
As with California SB 1386, which requires financial institutions to notify California consumers when they lose personal information, the bill would apply to all companies doing business with state residents.
"This is good for consumers. It's a bill that's long overdue," said Joe Ridout, a spokesman for Consumer Action, a non-profit consumer-advocacy group.
"Putting the responsibility on retailers is appropriate when there's been a data breach because retailers simply shrug off the burden and pass the mess they've made off to consumers."
The assembly bill, passed with overwhelming bipartisan support, would require retailers to notify consumers after losing credit or debit card information.
Retailers would be required to pay for the cost of notifying consumers and replacing their cards, and they would be forced to follow Payment Card Industry (PCI) standards, which mandate security for credit and debit card information.
California's legislation is "the reason why many people in other states have been notified" of data breaches in the last couple of years, Ridout said. He pointed to the ChoicePoint data breach of February, 2005, which became well known because of SB 1386.
The bill faces approval by the Senate Appropriations Committee this summer, then a vote by the full Senate. The bill then must be signed into law by Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger, a Republican.
Such a law could serve as a model for federal policy, although efforts to pass similar federal legislation have stalled in committee in both houses of Congress.
Minnesota legislators passed a similar bill, the Minnesota Plastic Card Security Act, which regulates the storage of consumers’ personal information after a purchase.