OFFICE OF FISCAL ANALYSIS Legislative Office Building, Room 5200 Hartford, CT 06106 (860) 240-0200 http://www.cga.ct.gov/ofa sHB-5330 AN ACT CONCERNING THE DEPARTMENT OF CONSUMER PROTECTION'S RECOMMENDATIONS REGARDING VARIOUS REVISIONS TO THE CONSUMER PROTECTION STATUTES. As Amended by House "A" (LCO 5603) House Calendar No.: 184 Primary Analyst: ME 4/28/22 Contributing Analyst(s): Reviewer: PR OFA Fiscal Note State Impact: Agency Affected Fund-Effect FY 23 $ FY 24 $ Resources of the General Fund GF - Revenue Impact See Below See Below Consumer Protection, Dept. Various - Potential Revenue Gain See Below See Below Note: GF=General Fund; Various=Various Municipal Impact: None Explanation The bill makes various changes to the consumer protection statutes resulting in the potential revenue impact described below. • Section 2 establishes a religious wine retailer 1 permit resulting in a potential revenue gain to the state to the extent the permit is applied for. It's anticipated this permit will generate less than ten applications. • Section 3 expands the in-state transporter's permit to allow one permit to cover boats and vehicles under common control, direction, or management resulting in a potential revenue loss to the extent fewer in-state transporter's permits are applied 1 The annual fee for the religious wine retailer permit is $250. 2022HB-05330-R01-FN.DOCX Page 2 of 2 for. In FY 21 there were 80 in-state transporters permits. • Section 8 allows café permits in all airports rather than just in Bradley International Airport resulting in a potential revenue gain to the state if additional airports apply for café permits. • Sections 18-19 expands the list of exempted permits and allows certain permittees to obtain an additional permit resulting in a potential revenue gain to the extent additional permits are applied for. • Section 27 makes the provisional permit $500 fee nonrefundable resulting in a potential revenue gain to the extent refunds would have been issued. • Section 37 allows the Commissioner of Consumer Protection to impose an additional civil penalty (up to $500) for violations regarding credit card surcharge prohibitions resulting in a potential revenue gain to the Consumer Protection Enforcement Account to the extent violations occur and civil penalties are imposed. The bill also makes various changes to consumer protection statute resulting in no fiscal impact to the state or municipalities. House "A" eliminates one section and makes various cannabis advertising changes resulting in no fiscal impact to the state. The Out Years The annualized ongoing fiscal impact identified above would continue into the future subject to the number of permit applications and renewals and violations.