HR Hero Your Employment Law Resource

HR Hot Topics

Home > HR Topics > Identity Theft | All Topics > A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z
Bookmark and Share Send to a Colleague

Identity Theft


Additional HR Resources

Immigration Enforcement
An intensive review of U.S. Department of Homeland Security's policy and more

New Enforcement Tactics
An audio conference on the status of "no match" letters and new legal risks

E-Verify Pros and Cons
The potential dangers, safeguards and solutions for using the E-Verify program

ID Theft at Work
How to help prevent ID theft — and manage it effectively if it occurs

Employee Theft
How HR can prevent workplace pilfering and how to take action if theft occurs

Workplace Technology
How to limit liability caused by employee use and abuse of workplace technology

Protect Sensitive Information
How to alter your hiring and record keeping policies to limit your exposure

Safe Record-Keeping
Techniques and strategies for
tackling the paperwork monster

Record Retention Laws
What to save, what to shred: comply with personnel record retention laws

Employment Law in Your State
Where your state lawmakers and fellow employers stand

Federal Employment Law
Advanced warning on upcoming federal regulations and legislation

Identity theft as a crime may not appear to be closely associated with the concerns and responsibilities of human resources personnel. Important current issue? Yes. The daily concern of a company filing its customers' personal information? Absolutely. A company obviously must take adequate steps to protect the confidential information of its customers. But exactly where and how does ID theft become a concern for HR personnel?


Related articles on ID Theft
ID Theft tools for Employment Law Letter subscribers


The answer becomes a little more obvious when you consider just how much personal information about your company’s employees a file cabinet full of HR paperwork contains. Just think of all the personal information that can be found in personnel files and other forms and documents you have to maintain for taxes and state and federal laws. Increasingly, employers are being held liable for any harm their employees suffer because of a workplace breach of their confidential information.

Congress and many state legislatures have passed legislation geared at protecting confidential information in the workplace, and additional legislative protections are being proposed all the time. Federal laws regarding protection of customers and employees confidential information include the Fair and Accurate Credit Transactions Act (FACT Act) and the Fair Credit Reporting Act (FCRA). In addition, it appears that the courts are primed for holding employers liable for losses of their employees’ confidential information, even in the absence of a specific law requiring them to protect it.

Finally, you should remember that protecting your employees from identity theft is in your company’s best interest for a number of other reasons, not the least of which is the bottom line. When an employee’s identity is stolen, her productivity at work will inevitably be affected as she is forced to use regular business hours to notify all the appropriate entities in an effort to correct the problem.

Obviously, you can’t completely insulate your employees from ID theft, but you can take reasonable steps to protect them from it in the workplace. Despite the large-scale computer breaches frequently in the news today, workplace identity theft isn't much different now than it was 10 or 20 years ago. Even for all of the increased reliance on networked computing, however, the most common scenario appears to be the one in which a single employee gains access to the hard, paper version of personal information about the company’s other employees or customers.

View all HR topics

Bookmark and Share Send to a Colleague

Related articles on ID Theft from the State Employment Law Letters
designates additional valuable resources available exclusively to Employment Law Letter subscribers

Identity crisis: how to respond to a data breach
  Delaware Employment Law Letter, July 2008
Postville immigration raid spurs host of legal claims
  Iowa Employment Law Letter, June 2008
Employees hold the key to data security
  Colorado Employment Law Letter, December 2007
Taking out the trash? Make sure you don't leave anything behind
  Louisiana Employment LawLetter, October 2007
Wisconsin residents must be notified when third parties acquire personal information
  Wisconsin Employment Law Letter, June 2007
Identity theft threatens New Jersey workplaces
  New Jersey Employment Law Letter, April2007
Michigan's Identity Theft Protection Act
  Michigan Employment Law Letter, March 2007

HR Tools for ID Theft

     

Bookmark and Share Send to a Colleague

Subscriber Login