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Consumer Credit Reporting Webinar: Key issues in complaints handling

Consumer Credit Reporting Webinar: Key issues in complaints handling . What will be covered?. The webinar will focus on the following issues:  Overview & introduction Types of personal information that can be held in the consumer credit reporting system  Key requirements to list a default 

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Consumer Credit Reporting Webinar: Key issues in complaints handling

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  1. Consumer Credit Reporting Webinar:Key issues in complaints handling

  2. What will be covered? The webinar will focus on the following issues:  • Overview & introduction • Types of personal information that can be held in the consumer credit reporting system  • Key requirements to list a default  • Access rights and obligations  • The new corrections process  • Complaints about incorrect personal information

  3. New laws regulating credit reporting? Part IIIA of the amended Privacy Act 1988 supplemented by: • Privacy Regulation 2013 • Privacy (Credit Reporting) Code 2014 (CR code)

  4. How are the laws structured? Separated into divisions based on the type of participant: • Division 2 – CRBs • Division 3 – credit providers • Division 4 – ‘affected information recipients’ Separate division (Division 5) setting out complaints handing rights and obligations CR code divided by topic

  5. Key change in terminology No reference to a ‘credit report’ or a ‘credit information file’ in the legislation  however, expected that industry will continue to use these terms.

  6. New Categories of personal information • Information in the credit reporting system is categorised based on: • the entity that holds the information, • the entity that disclosed the information, and • the purpose for which that information can be used • Reflects the flow of information in the system • Obligations and rights expressed by reference to these different categories

  7. New Categories There are six key categories: • credit information (CI)  collected by credit providers • CRB derived information  produced by CRBs using CI • credit reporting information (CRI) = CI + CRB derived information  disclosed by CRBs to credit providers • CP derived information  produced by credit providers using CRI • credit eligibility information = CRI and CP derived information  used & disclosed by credit providers (but not to CRBs) and includes CRI and CP derived information • regulated information  held (used) by AIRs

  8. ‘Credit information’ Credit information is the key category: • ‘raw’ types of information permitted to be collected by CRBs for inclusion in a credit report • credit information is defined in s6N • equivalent to s18E of the current Part IIIA

  9. What is NOT ‘credit information’ • ‘Pre-commencement information’ – information prescribed by the old s18E that is no longer permitted to be collected by a CRB for inclusion in a credit report • Other publicly available information – that doesn’t meet the requirements of s6N & Para 11 CR code • Other consumer credit information – other information about an individual's consumer credit activities (Para 5.1 CR code, E.g. information about the balance on a credit account) • Other commercial information – other information about an individual's commercial credit activities

  10. Pre-commencement information

  11. Para 5.1(c) CR code – TRANSITION PERIOD The exception applies if… • a CRB lawfully held the information immediately prior to 12 March 2014, or • a CP holds the information, that was lawfully disclosed to it by a CRB and… • the personal information is NOTinformation about a small default (a default of < $150) • the use or disclosure occurs on or before 12 March 2016 OR the expiry of the relevant retention period, whichever is sooner. or… • the personal information is a file note entered at the request of the individual prior 12 March 2014 and the individual has not subsequently requested its removal.

  12. Handling pre-commencement information BUT… any pre-commencement information (or file note) captured by this exception MUST BE HANDLED AS IF IT WERE CREDIT INFORMATION For example, the relevant retention period will be the NEW retention period for the most analogous type of credit information

  13. Publicly available information

  14. Publicly available information Previously publicly available information not regulated by Part IIIA But this has changed…

  15. Publicly available information Part IIIA (s6N): • MUST be about an individual’s activities in Australia and creditworthiness CR code (Para 11): • MUST be available to the general public • MUST be collected by a CRB from an agency or state/territory authority

  16. Other consumer credit information

  17. Other information about consumer credit activities Part IIIA exhaustively sets out the types of personal information able to be included in an individuals consumer credit report  Paragraph 5.1 of the CR Code makes this absolutely clear

  18. Commercial credit information

  19. Commercial information ‘Credit information’ includes information about: • commercial credit enquiries, and • commercial credit applications (type & amount)  Credit laws DO NOT regulate other types of commercial credit information But… …the laws DO regulate when and for what purpose a commercial provider can access the consumer system

  20. DEFAULTS

  21. Listing a default • NOT statute barred • NOT less than $150 at the time of listing • ALL of that amount must be at least 60 days overdue • 2 notices • Notice requesting payment • Notice of intention to disclose a default

  22. Listing a default – timing requirements 2 notices must be issued 30 days apart (cant be in one envelope!) 2nd notice must be issued at least 14 days prior to listing Default cannot be listed more than 90 days after 2nd notice is given

  23. Updating a default Key concerns: • double listings • artificial extension of the retention period Solution: • each overdue payment must be the subject of a separate listing (even for the same credit account) • default can only be updated to reflect accrual of incidental fees and charges that result from the overdue payment

  24. FREE ACCESS

  25. FREE Access — CRBs A CRB must provide FREE access in the following circumstances: if the individual has applied for, and been refused credit, within the past 90 days if the access relates to a decision by a CRB or a credit provider to correct information, and in addition, once every 12 months.

  26. FREE Access — CRBs must be as available and easy to identify as fee-based access services within 10 days of receipt request includes access to a current credit score must include summary & explanation to aid understanding CRB required to verify the identity of the individual seeking access

  27. CORRECTIONS

  28. Corrections Single point of access obligation to consult evidence substantiating correctness 30 day timeframe

  29. Corrections interchange How might this work…? • establishment of a corrections interchange • centralised registry of all corrections requests • incorrect information held by multiple CRBs can be corrected simultaneously

  30. COMPLAINTS

  31. Complaints 3 tiered complaints system: • CRB or credit provider to which the complaint relates • recognised external dispute resolution scheme • the OAIC

  32. Complaints to the OAIC OAIC can decline to investigate complaint if: • individual did not first complain to the CRB or credit provider • complaint is already being dealt with by an EDR scheme • complaint would be more effectively or appropriately dealt with by an EDR scheme

  33. Corrections & Access complaints Individual not required to complain to a CRB or a credit provider about the outcome of their correction or access request

  34. More information? 15 NEW consumer credit reporting fact sheets available on the OAIC website – www.oaic.gov.au OAIC Business Resource 3 – ‘What has changed in credit’ – www.oaic.gov.au ARCA – www.creditsmart.org.au Possibility of future webinars (Feedback!)

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