COMMITTEE ON LEGISLATIVE RESEARCH

OVERSIGHT DIVISION



FISCAL NOTE



L.R. No.: 2676-01

Bill No.: SB 897

Subject: Crimes and Punishment; Criminal Procedure; Victims of Crimes

Type: Original

Date: February 10, 2004




FISCAL SUMMARY



ESTIMATED NET EFFECT ON GENERAL REVENUE FUND
FUND AFFECTED FY 2005 FY 2006 FY 2007
General Revenue Less than ($100,000) Less than ($100,000) Less than ($100,000)
Total Estimated

Net Effect on

General Revenue

Fund

Less than ($100,000) Less than ($100,000) Less than ($100,000)



ESTIMATED NET EFFECT ON OTHER STATE FUNDS
FUND AFFECTED FY 2005 FY 2006 FY 2007
Total Estimated

Net Effect on Other

State Funds

$0 $0 $0



Numbers within parentheses: ( ) indicate costs or losses.

This fiscal note contains 5 pages.











ESTIMATED NET EFFECT ON FEDERAL FUNDS
FUND AFFECTED FY 2005 FY 2006 FY 2007
Total Estimated

Net Effect on All

Federal Funds

$0 $0 $0



ESTIMATED NET EFFECT ON LOCAL FUNDS
FUND AFFECTED FY 2005 FY 2006 FY 2007
Local Government $0 $0 $0




FISCAL ANALYSIS



ASSUMPTION



Officials from the Department of Public Safety - Missouri State Highway Patrol, - State Emergency Management Agency, - Capitol Police assume the proposed legislation would have no fiscal impact on their agencies.



Officials from the Office of State Courts Administrator assume the proposed legislation would have no fiscal impact on the courts.



Officials from the Department of Public Safety - Division of Fire Safety (DFS) assume the proposed legislation may effect the frequency their investigators are called to testify in court, or the duration of their testimony. However, the DFS does not anticipate a large fiscal impact.



Officials from the Office of Attorney General assume the costs of handling any criminal appeals arising from this proposal could be absorbed within existing resources.



Officials from the Office of Prosecution Services assume prosecutors could absorb the costs of the proposed legislation within existing resources.







ASSUMPTION (continued)



Officials from the Office of State Public Defender assume existing staff could provide representation for those few cases arising where indigent persons were charged with arson motivated by hate crimes, a class A felony. However, passage of more than one similar bill would require the State Public Defender System to request increased appropriations to cover the cumulative cost of representing indigent persons accused in the additional cases.



In response to a similar proposal from 2003, officials from the Department of Corrections (DOC) assumed that defined arson crimes could be charged as a hate crime punishable as a class A felony. Currently Arson I is a class A felony and is also classified as a Dangerous Felony (and would be required to serve 85% of their sentence) so the new language would not affect 1st degree Arsonists.



Arson II offenders are currently charged with a class C felony and there were 39 admittances to the DOC in FY01 for this crime. Charges for a class A felony pursuant to the modification would find them serving 4 extra years after the 2nd year out of currently served time. Using the basis of the percentage of property damage offenses motivated by discrimination (1.6%) would give an approximate of 1 offender charged under this new crime with the effect felt the 3rd year.



If additional persons are sentenced to the custody of the DOC due to the provisions of this legislation, the DOC will incur a corresponding increase in operational cost either through incarceration (FY01 average of $35.78 per inmate per day, or an annual cost of $13,060 per inmate) or through supervision provided by the Board of Probation and Parole (FY01 average of $3.34 per offender per day, or an annual cost of $1,219 per offender).



The DOC was unable to determine the number of additional inmate beds that may be required as a consequence of passage of this proposal. Estimated construction cost for one new medium to maximum security inmate bed is $55,000. Utilizing this per-bed cost provides for a conservative estimate by the DOC, as facility start-up costs are not included and entire facilities and/or housing units would have to be constructed to cover the cost of housing new commitments resulting from the cumulative effect of various new legislation, if adopted as statute.



In summary, supervision by the DOC through probation or incarceration would result in additional unknown costs to the department. Eight (8) persons would have to be incarcerated per fiscal year to exceed $100,000 annually. Due to the narrow scope of this new crime, estimates indicate the impact would be less than $100,000 per year for the DOC.







FISCAL IMPACT - State Government FY 2005

(10 Mo.)

FY 2006 FY 2007
GENERAL REVENUE FUND
Costs - Department of Corrections

Incarceration/probation costs



Less than ($100,000)


Less than ($100,000)


Less than ($100,000)
ESTIMATED NET EFFECT ON GENERAL REVENUE FUND

Less than ($100,000)


Less than ($100,000)


Less than ($100,000)




FISCAL IMPACT - Local Government FY 2005

(10 Mo.)

FY 2006 FY 2007
$0 $0 $0



FISCAL IMPACT - Small Business



No direct fiscal impact to small businesses would be expected as a result of this proposal.





DESCRIPTION



The proposed legislation makes arson in the 1st degree and arson in the 2nd degree a class A felony if the building or structure damaged is a church or place of worship and race, color, religion, national origin, sex, sexual orientation, or disability of the victim(s) is a motivational factor.



This legislation is not federally mandated, would not duplicate any other program and would not require additional capital improvements or rental space.













SOURCES OF INFORMATION



Office of Attorney General

Office of State Courts Administrator

Department of Public Safety

- Missouri State Highway Patrol

- Division of Fire Safety

- State Emergency Management Agency

- Capitol Police

Office of Prosecution Services

Office of State Public Defender



NOT RESPONDING: Department of Corrections









Mickey Wilson, CPA

Director

February 10, 2004