COMMITTEE ON LEGISLATIVE RESEARCH

OVERSIGHT DIVISION



FISCAL NOTE



L.R. No.: 3711-03

Bill No.: SB 1034

Subject: State Attorney General; Consumer Protection; Surety Bonds

Type: Original

Date: February 3, 2004




FISCAL SUMMARY



ESTIMATED NET EFFECT ON GENERAL REVENUE FUND
FUND AFFECTED FY 2005 FY 2006 FY 2007
Total Estimated

Net Effect on

General Revenue

Fund

$0 $0 $0



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 and the Office of State Public Defender 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 Office of Prosecution Services assume prosecutors could absorb the costs of the proposed legislation within existing resources.



Officials from the Department of Corrections (DOC) assume this proposal regulates vacation clubs. Penalty provisions, the component of the bill to have potential fiscal impact for DOC, is for a class D felony.



Currently, the DOC cannot predict the number of new commitments which may result from the enhancement of the offense(s) outlined in this proposal. An increase in commitments depends on the utilization by prosecutors and the actual sentences imposed by the court.



ASSUMPTION (continued)



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 (FY03 average of $38.10 per inmate per day, or an annual cost of $13,907 per inmate) or through supervision provided by the Board of Probation and Parole (FY03 average of $3.15 per offender, per day or an annual cost of $1,150 per offender).



The DOC does not anticipate the need for capital improvements at this time. It must be noted that the cumulative effect of various new legislation, if passed into law, could result in the need for additional capital improvements funding if the total number of new offenders exceeds current planned capacity.



The following factors contribute to DOC's minimal assumption:



In summary, supervision by the DOC through probation or incarceration would result in some additional costs, but DOC assumes the impact would be $0 or a minimal amount that could be absorbed within existing resources.



Officials from the Office of Secretary of State (SOS) assume the proposal would give the Attorney General's Office the authority to adopt rules to implement the provisions of this act. These rules would be published in the Missouri Register and the Code of State Regulations. These rules could require as many as 8 pages in the Code of State Regulations and half again as many pages in the Missouri Register, as cost statements, fiscal notes, and the like are not repeated in the Code. The estimated cost of a page in the Missouri Register is $23 and the estimated cost of a page in the Code of State Regulations is $27. Based on these costs, the estimated cost of the proposal is $492 in FY 05 and unknown in subsequent years. The actual cost could be more or less than the numbers given. The impact of this legislation in future years is unknown and depends upon the frequency and length of rules filed, amended, rescinded, or withdrawn.



ASSUMPTION (continued)



Oversight assumes the SOS could absorb the costs of printing and distributing regulations related to this proposal. If multiple bills pass which would require the printing and distribution of regulations at substantial costs, the SOS could request funding through the appropriation process.



Officials from the Office of Attorney General and the Department of Economic Development did not respond to Oversight's request for fiscal impact.





FISCAL IMPACT - State Government FY 2005

(10 Mo.)

FY 2006 FY 2007
$0 $0 $0





FISCAL IMPACT - Local Government FY 2005

(10 Mo.)

FY 2006 FY 2007
$0 $0 $0





FISCAL IMPACT - Small Business



The proposed legislation could have a fiscal impact on small business.





DESCRIPTION



The proposed legislation would regulate the business practice of travel clubs and vacation clubs. The club would be required to register to do business or possess a fictitious name in accordance with existing state law. Before contracting with citizens of this state, the club would file and maintain a bond with the Attorney General's office. The Attorney General would set the bond amount by rule. The bond or letter of credit would be in favor of any private client injured by a violation of the terms of this act. In lieu of a bond or letter of credit, a club would be required to annually provide proof to the Attorney General that the company has insurance against nonperformance in an amount equal to what bonds have been issued. The proposal would also permit a purchaser to rescind the contract with the travel club within seven days. The proposal would also require a seller provide a confirmation number to a buyer within five days.



DESCRIPTION (continued)



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 State Courts Administrator

Department of Corrections

Department of Public Safety

- Missouri State Highway Patrol

Office of Prosecution Services

Office of Secretary of State

Office of State Public Defender



NOT RESPONDING



Office of Attorney General

Department of Economic Development













Mickey Wilson, CPA

Director

February 3, 2004