2025 Session Last amended: 2025 session

§ 268.19 — Data Privacy

Plain-Language Summary

Information gathered by the state for unemployment insurance purposes is private. It cannot be shared publicly except in specific situations allowed by law, such as sharing with other government agencies for tax enforcement, child support, fraud investigations, or public health research.

Practical Notes
When this applies: Whenever someone requests access to unemployment insurance records. Who this affects: Workers, employers, and government agencies. Key points: Your unemployment records are classified as private data. The state can share them with certain agencies (such as tax authorities, child support enforcement, and law enforcement investigating fraud) but cannot make them public. Employers can access wage data about their own employees. If you are involved in a court case, a district court order is needed to release these records – a subpoena alone is not enough.