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A matter of trust: strong communication between recyclers and clients can help recyclers ensure they are FACTA compliant.


There's no question that the world is deep within the Information Age. Information is everywhere and readily available like never before--a fact that millions of Americans are aware of all too well.

According to according to
prep.
1. As stated or indicated by; on the authority of: according to historians.

2. In keeping with: according to instructions.

3.
 a survey conducted by the Privacy Rights Clearinghouse Privacy Rights Clearinghouse (PRC) is a project of the Utility Consumers' Action Network (UCAN), an American 501(c)(3) non-profit consumer advocacy organization. The Privacy Rights Clearinghouse is devoted to upholding the right to privacy and protecting consumers against identity  in San Diego San Diego (săn dēā`gō), city (1990 pop. 1,110,549), seat of San Diego co., S Calif., on San Diego Bay; inc. 1850. San Diego includes the unincorporated communities of La Jolla and Spring Valley. Coronado is across the bay. , more than 9 million people were the victims of identity theft in 2005 in the United States United States, officially United States of America, republic (2005 est. pop. 295,734,000), 3,539,227 sq mi (9,166,598 sq km), North America. The United States is the world's third largest country in population and the fourth largest country in area. . The threat of this growing crime that includes a wide range of information fraud has spurred the creation of a number of laws to try to combat it at both the state and federal levels. Among the regulations is the Fair and Accurate Credit Transactions Act Under the Fair and Accurate Credit Transactions Act of 2003 (FACT Act or FACTA, Pub.L. 108-159) which was passed by the United States Congress on December 4 2003 as an amendment to the Fair Credit Reporting Act, consumers can request and obtain a free credit report , or FACTA FACTA Fair and Accurate Credit Transactions Act of 2003 , a federal statute that went into effect in June 2005.

FACTA covers a wide range of information security topics, but it is the disposal rule that has many paper and electronics recyclers paying special attention.

GETTING IN THE ACT. The language of the act states that "any person that maintains or otherwise possesses consumer information, or any compilation of consumer information, derived from consumer reports for a business purpose properly dispose of any such information or compilation." This language has raised more than a few eyebrows among paper and electronics recyclers, both those who have secure destruction arms of their operations and those who don't.

Can recyclers be held legally responsible if what FACTA determines as consumer report information finds its way into their material streams and then falls into the wrong hands? What happens if the recyclers didn't know they had the material in the first place? These are questions still on the minds of many recyclers as the industry comes to terms with FACTA and its potential legal implications.

"Recyclers could be liable if they know they possess consumer report information and they do not dispose of it properly," says Katherine Armstrong, an attorney in the division of finance for the Federal Trade Commission (FTC FTC

See Federal Trade Commission (FTC).
), which is responsible for FACTA.

By "consumer report information," FACTA is referring to information that is obtained from a consumer reporting company for the purposes of applying for credit, employment or insurance, among other things, says Armstrong. This could or could not include bits of information like Social Security numbers, bank account numbers and many other pieces of information, depending on the circumstances, which contributes to some of the confusion surrounding the regulation.

Technically, the disposal rule covers any person who maintains consumer report information and that can include recyclers, who are grouped in with "service providers" in the language of the rule. In issuing the final rule, the FTC stated that, "under the final rule, service providers continue to be covered, and therefore, along with the record owner Record Owner

The stockholder of record as distinguished from the beneficial owner.
, bear responsibility for the proper disposal of consumer information that they maintain or otherwise possess." While this language seems to make recyclers liable for consumer information that may be contained in the paper or electronic material they process, it continues, "in evaluating a service provider's compliance with this rule, however, a record owner's failure to provide notice or contract for disposal in accordance Accordance is Bible Study Software for Macintosh developed by OakTree Software, Inc.[]

As well as a standalone program, it is the base software packaged by Zondervan in their Bible Study suites for Macintosh.
 with the requirements of the rule will be strongly considered."

This means that the liability of recyclers hinges Hinges may refer to:
  • Plural form of hinge, a mechanical device that connects two solid objects, allowing a rotation between them.
  • Hinges, a commune of the Pas-de-Calais département, in northern France
 on their awareness of whether the materials being processed contain consumer information--an awareness that comes from the material generator, or the recycler's client, says Scott Horne, general counsel for the Institute of Scrap Recycling recycling, the process of recovering and reusing waste products—from household use, manufacturing, agriculture, and business—and thereby reducing their burden on the environment.  Industries Inc. (ISRI ISRI Institute of Scrap Recycling Industries
ISRI Institute for Software Research, International (Carnegie Mellon University)
ISRI Information Science Research Institute
ISRI Intelligent Systems Research Institute
). "There is a lot of misinformation mis·in·form  
tr.v. mis·in·formed, mis·in·form·ing, mis·in·forms
To provide with incorrect information.



mis
 being disseminated disseminated /dis·sem·i·nat·ed/ (-sem´i-nat?ed) scattered; distributed over a considerable area.

dis·sem·i·nat·ed
adj.
Spread over a large area of a body, a tissue, or an organ.
 out there," Horne says. "The law would require recyclers to take certain actions if they are in fact aware of the fact that they are receiving information that is covered by FACTA. However, a recycler cannot be conned into being covered by the law."

Neither Horne nor Armstrong is aware of any cases that have been brought against recyclers holding them liable in a case of identity theft. But if such a case were to occur, Armstrong says a number of factors would come into play in determining the party responsible, and while a recycler could be held liable under FACTA, there's no blanket guarantee under the regulations that say the company will be. "Clearly, if a record holder is trying to shirk shirk

In Islam, idolatry and polytheism, both of which are regarded as heretical. The Qu'ran stresses that God does not share his powers with any partner (sharik) and warns that those who believe in idols will be harshly dealt with on the Day of Judgment.
 [liability] off on the recycler, any fact-checker would look at the actions of the record keeper, as well as the actions of the recycler" says Armstrong.

CLEAR COMMUNICATION. Horne says the relationship between recycler and client is key because legal responsibility in the FACTA regulation hinges on a clear communication between the two of exactly what kind of material is being handled and processed.

Joel Litman of Texas Recycling/Surplus in Dallas agrees and says that the customer, as the first step in the recycling process, has the biggest responsibility when it comes to FACTA compliance. "The customers have to be compliant and there are certain steps they have to follow--we are just one component of that process," he says.

Litman runs a paper recycling Paper recycling is the process of recovering waste paper and remaking it into new paper products. There are three categories of paper that can be used as feedstocks for making recycled paper: mill broke, pre-consumer waste, and post-consumer waste.  operation at Texas Recycling/Surplus, but he also has a secure document destruction arm of his operation--ActionShred. Between the two operations, he says several million pounds of scrap paper scrap paper npedazos mpl de papel

scrap paper npapier m brouillon

scrap paper scrap n
 are processed each month. The volume of material alone makes it essential to rely on the customer--to trust that the material generator is being responsible and making sure any FACTA-covered information is bound for some kind of secure document destruction first, he says. "Paper comes from so many different sources," Litman says. "You can't go through each piece."

Peter Bennison of Waste Management & Recycling Products Inc., an electronics recycling operation in Schenectady, N.Y., also says that solid communication is the best way to ensure a recycling operation stays on the good side of FACTA.

"You have to communicate with your customers effectively to make sure they understand how important it is," he says. "Whether it's cell phones or computers, when people get rid of this stuff, are they doing the right thing?"

Bennison says secure information turns up by mistake at his facility on a pretty regular basis. He recalls one instance where a customer had sent in a few obsolete printers--one still containing transparency (1) The quality of being able to see through a material. The terms transparency and translucency are often used synonymously; however, transparent would technically mean "seeing through clear glass," while translucent would mean "seeing through frosted glass." See alpha blending.  film filled with personal information. "One of our employees noticed it, and we hand-delivered it back to the customer," Bennison says.

Such internal safeguards are helpful in avoiding any potential culpability culpability (See: culpable)  if secure information was to fall into the wrong hands, Bennison says. "We educate our employees," he says. "If you come across something you feel a customer would feel is confidential, we take it back to them."

Last year, Waste Management & Recycling Products installed a large shredder capable of destroying hard drives and other electronics so secure information can be destroyed on site. Customers also have the option of destroying the information themselves or of storing it. "We look at is as, 'Let's make sure our customers are educated as to what their options are so we can help them,'" Bennison says.

A COOPERATIVE EFFORT. Recyclers could possibly find themselves in a legally sticky situation if they notice FACTA-covered information somewhere in the material stream that a customer hasn't contracted with them to be destroyed properly. "They can't avoid it, or turn a blind eye to it," Armstrong says.

However, the rule was not designed to make a recycler's job more difficult, she says, rather to "prevent the kind of fraud that can occur when consumer report information is improperly disposed of."

Therefore, "Knowledge is power," as the saying goes, and it's also an important weapon in defending oneself against FACTA's legal consequences. That knowledge is something recyclers hope can come from within the industry itself.

"The one thing that our industry doesn't want is more legislation," Litman says. "There's a trust level there, a good faith level there between customer and recycler--just like any other customer/client relationship,"

He and others in the industry hope that material generators and recyclers can cooperate to help each other stay FACTA compliant and out of legal liability crosshairs.

The author is associate editor of Recycling Today magazine and can be reached at jgubeno@gie.net.

SAFE HANDLING

Additional news items on regulations affecting the secure destruction of personal information can be found at Recycle re·cy·cle  
tr.v. re·cy·cled, re·cy·cling, re·cy·cles
1. To put or pass through a cycle again, as for further treatment.

2. To start a different cycle in.

3.
a.
 Today's sister publication Destruction Business's Web Site at www.SDBmagazine.com
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Title Annotation:Fair and Accurate Credit Transactions Act
Author:Gubeno, Jackie
Publication:Recycling Today
Geographic Code:1USA
Date:Feb 1, 2006
Words:1369
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