ICCFA is closely monitoring legislative developments related to H.R. 8413 and has communicated to Subcommittee staff that the deathcare industry is governed by record-retention requirements that arise from separate funeral, crematory, and cemetery state licensing laws. ICCFA will continue working with congressional staff to ensure a federal data privacy framework preserves obligations imposed by state licensing laws, including record-retention requirements.
On June 3, the House Energy and Commerce Committee Subcommittee on Commerce, Manufacturing, and Trade convened a hearing on H.R. 8413, the SECURE Data Act. This legislative effort marks a structural shift in the federal data privacy debate, moving away from bipartisan compromises from previous congresses and leaning heavily into a national model derived from the consensus state framework passed by 21 out of the 22 states with active privacy laws. The bill seeks to override all state-level data privacy frameworks to establish a single, predictable nationwide benchmark. Proponents argue that an interstate patchwork of 50 different regulations creates a multi-billion dollar compliance barrier that paralyzes small businesses. Opponents argue that the proposed federal law is fundamentally weaker than active state frameworks, lacks a Private Right of Action (PRA), and operates as a regulatory “ceiling” that strips states of their ability to enact strict consumer protections.
