Low urgency

Privacy Act of 1974; Matching Program

Detected July 6, 2026 · in Private Security Licensing

CMS is launching a new data matching program under the Privacy Act, which may affect background checks and employee data handling for private security firms that work with Medicare/Medicaid or access CMS data.

Aforeworn detected this change in the Private Security Licensing space on July 6, 2026 and published this briefing so affected operators are forewarned rather than caught off guard. It is rated Low urgency. Private security firms (guard-service, PPOs, in-house, armored transport) that handle CMS data or have contracts involving Medicare/Medicaid beneficiaries. should confirm how it applies to their specific situation before acting. There is a time constraint attached: No immediate deadline; monitor for further implementation details.. Acting after that point can mean penalties, a lapsed licence, or lost eligibility — exactly the kind of surprise Aforeworn exists to prevent. Aforeworn monitors Private Security Licensing continuously and turns every detected change into a plain-English briefing like this one, so you always know first. Forewarned is forearmed.

What changed

A new matching program between CMS and other agencies will compare data sets, potentially triggering additional privacy compliance requirements for businesses that access or share CMS data.

Who it affects

Private security firms (guard-service, PPOs, in-house, armored transport) that handle CMS data or have contracts involving Medicare/Medicaid beneficiaries.

What you must do

Review current data-sharing agreements and privacy policies to ensure compliance with the new matching program notice.

Deadline

No immediate deadline; monitor for further implementation details.

Source: https://www.federalregister.gov/documents/2026/07/06/2026-13572/privacy-act-of-1974-matching-program

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