The Insurance Data Protection Act prevents federal regulators from directly collecting data from insurance companies, promoting confidentiality and requiring them to seek information from other sources first. This matters because it aims to protect sensitive information held by insurance companies.
Insurance Data Protection Act This bill limits the ability of federal entities to compel insurance companies to share information. Specifically, the bill eliminates the subpoena power of the Federal Insurance Office. Under current law, the office has the power to subpoena information from insurers to, among other purposes, identify issues that could contribute to a systemic crisis in the insurance industry or the U.S. financial system. The bill also eliminates the ability of the Office of Financial Research to subpoena insurance companies. When seeking to collect insurance company data under specified consumer protection laws, a financial regulator must obtain the data from other regulators or from publicly available sources if possible. Otherwise, the financial regulator may only collect this data directly from the insurance company if the regulator complies with the Paperwork Reduction Act.
1. This bill stops federal financial regulators from collecting data directly from insurance companies. 2. It requires regulators to check if data is available from other sources before collecting it. 3. The bill aims to keep insurance company data confidential and limit its sharing. 4. It changes how financial regulators interact with insurance companies regarding data collection. 5. The bill emphasizes coordination among various regulatory agencies before data collection.