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UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
FEDERAL TRADE COMMISSION
WASHINGTON, D.C. 20580
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Division of Credit Practices
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Thomas E. Kane
Attorney
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October 27, 1997
Michael Cast
Compliance Services Manager
Capitol Federal Savings
P.O. Box 3505
Topeka, Kansas 66601-3505
- Re: Merged Consumer Reports
Dear Mr. Cast:
This is in response to your July 15, 1997 letter requesting a
staff opinion concerning the amended Fair Credit Reporting Act
("FCRA"), which took effect on September 30, 1997. According
to your letter, Capitol Federal Savings' mortgage lending operation
is considering "adding a credit report 'merge and purge'
component to the revised processing function." By "merge
and purge" component, I understand you to mean a system by
which consumer reports on individual consumers from each of the
three largest credit repositories -- Trans Union, Experian and
Equifax -- will be merged to create one consumer report per consumer
and, in the process, duplicative information will be removed.
You ask a number of questions related to the addition of the merge
and purge system. I have reprinted your questions in italics below
and added my responses, based on the amended FCRA.
1. Assume that we utilize an intermediary to pull credit
report information from the three main repositories, conduct a
"merge and purge" of that information, and provide us
with a finalized credit report. It is our understanding that we
are to report that intermediary in the event of adverse action
and that we can provide a copy of the finalized credit report
(under the intermediary's name) in the event of adverse action.
Please indicate whether we are correct in these determinations.
- If an intermediary pulls consumer report information from
the three main repositories, conducts a "merge and purge"
of the information to create another consumer report, and provides
that report to Capitol Federal, the intermediary will be a consumer
reporting agency for purposes of the FCRA, and Capitol Federal
will be a "user" of consumer reports. If Capitol Federal
takes an adverse action based on information contained in one
of these consumer reports, Capitol Federal must comply with
Section 615(a) of the FCRA, 15 U.S.C. § 1681m(a). That
section requires Capitol Federal to provide the following to
the consumer orally, in writing, or electronically: (1) a notice
of the adverse action; (2) the name, address, and telephone
number of the intermediary (consumer reporting agency) that
created the merged and purged consumer report (including a toll-free
number for the intermediary if it maintains files on consumers
on a nationwide basis); (3) a statement that the intermediary
did not make the decision to take the adverse action; (4) a
notice that the consumer has the right to obtain a free copy
of their consumer report from the intermediary; and (5) a notice
that the consumer has the right to dispute the accuracy or completeness
of any information in the consumer report. The FCRA does not
forbid companies that take adverse action against a consumer,
based on information in their consumer report, from providing
a copy of the report to the consumer.(1)
2. Assume that we purchase a software package to pull credit
report information from the three main repositories, conduct a
"merge and purge" of that information on our computer
system, and print out a finalized credit report.
a. Would such an arrangement mean that Capitol Federal is
a "consumer reporting agency"? What about the software
provider?
- To be a "consumer reporting agency," a person must
"assembl[e] or evaluat[e] . . . information on consumers
for the purpose of furnishing consumer reports to third parties."
Section 603(f), 15 U.S.C. § 1681a(f). Under the scenario
described above, Capitol Federal would not be a consumer reporting
agency if it used the "merged and purged" consumer
reports for its own, internal purposes because the company would
not be assembling the information to furnish consumer reports
to third parties. The software provider also would not be a
consumer reporting agency because it would not be assembling
or evaluating information at all. The software that Capitol
Federal purchased could be said to assemble and evaluate the
information, but the software provider no longer has any connection
at all to the information.
b. Are we to report all three repositories in the event of
adverse action? Or, can we report only one of the three repositories?
- Section 615(a) of the amended FCRA, 15 U.S.C. § 1681m(a),
provides that any person that takes any adverse action with
respect to a consumer that is based "in whole or in part
on any information contained in a consumer report" shall
provide to the consumer the name, address, and telephone number
of the consumer reporting agency "that furnished the report
to the person."
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- Thus, Capitol Federal must provide the name, address and telephone
number of each of the three repositories whose consumer report
included information on which Capitol Federal based its decision,
in whole or in part, to take the adverse action. If only one
of the three repositories' reports contained such information,
Section 615(a) requires that Capitol Federal give only that
repository's name, address and telephone number. If, however,
Capitol Federal used information from all three repositories'
consumer reports to make the decision to take adverse action,
Capitol Federal must give the consumer the name, address and
telephone number of all three repositories.
c. If all three repositories must be disclosed, how specific
must we be? For example, must we identify which repository provided
each individual piece of information which contributed to the
adverse action?
- Section 615 of the FCRA does not require that Capitol Federal
disclose which repository provided which piece of information
that contributed to the adverse action.
d. If we provide a copy of the "merged and purged"
report to the consumer, is the report to be issued under the name
of Capitol Federal, the software company, the names of each repository,
or how?
- If Capitol Federal does provide merged consumer reports to
those consumers about whom Capitol Federal takes an adverse
action, the FCRA does not address the issue of which name should
go on top of the report.
3. In a question probably asked by thousands, we have heard
that regulations will not be issued implementing the Fair Credit
Reporting Act, but that a "staff commentary," including
model disclosures, is to be issued. Is this true?
- The Federal Trade Commission does not have the authority to
issue substantive regulations implementing the amended FCRA.
The Commission has, however, issued three notices as required
by the FCRA amendments. The notices are (1) a summary of consumer
rights that consumer reporting agencies will include whenever
they deliver a consumer report to a consumer; (2) a notice to
individuals and companies that furnish information to consumer
reporting agencies; and (3) a notice to users of consumer reports.
The notices were published in the Federal Register at 62 Fed.
Reg. 35,586 (1997) (to be codified at 16 C.F.R. pt. 601). While
Commission staff may issue a commentary on the amended FCRA
some time in the future, we believe it would premature to do
so until we have addressed a wide variety of requests for staff
opinions such as this one.
The views set forth in this opinion are those of the staff, and
are not binding on the Commission.
Sincerely,
Thomas E. Kane
Endnotes:
1. Section 607(c) of the amended FCRA, 15 U.S.C. § 1681e(c),
states that a consumer reporting agency may not prohibit a user
of a consumer report provided by the agency from disclosing the
contents of the report to a consumer who has suffered adverse
action based on the report.
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