Connecticut 2021 2021 Regular Session

Connecticut House Bill HB06385 Introduced / Fiscal Note

Filed 03/25/2021

                    OFFICE OF FISCAL ANALYSIS 
Legislative Office Building, Room 5200 
Hartford, CT 06106  (860) 240-0200 
http://www.cga.ct.gov/ofa 
sHB-6385 
AN ACT CONCERNING ENHANCEMENTS TO CERTAIN 
AGRICULTURAL PROGRAMS.  
 
Primary Analyst: MR 	3/24/21 
Contributing Analyst(s): EMG, PR   
 
 
 
 
OFA Fiscal Note 
 
State Impact: 
Agency Affected Fund-Effect FY 22 $ FY 23 $ 
Department of Agriculture GF - Cost 125,832 125,832 
Resources of the General Fund GF - Revenue 
Gain 
Potential 
Minimal 
Potential 
Minimal 
Note: GF=General Fund  
Municipal Impact: None  
Explanation 
This bill makes changes to various agricultural laws and programs. 
Section 3 alters labeling verbiage on farm products marketed under 
the “CT-Grown” program by the Department of Agriculture (DoAg).  
Violations of the new labeling requirements under the bill receive a 
warning for the first violation and a $100 fine for subsequent 
violations. This may result in a minimal revenue gain to the General 
Fund, to the extent violations occur and are enforced by DoAg.   
Section 4 revises the penalties for violating the state’s produce 
safety laws and applies them to violations of the federal Food Safety 
Modernization Act’s (FSMA) produce safety rule. Currently, the FSMA 
law sets a range of fines as penalties (from $25 to $50 for a first offense 
and from $100 to $200 for subsequent offenses).  Instead, the bill sets 
fines: $50 for the first offense and $200 for a subsequent offense. This 
is not anticipated to have a fiscal impact, as total revenue associated 
with these fines is minimal.   2021HB-06385-R000134-FN.DOCX 	Page 2 of 2 
 
 
Section 5 of the bill reduces the penalty for violating Connecticut’s 
seed law (labeling, sales, and record keeping requirements). Currently, 
the penalty is a class D misdemeanor with a fine of $100 for a first 
offense and $200 for a subsequent offense. The bill removes the class D 
misdemeanor penalty, leaving the specified monetary fines in place.  
This has no fiscal impact as there have been no violations under the 
current statute for the past five years. 
Section 6 requires the farmers’ market WIC and senior nutrition 
program vouchers, also administered by DoAg, to have a value of at 
least $20.  Currently, eligible program participants receive $15 and $18 
in vouchers, respectively. Increasing the dollar amount of the WIC 
and senior nutrition vouchers to $21 would result in annual costs to 
DoAg of $125,832.
1
   
Section 10 expands the purposes of DoAg’s farm viability matching 
grant program to include “the development of urban and 
nontraditional farming practices.” This has no fiscal impact to the 
General Fund, but it may cause reserves within the nonlapsing account 
of the Community Investment Act to be expended faster than they 
otherwise would have been. The current balance in this account is 
$717,592, and in FY 20 the account expended was $549,937.   
Sections 11 - 13 eliminate the Connecticut Marketing Authority 
within DoAg. This has no fiscal impact as the Hartford Regional 
Market was transferred to the Capital Region Development Authority 
in January 2019 (FY 20) under PA 18-154. 
Other sections and provisions of the bill make various changes that 
have no fiscal impact.  
                                                
1
 This estimate assumes the dollar amount of the vouchers is increased to $21 to be 
consistent with the program's current practice of using vouchers in multiples of $3.