Arizona 2024 2024 Regular Session

Arizona Senate Bill SB1366 Comm Sub / Analysis

Filed 02/26/2024

                     
  	SB 1366 
Initials PB 	Page 1 	Commerce 
 
ARIZONA HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES 
Fifty-sixth Legislature 
Second Regular Session 
Senate: FICO DP 5-1-1-0 | 3
rd
 Read 16-10-4-0 
 
SB 1366: regulatory sandbox; blockchain 
Sponsor: Senator Bolick, LD 2 
Committee on Commerce 
Overview 
Modifies the definition of innovation relating to the Regulatory Sandbox Program (Program). 
History 
The Attorney General (AG) administers and oversees the Program, which enables persons to 
obtain limited access to Arizona's market to test innovative financial products or services or 
other innovations without obtaining a license or other authorization. An innovation is the 
use or incorporation of new or emerging technology or the reimagination of uses for existing 
technology to address a problem, provide a benefit or otherwise offer a product, service, 
business model or delivery mechanism that is not known by the AG to have a comparable 
widespread offering in Arizona (A.R.S. §§ 41-5601 and 41-5602).   
An applicant for the Program must demonstrate to the AG adequate understanding of the 
innovation and a sufficient plan to test, monitor and assess the innovation while ensuring 
consumers are protected from a test's failure. Upon application approval, an applicant is 
deemed a Program participant and given 24 months to test the innovation. The participant 
must retain records, documents and data produced in the ordinary course of business. If an 
innovation fails before the end of the testing period, the participant must notify the AG and 
report on actions taken to ensure consumers have not been harmed because of the 
innovation's failure. Before the 24-month testing period ends, the participant must notify the 
AG that the participant will exit the Program and cease offering any innovative products or 
services within 60 days after the 24-month testing period ends or seek an extension in order 
to pursue a license or other authorization required by law (A.R.S. §§ 41-5603; 41-5605; 41-
5607 and 41-5609). 
Blockchain technology is a type of distributed ledger technology that uses a distributed, 
decentralized, shared and replicated ledger, which may be public or private, permissioned or 
permissionless, or driven by tokenized crypto economics or tokenless. The data on the ledger 
is protected with cryptography, is immutable and auditable and provides an uncensored truth 
(A.R.S. § 44-7061). 
Provisions 
1. Modifies the definition of innovation as the use or incorporation of a new or existing idea 
or a new or emerging technology or a new use of existing technology, including blockchain 
technology, to address a problem, provide a benefit or offer a product, production method 
or service. (Sec 1) 
2. Defines blockchain technology. (Sec 1) 
3. Makes technical changes. (Sec 1) 
☐ Prop 105 (45 votes)     ☐ Prop 108 (40 votes)      ☐ Emergency (40 votes) ☐ Fiscal Note