consumer's creditworthiness, credit standing,
credit capacity, character, general reputation, personal
characteristics, or mode of living.\3\ In 1996, the Consumer Credit
Reporting Reform Act extensively amended the FCRA.\4\ The FACT Act
further amended the FCRA for various purposes, including to increase
the accuracy of consumer reports.
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\3\ 15 U.S.C. 1681-1681x.
\4\ Pub. L. 104-208, 110 Stat. 3009 (Sept. 20, 1996).
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Section 623 of the FCRA describes the responsibilities of persons
that furnish information about consumers (furnishers) to consumer
reporting agencies (CRAs).\5\ Section 312 of the FACT Act amended
section 623 by requiring the Agencies to issue guidelines for use by
furnishers regarding the accuracy and integrity of the information
about consumers that they furnish to consumer reporting agencies and to
prescribe regulations requiring furnishers to establish reasonable
policies and procedures for implementing the guidelines (referred to in
this proposal as the accuracy and integrity regulations and
guidelines). Section 312 also requires the Agencies to issue
regulations identifying the circumstances under which a furnisher must
reinvestigate disputes concerning the accuracy of information provided
by a furnisher to a CRA and contained in a consumer report based on a
direct request from a consumer (referred to in this proposal as the
direct dispute regulations). The Agencies are proposing to adopt
accuracy and integrity regulations and guidelines and direct dispute
regulations to satisfy the requirements of section 312.\6\
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\5\ Section 623 is codified at 15 U.S.C. 1681s-2.
\6\ The FACT Act also directs the FTC to ``conduct an ongoing
study of the accuracy and completeness of information contained in
consumer reports prepared or maintained by consumer reporting
agencies and methods for improving the accuracy and completeness of
such information.'' See section 319 of the FACT Act. The FTC
submitted its first interim report to Congress on this study on
December 9, 2004, https://www.ftc.gov/reports/facta/
041209factarpt.pdf (last visited Oct. 4, 2007). The FTC submitted
its second interim report to Congress in December 2006, https://
www.ftc.gov/reports/FACTACT/FACT_Act_Report_2006.pdf (last
visited Oct. 4, 2007).
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II. Statutory Requirements
Accuracy and Integrity Regulations and Guidelines
As added by section 312 of the FACT Act, section 623(e)(1)(A) of
the FCRA requires the Agencies to establish and maintain guidelines for
use by each furnisher ``regarding the accuracy and integrity of the
information relating to consumers'' that the furnisher provides to
CRAs. In developing the guidelines, section 623(e)(3) directs the
Agencies to:
Identify patterns, practices, and specific forms of
activity that can compromise the accuracy and integrity of information
furnished to CRAs;
Review the methods (including technological means) used to
furnish information relating to consumers to CRAs;
Determine whether furnishers maintain and enforce policies
to assure the accuracy and integrity of information furnished to CRAs;
and
Examine the policies and processes employed by furnishers
to conduct reinvestigations and correct inaccurate information relating
to consumers that has been furnished to CRAs.
The Agencies also are required to update the guidelines as often as
necessary.
Section 623(e)(1)(B) of the FCRA requires the Agencies to prescribe
regulations requiring furnishers to ``establish reasonable policies and
procedures for implementing the guidelines'' established pursuant to
section 623(e)(1)(A). Section 623(e)(2) of the FCRA provides that the
Agencies must consult and coordinate with one another so that, to the
extent possible, the regulations prescribed by each Agency are
consistent and comparable with the regulations prescribed by each of
the other Agencies.
Direct Disputes
As amended by section 312 of the FACT Act, section 623(a)(8) of the
FCRA directs the Agencies jointly to prescribe regulations that
identify the circumstances under which a furnisher is required to
reinvestigate a dispute concerning the accuracy of information
contained in a consumer report on the consumer, based on a direct
request by the consumer. In prescribing the direct dispute regulations,
section 623(a)(8) directs the Agencies to weigh the following specific
factors:
The benefits to consumers and the costs to furnishers and
the credit reporting system;
[[Page 70947]]
The impact on the overall accuracy and integrity of
consumer reports of any direct dispute requirements;
Whether direct contact by the consumer with the furnisher
would likely result in the most expeditious resolution of any dispute;
and
The potential impact on the credit reporting process if
credit repair organizations are able to circumvent the provisions in
subparagraph G of section 623(a)(8), which generally states that the
direct dispute rules shall not apply when credit repair organizations
provide notices of dispute on behalf of consumers.
III. The Agencies' Consideration of the Statutory Accuracy and
Integrity Criteria and Direct Dispute Factors
The Agencies' Advance Notice of Proposed Rulemaking
In order to obtain information pertaining to the criteria that
Congress directed the Agencies to consider in developing the accuracy
and integrity guidelines and the factors that Congress directed the
Agencies to weigh in prescribing the direct dispute regulations, the
Agencies issued an advance notice of proposed rulemaking (ANPR) in
March 2006.\7\ The ANPR contained detailed requests for comment on ten
issues related to the statutory criteria governing the development of
the accuracy and integrity guidelines, and on eight issues related to
the statutory factors that the Agencies must weigh when promulgating
the direct dispute regulations. The Agencies also specifically
requested comment on how the issues presented by the ANPR might differ
depending on the type of furnisher, the types of information furnished,
the frequency with which a furnisher reports information about
consumers to CRAs, or the type of CRA that receives the furnished
information.
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\7\ 71 FR 14,419 (March 22, 2006).
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The Agencies received a total of 197 comments. Commenters included
depository institutions, other financial services companies, trade
associations, a CRA, a credit score service provider, a mortgage
company, consumer groups, and individual consumers. Key issues
identified and comments received on the accuracy and integrity criteria
and on the direct dispute factors are summarized separately in the next
two sections.
Comments Pertaining to Accuracy and Integrity Regulations and
Guidelines
Burden of accuracy and integrity regulations and guidelines. A
consistent theme among industry commenters on the ANPR was that the
proposed guidelines and regulations should be sensitive to the
voluntary nature of the reporting of information about consumers by
furnishers to CRAs and not create undue burdens on furnishers that
would discourage reporting. These commenters asserted that imposing
burden on furnishers may result in furnishers reporting less
information than they do presently or ceasing to report at all, thereby
decreasing the effectiveness of the current credit reporting system for
both consumers and industry.
Types of errors, omissions, or other problems that may impair the
accuracy and integrity of furnished information. Many commenters
detailed the types of errors that may impair the accuracy of
information furnished to CRAs. Industry commenters, consumer groups,
and individuals stated that some furnishers do not report consumers'
positive payment histories, a practice that can lead to lower credit
scores than consumers may merit. Similarly, commenters also noted that
some furnishers do not report credit limits, which may likewise lead to
lower credit scores. Consumer groups reported that sales of consumer
accounts to collection agencies also result in accounts being ``re-
aged,'' meaning that a debt receives a new origination date when the
collection account is opened, resulting in the debt being included on a
consumer's credit file longer than legally permissible. In addition, a
number of industry commenters mentioned that data entry errors by
furnishers and different data processing procedures by the CRAs can
result in ``mixed files''--files that include information from two or
more consumers. Commenters noted that furnishing inaccurate information
can adversely affect consumer credit scores and result in higher costs
of credit for some consumers and increased credit risk for lenders.
Patterns, practices, and specific forms of activity that can
compromise the accuracy and integrity of furnished information.
Industry commenters and consumer groups stated that a number of
furnishers do not use the industry standard format for reporting
information about consumers to CRAs, which results in the reporting of
inaccurate information. In addition, industry and consumer groups
mentioned that sales of debt to collection agencies or to other
creditors results in inaccurate information reported to the CRAs (e.g.,
duplicative reporting of accounts and re-aged accounts). Consumer
groups and a trade association noted problems with inaccurate
bankruptcy information being reported--some furnishers continue to
report a debt as not included in bankruptcy, fail to record a debt as
discharged, or continue to show a balance owed after bankruptcy
discharge. Several industry commenters stated that some furnishers do
not provide data to CRAs in a timely manner, which may result in
delinquent debtors appearing as current on their loans.
Business, economic, or other reasons for the patterns, practices,
and specific forms of activity that can compromise the accuracy and
integrity of furnished information. A few consumer groups and trade
associations indicated that some creditors omit good payment history or
credit limit information in order to protect their proprietary
underwriting systems and prevent competitors from soliciting business
from their customers. Some commenters also asserted that collection
agencies have little economic incentive to report updated or accurate
information because they typically do not use consumer report
information to determine credit risk.
Recommendations and descriptions of policies and procedures that a
furnisher should implement and maintain to identify, prevent, or
mitigate patterns, practices, and specific forms of activity that can
compromise the accuracy and integrity of information furnished to a
CRA. Some individual and industry commenters recommended that
furnishers report all consumer account information to CRAs and not omit
information. Consumer groups and some industry commenters recommended
that furnishers should report using the Metro 2 format--a standard
reporting format created by the credit reporting industry--or a similar
standardized format. Some depository institutions and trade
associations suggested that the accuracy and integrity guidelines
should be flexible and take into consideration the diversity of
furnishers with regard to size and business complexity.
Methods (including technological means) used to furnish information
about consumers to CRAs. Industry commenters stated that most
furnishers are reporting to the three nationwide CRAs electronically
using the Metro 2 format, although some furnishers transmit information
via magnetic tape, disks, or paper. Some trade associations commented
that errors can be introduced into a consumer's credit file when a CRA
translates the furnisher's raw data into the CRA's database.
[[Page 70948]]
Maintenance and enforcement of policies and procedures to ensure
the accuracy and integrity of information furnished to CRAs. Industry
commenters stated that, in general, furnishers have policies and
procedures in place to ensure the accuracy of information and perform
internal audits to verify accuracy. Industry commenters also stated
that furnishers have a business incentive to maintain and report
accurate information in order to maintain good customer relations.
Methods (including any technological means) that a furnisher should
use to ensure the accuracy and integrity of information about consumers
furnished to CRAs. Industry commenters suggested that furnishers should
use internal reports to verify the accuracy of information transmitted
to the CRAs. Consumer groups recommended that furnishers take
appropriate steps to ensure that they report bankruptcy discharge
information accurately.
Descriptions of policies, procedures, and processes used by
furnishers to conduct reinvestigations and to correct inaccurately
furnished information and recommendations that furnishers should adopt.
Industry commenters indicated that most furnishers use an electronic
automated system (e-OSCAR) for receiving and transmitting consumer
dispute information from and to the three nationwide CRAs. Although
each furnisher has its own procedures for investigating disputes,
furnishers generally review the information provided by the CRA and
compare it to the information in the consumer's file at the furnisher.
A few industry commenters stated that using the e-OSCAR system to
conduct reinvestigations is adequate. One trade association stated that
furnishers should establish better reinvestigation procedures and
provide staff training for processing credit disputes.
Consumer groups commented that furnishers' reinvestigation
procedures are inadequate in that they only verify that the reported
information is consistent with the furnishers' records, not the
underlying accuracy of such information. Consumer groups recommended
that furnishers should perform in-depth investigations beyond verifying
that information reported to CRAs matches furnishers' records,
including contacting consumers to obtain additional information, if
necessary. Consumer groups also noted that CRAs do not provide
furnishers with documentation provided by consumers to support their
claims.
Description of the policies and procedures of CRAs for ensuring the
accuracy and integrity of furnished information and whether and to what
extent those policies, procedures, or other requirements address
particular problems that may affect information accuracy and integrity.
A few industry commenters noted that CRAs have implemented policies to
ensure the accuracy of information that they receive from furnishers.
One industry commenter asserted that once CRAs incorporate data into
their databases, furnishers do not know how CRAs actually apply the
data to consumer credit files or whether the data is applied to the
correct consumers.
Comments Pertaining to Direct Dispute Regulations
Circumstances under which a furnisher should be required to
investigate a dispute. Industry commenters indicated that furnishers
generally are voluntarily investigating disputes that are directly
submitted to them using a process that is similar to the one furnishers
use to investigate disputes that CRAs forward to the furnishers.
Industry commenters, however, also stated that investigations of direct
disputes should be required only in instances of fraud or identity
theft that can be documented by the consumer, or where the consumer has
provided a written detailed dispute to the furnisher. Other industry
commenters believe that investigations of direct disputes should only
be required if the consumer has already disputed the item with the CRA
and received a response. Consumer groups favored a broad application of
the direct dispute rule, noting that many furnishers already have an
obligation to investigate other types of disputes for major product
categories under other laws, such as the Truth in Lending Act, Real
Estate Settlement Procedures Act, and Electronic Fund Transfer Act.
Some individuals commented that furnishers should always be required to
reinvestigate a consumer's account upon the consumer's request.
Benefits or costs to consumers that may result from a direct
dispute right. Consumer groups commented that consumers would benefit
from direct disputes because the dispute requirement would eliminate
the problem of CRAs not forwarding disputes and supporting
documentation to furnishers and would provide furnishers with necessary
documentation to investigate errors or fraud. One individual noted that
consumers would benefit by being able to deal with one entity, the
furnisher, rather than the three nationwide CRAs. Some industry
commenters noted that consumers would benefit from direct disputes in
complex cases or where the consumer needs to provide the furnisher with
supporting documentation.
Benefits to furnishers, consumer reporting agencies, or the credit
reporting system that may result if furnishers are required to
investigate direct disputes. Consumer groups stated that direct
disputes will result in a more accurate credit reporting system and
would afford industry the opportunity to standardize the dispute
resolution process. A few industry commenters stated that direct
disputes would yield faster dispute resolution for consumers. Some
industry commenters mentioned that direct disputes may be beneficial
for providing to furnishers additional documentation for complex
disputes, noting that such information may not be forwarded by CRAs.
Costs to furnishers, consumer reporting agencies, or the credit
reporting system of implementing a direct dispute requirement. Industry
commenters believed that a direct dispute requirement would impose
significant costs on furnishers resulting from an expected increase in
the number of direct disputes. One depository institution reported that
the costs of resolving a direct dispute are related to whether the
disputed information contains derogatory information and the nature of
the consumer's dispute. Some industry commenters noted that reviewing
consumers' lengthy payment histories can be costly. One industry
commenter noted that a direct dispute requirement would shift costs
from CRAs to furnishers.
One consumer group commented that start-up costs should not be
burdensome as many furnishers already have direct dispute
responsibilities for their major products (such as credit cards). This
commenter asserted that the cost for processing a direct dispute ranges
from $25 to $200, and that this cost is exceeded by the harms to
consumers who are adversely affected due to reporting errors.
Impact on the overall accuracy and integrity of consumer reports if
furnishers are required to investigate direct disputes. Some industry
commenters stated that they expect an adverse impact on overall
accuracy and integrity of consumer reports as a result of an increase
in duplicate disputes and costs, decreased efficiency in processing
disputes, and the likelihood that some furnishers would stop reporting
or report less information than they currently do.
Whether direct contact by the consumer with the furnisher would
likely result in the most expeditious
[[Page 70949]]
resolution of a dispute. Industry commenters generally believed that
direct contact by the consumer is most appropriate in instances of
fraud, identity theft, or where detailed information is needed in order
to resolve the consumer dispute. Some industry commenters also stated
that direct contact by the consumer would not be appropriate where the
error lies with the CRA or an aggregator rather than with the
furnisher.
Potential impact on the credit reporting process if credit repair
organizations are able to circumvent the FCRA's prohibition of their
submission of direct disputes. Consumer groups and an individual
commented that attorneys should be permitted to assist consumers with
disputes and not be considered credit repair organizations. Industry
commenters predicted an increase in costs resulting from a significant
increase in the number of direct disputes that would be filed by credit
repair organizations, which, these commenters contended, are often
deliberately vague or overbroad.
Additional, specific comments are mentioned, as appropriate, in the
section-by-section analysis.
The Agencies have carefully considered the comments received in
response to the ANPR in developing the proposed accuracy and integrity
regulations and guidelines and the proposed direct dispute regulations.
The Agencies also reviewed a number of studies that have identified
potential issues that may affect the accuracy of consumer report
information. These studies indicate that consumer report accuracy may
be affected by the presence of stale account information, the practice
of furnishing only negative information about an account, inaccurate or
incomplete public record data, inaccurate or incomplete collection
account data, and unreported credit limits.\8\
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\8\ See Robert B. Avery, Raphael W. Bostic, Paul S. Calem &
Glenn B. Canner, An Overview of Consumer Data and Credit Reporting,
Federal Reserve Bulletin, vol. 89, at 47-73 (Feb. 2003); Robert B.
Avery, Paul S. Calem, Glenn B. Canner & Shannon C. Mok, Credit
Report Accuracy and Access to Credit, Federal Reserve Bulletin, vol.
90, at 297-322 (Summer 2004); Consumer Federation of America &
National Credit Reporting Association, Credit Score Accuracy and
Implications for Consumers (Dec. 17, 2002), https://
www.consumerfed.org/pdfs/121702CFA_NCRA_Credit_Score_Report_
Final.pdf (last visited Oct. 4, 2007); Federal Trade Commission and
Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System, Report to Congress
on the Fair Credit Reporting Act Dispute Process (Aug. 2006).
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IV. Section-by-Section Analysis \9\
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\9\ The OCC, Board, FDIC, OTS and NCUA would place the proposed
regulations and guidelines implementing section 312 in the part of
their regulations that implement the FCRA--12 CFR parts 41, 222,
334, 571, and 717, respectively. For ease of reference, the
discussion in the Supplementary Information section uses the shared
numerical suffix of each of these agency's regulations. The FTC also
would place the proposed regulations and guidelines in the part of
its regulations implementing the FCRA, specifically 16 CFR part 660.
However, the FTC uses different numerical suffixes that equate to
the numerical suffixes discussed in the Supplementary Information
section as follows: Suffix .40 = FTC suffix .1, suffix .41 = FTC
suffix .2, suffix .42 = FTC suffix .3, and suffix .43 = FTC suffix
.4. In addition, Appendix E referenced in the Supplementary
Information section is the FTC's Appendix A.
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The following describes the three components of this rulemaking:
the proposed accuracy and integrity regulations, the proposed accuracy
and integrity guidelines, and the proposed direct dispute regulations.
Proposed Accuracy and Integrity Regulations
Section --.40 Scope
Section --.40 sets forth the scope of each Agency's proposed
regulations requiring furnishers to establish reasonable policies and
procedures for implementing the accuracy and integrity guidelines. Each
of the Agencies has tailored this section to describe those entities to
which this subpart applies. The FDIC requests comment on whether it
would be useful to include a cross-reference in its proposed regulation
to the definition of ``subsidiary'' in the Federal Deposit Insurance
Act.\10\
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\10\ See 12 U.S.C. 1813(w)(4).
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Section --.41 Definitions.
Two approaches to defining the terms ``accuracy'' and
``integrity.''
Section 623(e) of the FCRA requires the Agencies to establish and
maintain guidelines for use by furnishers regarding the accuracy and
integrity of the information about consumers that they furnish to CRAs.
The statute does not define the terms ``accuracy'' or ``integrity.''
Consumer group and industry commenters on the ANPR provided
suggestions for defining the terms ``accuracy'' and ``integrity.''
Consumer groups proposed that the Agencies define the term ``accuracy''
to mean ``conformity to fact,'' rather than conformity to data records.
They said that an accuracy standard should rely not only upon a
furnisher's data records, but also upon original documents such as
credit agreements. Some consumer groups also said that information
should not be considered ``accurate'' if it is overly general,
incomplete, out-of-date, or misleading. Consumer groups also proposed
that the Agencies make clear that information lacks ``integrity'' if it
is technically accurate, but misleads users of consumer reports because
it does not include critical information.
Industry commenters, citing the legislative history of the FACT
Act, suggested that the term ``integrity'' does not mean completeness,
but rather, that the information a furnisher provides to a CRA is
factually correct.
In the Agencies' view, neither the text nor the legislative history
of the FACT Act resolves how the terms ``accuracy'' and ``integrity''
should be defined. Although the terms used in section 623(e) differ
from terms used in other provisions of the FCRA,\11\ the text of
section 623(e) provides no direction to the Agencies about the meaning
or significance of that difference.\12\ The Agencies have reviewed the
legislative history, and note that the Congressional Record includes
post-enrollment statements regarding section 623(e) made by the
Chairman of the House Financial Services Committee and by the Ranking
Member of the Senate Committee on Banking, Housing and Urban
Affairs.\13\ Those statements,
[[Page 70950]]
however, provide different views on the meaning of the terms.
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\11\ See FCRA section 623(b)(1), 15 U.S.C. 1681s-2(b)(1)
(requiring entities that furnish information to CRAs to conduct
investigations in response to complaints regarding the
``completeness or accuracy'' of furnished information); sections
FCRA 623(a)(2)(A)-(B), 15 U.S.C. 1681s-2(a)(2)(A)-(B) (requiring
furnishers to correct and update information that the furnisher
determines is ``not complete or accurate'' and to refrain from
refurnishing information that remains ``not complete or accurate'').
\12\ Earlier versions of the legislation that became the FACT
Act required the agencies to prescribe regulations and guidelines
regarding the ``accuracy and completeness'' of information relating
to consumers. This language also was contained in the bill passed by
the Senate and referred to the Conference Committee. However, the
bill reported by the Conference Committee used the phrase ``accuracy
and integrity.'' Compare 149 Cong. Rec. S13990 (Nov. 5, 2003) (bill
as passed by the Senate) with 149 Cong. Rec. H12198 (Nov. 21, 2003)
(bill as reported by the Conference Committee).
\13\ See 149 Cong. Rec. E2512, E2516 (Nov. 4, 2003) (extension
of remarks of Chairman Michael Oxley, entered into the Congressional
Record on Dec. 9, 2003) (`` `[a]ccuracy and integrity' was selected
[by the Congress] as the relevant standard rather than `accuracy and
completeness' as used in Sections 313 and 319 [of the FACT Act], to
focus on the quality of the information furnished rather than the
completeness of the information furnished.''); 149 Cong. Rec.
S15806-02 (Nov. 24, 2003) (statement of Ranking Member Paul
Sarbanes) (`` `[A]ccuracy' relates to whether the information that
is provided by data furnishers to credit reporting agencies is
factually correct. The term `integrity' relates to whether all
relevant information that is used to assess credit risk and to grant
credit is accurately provided. Integrity of information is not
achieved when furnishers do not fully provide data that, by its
absence, could have a positive or negative effect on a consumer's
credit score, or on his or her ability to obtain credit under the
most favorable terms for which he or she qualifies.'').
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In light of these considerations, the Agencies are proposing for
comment two alternative approaches to defining the terms ``accuracy''
and ``integrity'' in the text of the regulations and guidelines.
Although the definition of ``accuracy'' is the same under both
alternatives, the two approaches differ in terms of both the substance
of the definition of ``integrity'' and the placement of the
definitions. Accordingly, the Agencies request comment on which
definition of ``integrity'' should be adopted in the final rule, and on
whether the definitions of ``accuracy'' and ``integrity'' should be
placed in the regulations or in the guidelines.
A. Regulatory Definition Approach
Under the first approach, the Agencies would provide specific
definitions for the terms ``accuracy'' and ``integrity'' in the
regulations. This approach, labeled ``Regulatory Definition Approach,''
appears at Sec. Sec. --.41(a) and --.41(b) in the text of the proposed
regulations. Under proposed Sec. --.41(a), the term ``accuracy'' means
that any information that a furnisher provides to a CRA about an
account or other relationship with the consumer reflects without error
the terms of and liability for the account or other relationship and
the consumer's performance or other conduct with respect to the account
or other relationship. This proposed definition of ``accuracy'' is
intended to require that furnishers have reasonable procedures in place
to ensure that the information they provide to CRAs is factually
correct. The Agencies solicit comment on whether the definition of
accuracy should specifically provide that accuracy includes updating
information as necessary to ensure that information furnished is
current.
Under proposed Sec. --.41(b), the term ``integrity'' means that
any information that a furnisher provides to a CRA about an account or
other relationship with the consumer does not omit any term, such as a
credit limit or opening date, of that account or other relationship,
the absence of which can reasonably be expected to contribute to an
incorrect evaluation by a user of a consumer report of a consumer's
creditworthiness, credit standing, credit capacity, character, general
reputation, personal characteristics, or mode of living. Thus, the
Regulatory Definition Approach provides that information furnished to a
CRA may be technically ``accurate'' yet lack ``integrity'' because it
presents a misleading picture of the consumer's creditworthiness by
omitting critical information, such as a credit limit on a revolving
credit account.\14\
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\14\ ``A key factor that credit evaluators consider when they
assess the creditworthiness of an individual is credit utilization.
If a creditor fails to report a credit limit for an account, credit
evaluators must either ignore utilization or use a substitute
measure such as the highest-balance level--that is, the largest
amount ever owed on the account. Substituting the highest balance
level for the credit limit generally results in a higher estimate of
credit utilization because the highest-balance amount is typically
lower than the credit limit: the higher estimate leads, in turn, to
a higher perceived level of credit risk for affected consumers.''
Robert B. Avery, Paul S. Calem, Glenn B. Canner, Credit Report
Accuracy and Access to Credit; Federal Reserve Bulletin, Summer
2004, p. 306.
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Under the Regulatory Definition Approach--and as described in
further detail in the section-by-section analysis of the guidelines--
the Agencies would include in the guidelines six objectives that a
furnisher's policies and procedures should be designed to achieve. The
six objectives seek to ensure that: Information is furnished
accurately; information is furnished with integrity; the furnisher
conducts reasonable investigations of consumer disputes about the
accuracy or integrity of information in consumer reports and takes
appropriate actions based on the outcome of such investigations;
information is reported in a form and manner designed to minimize the
likelihood that it will be erroneously reflected in the consumer's
report; information furnished is substantiated by the furnisher's
records; and the furnisher updates information it furnishes as
necessary to reflect the current status of the consumer's account or
other relationship. The first two of these objectives would reflect the
regulatory definitions of ``accuracy'' and ``integrity.''
Thus, under the Regulatory Definition Approach, the guidelines
would provide that a furnisher should have written policies and
procedures reasonably designed to ensure that the information it
furnishes about accounts or other relationships with a consumer:
Accurately identifies the appropriate consumer;
Accurately reports the terms of those accounts or other
relationships; and
Accurately reports the consumer's performance and other
conduct with respect to the account or other relationship.
Further, the guidelines would provide that a furnisher should have
policies and procedures reasonably designed to ensure that the
information it furnishes about accounts or other relationships with a
consumer avoids misleading users of consumer reports about the
consumer's creditworthiness, credit standing, credit capacity,
character, general reputation, personal characteristics, or mode of
living.
Consistent with the FCRA, under which the furnishing of information
about consumers is voluntary, the proposed definitions would apply only
to information that the furnisher elects to report to CRAs. The
Agencies are aware that some furnishers may be subject to separate
obligations to report all available information about an account or
other relationship.\15\ These proposed definitions, however, are not
intended to require furnishers to do so.
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\15\ Furnishers that report information about consumers to CRAs
related to mortgage loans may be required by Freddie Mac, Fannie
Mae, and the Federal Housing Administration to report full-file
information. See Fannie Mae Servicing Guide, Part I, Section 304.09
and Part VII, Section 107; Freddie Mac Service Guide, Section 55.4:
Reports to credit repositories; and the Federal Housing
Administration Servicing Handbook, Section 4330.1(c) (Rev-5)
(incorporating by reference the Fannie Mae Servicing Guide).
Further, the Department of Housing and Urban Development has defined
``Mortgages contrary to good lending practices'' to include a
mortgage or a group or category of mortgages entered into by a
lender and purchased by Fannie Mae or Freddie Mac where it can be
shown that a lender engaged in a practice of failing to report
monthly on borrowers' repayment history to credit repositories on
the status of each loan purchased by Fannie Mae or Freddie Mac that
a lender is servicing. 24 CFR 81.2(b).
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B. Guidelines Definition Approach
The second approach contained in the proposal, labeled the
``Guidelines Definition Approach,'' would define the terms ``accuracy''
and ``integrity'' in the guidelines--rather than in the regulations--
with reference to the objectives that a furnisher's policies and
procedures should be designed to accomplish.
Under the Guidelines Definition Approach, the Agencies have
identified four objectives that pertain to the accuracy and integrity
of information furnished and related matters. Definitions for the terms
``accuracy'' and ``integrity'' would be incorporated into the first two
of these objectives. Thus, the guidelines would provide that a
furnisher should have written policies and procedures reasonably
designed to ensure that the information it furnishes about accounts or
other relationships with a consumer is accurate. The guidelines would
define ``accuracy'' to mean that any information that a furnisher
provides to a CRA about an account or other relationship with the
consumer reflects without error the terms of and liability for the
account or other relationship and the consumer's performance or other
conduct with
[[Page 70951]]
respect to the account or other relationship. This is the same
definition of ``accuracy'' used in the Regulatory Definition Approach.
Additionally, the guidelines would provide that a furnisher's
policies and procedures should ensure that the information it furnishes
about accounts or other relationships with a consumer is furnished with
integrity. The guidelines would define ``integrity'' to mean that any
information that a furnisher provides to a CRA about an account or
other relationship with the consumer: (1) Is reported in a form and
manner that is designed to minimize the likelihood that the
information, although accurate, may be erroneously reflected in a
consumer report; and (2) should be substantiated by the furnisher's own
records. In addition to being placed in a different location, this
definition is substantively different from that used in the Regulatory
Definition Approach.
Under the Guidelines Definition Approach, the definition of
``integrity'' does not address the omission of any term the absence of
which could contribute to an incorrect evaluation by a user of a
consumer's creditworthiness. Instead, the proposed definition of
``integrity'' addresses two potential issues with furnished
information. First, accurate information may be attributed to the wrong
consumer or the wrong account, or may be associated with an erroneous
date. Second, if the accuracy of the furnished information is disputed,
the furnisher should be able to substantiate, or verify, the
information through its own records. The Regulatory Definition Approach
also includes these two concepts in the guidelines as objectives that a
furnisher's policies and procedures should be designed to achieve. The
Guidelines Definition Approach, like the Regulatory Definition
Approach, also includes as objectives: Ensuring that the furnisher
conducts reasonable investigations of consumer disputes about the
accuracy or integrity of information in consumer reports and takes
appropriate actions based on the outcome of such investigations; and
ensuring that the furnisher updates information it furnishes as
necessary to reflect the current status of the consumer's account or
other relationship.
As noted above, the Agencies invite comment on these alternative
definitions of ``integrity,'' and on whether the definitions of
``accuracy'' and ``integrity'' should be placed in the regulatory text
or in the guidelines.
Furnisher
Proposed Sec. --.41(c) would define the term ``furnisher'' to mean
an entity other than an individual consumer that furnishes information
relating to consumers to one or more CRAs. An entity is not a furnisher
under the proposed definition when it provides information to a CRA
solely to obtain a consumer report under sections 604(a) and (f) of the
FCRA, which enumerate the circumstances under which a CRA may provide a
consumer report and prohibit persons from obtaining or using consumer
reports for impermissible purposes. Users of consumer reports may
provide information about consumers to CRAs in order to obtain such
reports, but they do not do so for the purpose of having such
information included in consumer reports. Although the user's request
for the report may be reflected in the consumer report as an inquiry,
the Agencies do not believe it would be appropriate to subject such
furnishing of information to the regulations and guidelines proposed
here. In addition, by defining the term ``furnisher'' in terms of an
entity other than an individual consumer, the proposal makes clear that
consumers are not furnishers, even if they self-report information
about themselves to a CRA.
Identity Theft
Proposed Sec. --.41(d) provides that the term ``identity theft''
has the same meaning as in the FTC's regulations at 16 CFR 603.2(a).
Section 603.2(a), which was adopted pursuant to section 111 of the FACT
Act,\16\ defines the term ``identity theft'' to mean ``a fraud
committed or attempted using the identifying information of another
person without authority.'' This definition also is used in the
interagency regulations implementing section 114 of the FACT Act (Red
Flags).
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\16\ Section 111 provides for a definition of the term
``identity theft,'' and authorizes the FTC to refine that
definition. See section 603(q)(3) of the FCRA, 15 U.S.C.
1681a(q)(3).
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Direct Dispute
Proposed Sec. --.41(e) defines ``direct dispute'' to mean a
dispute submitted directly to a furnisher by a consumer concerning the
accuracy of any information contained in a consumer report relating to
the consumer. Although the definition of ``direct dispute'' uses the
term accuracy, the proposed Regulatory Definition Approach provides a
definition of accuracy for purposes of the definition of ``direct
dispute,'' but the Guidelines Definition Approach does not.
The Agencies solicit comment on whether the definition of
``accuracy'' should be made applicable to direct disputes, if the
Guidelines Definition Approach is adopted. The Agencies also solicit
comment on whether the proposed definition of ``accuracy'' is
appropriate for the direct dispute provision.\17\
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\17\ The Agencies note that section 623(a)(8) only requires a
furnisher to handle direct disputes about ``accuracy.'' In contrast,
section 611(a) requires a CRA to handle disputes about
``completeness or accuracy'' and section 623(b) requires furnishers
to reinvestigate disputes about ``completeness or accuracy'' if the
disputes come through a CRA. The Agencies particularly request
comment on whether the definition of ``accuracy'' needs to be
clarified in order to more clearly delineate those disputes that,
while subject to the CRA dispute process, would not be subject to
the direct disputes rule.
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Section --.42 Reasonable Policies and Procedures Concerning the
Accuracy and Integrity of Furnished Information
Paragraph (a) of proposed Sec. --.42 would require each furnisher
to establish and implement reasonable written policies and procedures
regarding the accuracy and integrity of the information about consumers
that it furnishes to a CRA. The policies and procedures must be
appropriate to the nature, size, complexity, and scope of the
furnisher's activities.
The requirement that furnishers' policies and procedures be written
facilitates effective implementation and enables the Agencies to assess
furnishers' compliance with the rules. The Agencies do not believe that
the requirement for written policies and procedures will be unduly
burdensome, particularly since, under the guidelines, a furnisher may
include any of its existing policies and procedures that are relevant
and appropriate. As noted previously, industry commenters responding to
the ANPR noted that, in general, furnishers have policies and
procedures in place to ensure the accuracy of information furnished to
CRAs. The Agencies invite comment on any burden and effects on
furnishers, particularly small furnishers, regarding the requirement
that the policies and procedures be written.
The Agencies recognize that there is substantial diversity among
furnishers with respect to their structure, operations, and the types
of business they conduct, such that a ``one-size-fit-all'' approach to
the implementation of the guidelines is inappropriate. The requirement
that the furnisher's policies and procedures must be appropriate to the
nature, size,