Credit Information

I've Heard About FACTA; What Does It mean?


What FACTA means is that if you, as an individual, lose the information on anyone you have ever hired; or, for any business in the United States of America that collects any personal information on people, if the information should be lost due to not destroying the information properly, then two things can happen. First, there are federal fines of up to $2,500.00, and state fines up to $1,000, per employee, per incident. Second, the business is liable for any damages the individual suffers as the result of a breach of information.

Take an example that the company loses information due to negligent destruction (i.e. you don't own a shredder and throw the information into the dumpster). Nothing in FACTA really determines what the employee has to do to prove "negligent destruction" on the part of the employer, so an employee could simply state that the employer had lost the information, and even if the employer had burned the information into ashes, it would be up to the employer to show that the information had not gotten out due to his or her company's negligence.

Business Week says that the average damages for Identity Theft victims are $92,000.00 and up per person. Using this statistic, if you have 10 employees lose their identities, then on average, your liability is $920,000.00. Statistically, you are responsible for an average of 75 bad checks and 8 credit cards per employee. The average Identity Theft victim also spends 600 hours getting their credit restored, which means that you will have 600 hours per employee, so potentially 6,000 hours for 10 employees, which you will be responsible for paying employees who aren't even at work, because they have taken time off to deal with the Identity Theft.

According to John Gardner, co-author of Chicken Soup for the Entrepreneurial Soul, "The damages are devastating to any business."

There are many problems related to people's identities that don't deal with credit issues. Contrary to popular belief, only 26% of identity theft issues relate to credit issues. The other 74% of the issues, according to Gardner, are related to the following four areas:

Someone stealing your DMV record. Example: An identity thief wants to drive under your employee's name instead of theirs. This will help the Identity Thief to not get caught in cases of DUI, unpaid speeding tickets, etc. Your employee is then blamed for their driving record.

Someone stealing your MIB record. This is your Medical Information Bureau Record. Example: An Identity Thief wants to have an AIDS test done in your employee's name, rather than theirs, or have their prescriptions filled using your employee's Medicaid or Medicare benefits

Someone stealing your character identity to commit a crime in your name. Imagine this - your future employee comes to your child care facility, and everything sounds good about this candidate. However, you run a criminal background check, and find out that they have three arrests for child pornography and one for drug trafficking to minors. You bring the record to their attention, and they insist it's not them.

Your employment record. Example: An Identity Thief wants to earn income using your employee's social security number, but let your employee pay taxes on the money they earn.

As a result of this, Gardner says that "Businesses need to offer 24 hour per day, 7 day per week access to attorneys?.I think that the danger is so large to any business, that they may want to [pay for] some of the cost of this, to encourage the employees to get the benefit?If a business does not understand that they need the help, they are living in a dream world."

Employers should also offer some sort of Identity Theft protection, and ongoing background monitoring. This can be offered as a voluntary benefit which has no real cost to the employer, as a fringe benefit paid by the employer, or can be a combination of both. When an identity thief uses your employee's information, (for example an identity thief takes the employee's current address, and uses it as their previous address when they apply for a mortgage,) ongoing background monitoring will notify your employee when the identity theft happens.

Most people don't find out that they have become victims until that Identity Thief, who has used your employee's credit to finance their mortgage, stops paying bills, is picked up for a crime, or doesn't pay taxes. Ongoing monitoring provides an early warning system, so that your employee will be able to call an expert who can correct the problem when it takes place. This will save your employee's time, and limit the losses your employee will incur as a result of the breach of their information. This will also save you the costs associated with the frustration and lack of ability to pay attention as work.

Even if your employees don't elect to have the benefits of legal services and identity theft protection, having a mandatory meeting where employees hear that you have made this coverage available to them will provide an affirmative defense, should an employee ever accuse you, as the employer, of having lost their personal information.

Under FACTA, access to an attorney and credit restoration, are benefits that employers need to offer. Ongoing background monitoring will mitigate damages that the employee can experience because the early warning system will be in place to handle the issues. Access to an attorney and credit restoration will drastically reduce the time the employee spends away from work dealing with the issues surrounding identity theft and other personal legal problems.

Failure on the part of an employer to offer this benefit leaves a company exposed to thousands (and even millions) of dollars in potential damages, and leaves employees subject to the time, frustration, and headaches associated with being a victim of Identity Theft.

Jonathan Kraft is a benefits consultant who specializes in educating people about how they can get affordable access to the legal system. Because of his work in the field of electronic Identity Theft, he has come to be known as Colorado's Foremost Expert on Computer Related Identity Theft. To schedule a time for Mr. Kraft's company to present Identity Theft and Legal Service protection to your employees, please contact him at (877) 825-7119. You can also find out more on the web at http://www.strive4impact.com/group


MORE RESOURCES:

Houston Business Journal

Corporate borrowers face hurdles amid credit fallout
Bizjournals.com, NC - 4 hours ago
With credit markets seizing amid major bank failures and a free fall in investor confidence, experts say a prolonged credit crunch could place a serious ...
New produce center deal nearly blown by AIG mess Philadelphia Business Journal
RiverBend takes a turn for expansion Bizjournals.com
all 424 news articles


Wall Street Journal Blogs

Carmakers in the credit coal mine
CBC.ca, Canada - 12 hours ago
But Wall Street's high-profile collapse, and the related tightening of credit for all businesses, has made a difficult situation even worse — and stirred ...
Credit Crunch Has Effect On Local Auto Sales LocalNews8.com
Toyota Offers Surprising Car Deals U.S. News Rankings & Reviews
Weak economy, tight credit squeeze LI auto dealers Newsday
MLive.com - Minneapolis Star Tribune
all 1,226 news articles


Tax Credit Extension Ensures Strong Future for Solar Industry
MarketWatch - 12 hours ago
a leading provider of renewable energy solar solutions, commends Congress for resurrecting the tax credit package that will serve as the lifeblood for the ...
Will Coal Be Cashing In On the New Tax Credit? Wall Street Journal
Solar takes stock after tax-credit battle Cleantech Group
Congress Extends Refined Coal Tax Credit Utility Products Magazine
Energy Risk (subscription) - Fuel Cell Today (press release)
all 714 news articles


Credit crisis adds to pressures on auto dealers
The Associated Press - 15 hours ago
For auto dealers already suffering under the worst US sales downturn in 15 years, the increasing cost of the credit they use to keep inventory in their ...
How to buy a car - even now CNNMoney.com
all 232 news articles


Credit Karma Launches New Credit Card Recommendation Service Based ...
MarketWatch - 14 hours ago
The new service provides customized recommendations by credit score range using a computation of current credit card information and overall consumer card ...
the fake identity racket Sydney Morning Herald
all 136 news articles


China Daily

Markets Down Sharply
NPR - 5 hours ago
by Jim Zarroli and Melissa Block All Things Considered, October 6, 2008 · US stocks have fallen again on further concerns that the credit crisis has gone ...
Video: Dow Closes Below 10,000, a Four-year Low AssociatedPress
Wall Street tumbles amid global sell-off San Diego Union Tribune
The Wall Street bust Asia Times Online
Forbes - The Associated Press
all 1,718 news articles


WNCT

Bank of America profit falls 68%, firm cuts dividend
MarketWatch - 5 hours ago
However, the increased pressure on the credit markets since Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc. filed bankruptcy last month, along with added capital required ...
Bank of America Q3 profit slumps NEWS.com.au
Bank of America Offers Stock, Cuts Payout; Net Falls (Update2) Bloomberg
BofA to raise $10bn in capital Financial Times
RTT News - 24/7 Wall St.
all 343 news articles


Boston Globe

Investors expect volatility as credit woes persist
The Associated Press - Oct 5, 2008
Those steps are the latest sign that the troubles of US banks, which have all but paralyzed credit markets, are affecting the financial systems of other ...
1 hurdle down, many more to go for the economy USA Today
Fed May See Lending to Companies, States as Next Crisis Fronts Bloomberg
TOPWRAP 11-Crisis hammers stocks, US urges unified response guardian.co.uk
San Francisco Chronicle - NewsWithViews.com
all 298 news articles


Fitch downgrades Ford credit rating another notch
Forbes, NY - 5 hours ago
s credit rating deeper into junk status Monday as economic worries dragged down auto shares along with stock markets around the globe. ...
Fitch Downgrades Ford & Ford Credit to 'CCC'; Outlook Negative MarketWatch
Fitch cuts Ford, Ford Motor Credit, deeper into junk Reuters
GM, Ford Tumble as Credit Crisis Unsettles Investors (Update1) Bloomberg
BusinessWeek
all 28 news articles


Jobs lost, credit choked, contractors worried
Bizjournals.com, NC - 6 hours ago
“The drop in construction employment accelerated in September and will get much worse unless credit markets reopen,” said Ken Simonson, chief economist for ...
Job losses signal that US is in recession Kansas City Star
all 32 news articles

Credit - Google News

home | site map
© 2006