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What is a Consumer Report?
A consumer report contains information about your personal and
credit characteristics, character, general reputation, and
lifestyle. To be covered by the FCRA, a report must be prepared
by a consumer reporting agency (CRA) — a business that assembles
such reports for other businesses. Insurers often do background
checks on applicants and get consumer reports during
considerations whether to insure an applicant or not.
Can Negative Credit Hinder a Getting Insurance?
An insurer may use consumer reports to underwrite insurance
policies and to screen high-risk applicants—as long as you
comply with the Fair Credit Reporting Act (FCRA). The FCRA is
designed to protect the privacy of consumer report information
and to guarantee that the information supplied by credit
reporting agencies (CRAs) is as accurate as possible. Consumer
reports may include information on an applicant’s credit
history, medical conditions, driving record, criminal activity,
and hazardous sports. Amendments to the FCRA, which went into
effect September 30, 1997, increase the legal obligations of
insurers who use consumer reports.
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What is the Adverse Action Notice?
The following disclosure requirement applies to new applicants
as well as current policy holders. When an adverse action is
taken—such as a decision to deny insurance, increase rates, or
terminate a policy—and it is based solely or partly on
information in a consumer report, Section 615(a) of the FCRA
requires you to provide a notice of the adverse action to the
consumer. The notice must include:
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The name, address, and telephone number of
the CRA that supplied the consumer report, including the
toll-free telephone number for credit bureaus that maintain
files nationwide.
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A statement that the CRA that supplied the
report did not make the decision to take the adverse action
and cannot give the specific reasons for it.
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A notice of the individual’s right to
dispute the accuracy or completeness of any information the
CRA furnished, and the consumer’s right to a free report
from the CRA upon request within 60 days.
Disclosure of this information is important
because some consumer reports may contain errors. The adverse
action notice is required even if information in the consumer
report was not the main reason for the denial or rate increase.
Even if the information in the report played only a small part
in the overall decision, the applicant still must be notified.
While written adverse action notices are not required, many
insurers provide them and keep copies for two years to show
compliance with the FCRA.
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