2023 New Year’s Resolution: Effectively Comply with New Comprehensive State Privacy Laws


More than just New Year’s resolutions went into effect when the clock struck midnight on January 1, 2023. The California Privacy Rights Act (“CPRA”) and the Virginia Consumer Data Protection Act (“VCPDA”) are now effective in California and Virginia, respectively. These comprehensive data privacy laws, along with three other state laws going into effect this year, establish new and complex obligations for businesses. If your business has not taken steps to prepare for these privacy laws, it is high time to start that process to avoid violations and enforcement likely to follow later in the year. See below for a timeline of key dates.

The CPRA amends the California Consumer Privacy Act (“CCPA”), which was the first comprehensive privacy law in the United States. The CPRA does not expand the applicability of the CCPA, but does impose a number of new requirements. In addition to creating several new consumer rights, two important CCPA exemptions are no longer in effect as of January 1, 2023: (1) the exemption for certain employment-related information of workforce members, meaning employers’ obligations in handling workforce personal information have significantly expanded; and (2) the temporary exemption for certain business-to-business (“B2B”) personal information, meaning businesses will have to apply expanded requirements to personal information about business partners.

While the CPRA is in effect, the California Privacy Protection Agency (“CPPA”), the new agency created by the CPRA and tasked with enforcing the CCPA, has delayed issuance of final rules. During a December 16, 2022 board meeting, the CPPA Executive Director noted that the final rules will likely be released in late January. Until the final regulations are approved, existing regulations will be in effect.

As we discussed previously, though the state laws going into effect this year diverge in some significant ways, the laws share a common goal of protecting consumer data and, therefore, contain numerous similarities. This checklist of questions below may help your business prepare for compliance with these laws, as well as similar laws that may be enacted by other states in the future.


©2025 Epstein Becker & Green, P.C. All rights reserved.
National Law Review, Volume XIII, Number 10