COMMITTEE ON LEGISLATIVE RESEARCH

OVERSIGHT DIVISION


FISCAL NOTE


L.R. No.:         3570-01

Bill No.:          HB 1382

Subject:           Children and Minors; Crimes and Punishment; Law Enforcement Officers and Agencies

Type:              Original

Date:               February 4, 2008





 

Bill Summary:            The proposal changes the laws regarding the age of victims and offenders in various sexual offenses.



FISCAL SUMMARY


ESTIMATED NET EFFECT ON GENERAL REVENUE FUND

FUND AFFECTED

FY 2009

FY 2010

FY 2011

General Revenue

($216,906)

($670,238)

($1,150,576)

 

 

 

 

Total Estimated

Net Effect on

General Revenue

Fund

($216,906)

($670,238)

($1,150,576)


ESTIMATED NET EFFECT ON OTHER STATE FUNDS

FUND AFFECTED

FY 2009

FY 2010

FY 2011

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Total Estimated

Net Effect on Other

State Funds

$0

$0

$0


Numbers within parentheses: ( ) indicate costs or losses.

This fiscal note contains 6 pages.




ESTIMATED NET EFFECT ON FEDERAL FUNDS

FUND AFFECTED

FY 2009

FY 2010

FY 2011

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Total Estimated

Net Effect on All

Federal Funds

$0

$0

$0




ESTIMATED NET EFFECT ON FULL TIME EQUIVALENT (FTE)

FUND AFFECTED

FY 2009

FY 2010

FY 2011

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Total Estimated

Net Effect on

FTE

0

0

0


Estimated Total Net Effect on All funds expected to exceed $100,000 savings or (cost).


Estimated Net Effect on General Revenue Fund expected to exceed $100,000 (cost).


ESTIMATED NET EFFECT ON LOCAL FUNDS

FUND AFFECTED

FY 2009

FY 2010

FY 2011

Local Government

$0

$0

$0








FISCAL ANALYSIS


ASSUMPTION


Officials from the Department of Public Safety – Director’s Office and the – Missouri State Highway Patrol assume the proposal would have no fiscal impact on their agencies.


Officials from the Office of State Courts Administrator (CTS) assume there may be some increase in the number of cases filed. CTS would not anticipate a fiscal impact on the judiciary.


Officials from the Department of Corrections (DOC) assume the proposed legislation changes the age of victims and perpetrators in certain criminal statutes including statutory rape, statutory sodomy, sexual abuse and child molestation.


DOC estimates the increase in population will increase incrementally over the fiscal year. For cost estimates, a snapshot of the midyear average population was used to determine fiscal impact.


Assumptions used to determine cost and rounded to the nearest whole number include:

 

          $41.21 (FY07 cost) inmate per capita costs with an inflation rate of 3% per each subsequent year.

 

          $2.43 (FY07 cost) average daily probation costs with an inflation rate of 3% per each subsequent 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 (FY07 average of $41.21 per inmate, per day or an annual cost of $15,042 per inmate) or through supervision provided by the Board of Probation and Parole (FY07 average of $2.43 per offender, per day or an annual cost of $887 per offender).


ASSUMPTION (continued)


The following charts detail the estimated fiscal impact for the scope of the fiscal note (FYs 2009, 2010, and 2011), the estimated ten-year fiscal impact, and the assumptions used in determining these costs:


Statutory Rape and Sodomy Ages Assumptions

 

Cost

Days

Total

Operating Expenses

41.21

365

15,042

Construction (C4 or C5 $55,000)

 

 

0

Emergency Housing

0.00

365

0

Operating Inflation (3.0%)

 

 

1.030

Emer. Hsng. Inflation (10%)

 

 

1.100

Construction Inflation (3.0%)

 

 

1.030



 

End FY Population

Average Population

Emer Hsng Expense

Operating Expense

Construction Expense

Total Cost w/ Inflation

FY 2008

0

(current year which will have no costs incurred)

FY 2009

28

14

0

$210,588

0

$216,906

FY 2010

56

42

0

$631,764

0

$670,238

FY 2011

84

70

0

$1,052,940

0

$1,150,576

FY 2012

203

144

0

$2,166,048

0

$2,437,906

FY 2013

294

249

0

$3,745,458

0

$4,342,012

FY 2014

385

340

0

$5,114,280

0

$6,106,718

FY 2015

476

431

0

$6,483,102

0

$7,973,398

FY 2016

595

536

0

$8,062,512

0

$10,213,349

FY 2017

602

599

0

$9,010,158

0

$11,756,213

FY 2018

609

606

0

$9,115,452

0

$12,250,405

Total Ten-Year Fiscal Impact:

$57,117,721


ASSUMPTION (continued)


In summary, supervision by the DOC through incarceration or probation would result in additional costs and although the exact fiscal impact is unknown, it is estimated that potential costs will be in excess of the indicated measurable dollar amount per year.


Officials from the Office of the State Public Defender (SPD) assume increasing penalties on existing crimes, or creating new crimes, will require more SPD resources. While the number of new cases (or cases with increased penalties) may be too few or uncertain to request additional appropriations for this specific bill, the SPD will continue to request sufficient appropriations to provide competent and effective representation in all its cases.


Oversight assumes the Office of the State Public Defender (SPD) could absorb the costs of the proposed legislation within existing resources. Oversight assumes any significant increase in the workload of the SPD would be reflected in future budget requests.


Officials from the Office of Prosecution Services did not respond to Oversight’s request for fiscal impact.



FISCAL IMPACT - State Government

FY 2009

(10 Mo.)

FY 2010

FY 2011

GENERAL REVENUE FUND

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

CostsDepartment of Corrections

 

 

 

     Incarceration/probation costs

($216,906)

($670,238)

($1,150,576)

 

 

 

 

ESTIMATED NET EFFECT ON GENERAL REVENUE FUND


($216,906)


($670,238)


($1,150,576)



FISCAL IMPACT - Local Government

FY 2009

(10 Mo.)

FY 2010

FY 2011

 

 

 

 

 

$0

$0

$0





FISCAL IMPACT - Small Business


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



FISCAL DESCRIPTION


The proposed legislation changes the laws regarding the age of victims and offenders in various sexual offenses.


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

            – Director’s Office

Office of the State Public Defender



NOT RESPONDING


Office of Prosecution Services








                                                                                                Mickey Wilson, CPA

                                                                                                Director

                                                                                                February 4, 2008