Connecticut 2023 2023 Regular Session

Connecticut House Bill HB06609 Introduced / Fiscal Note

Filed 04/27/2023

                    OFFICE OF FISCAL ANALYSIS 
Legislative Office Building, Room 5200 
Hartford, CT 06106  (860) 240-0200 
http://www.cga.ct.gov/ofa 
HB-6609 
AN ACT CONCERNING EXTENDED PRODUCER RESPONSIBILITY 
FOR SMOKE DETECTORS. 
AMENDMENT 
LCO No.: 7071 
File Copy No.: 133 
House Calendar No.: 105  
 
Primary Analyst: MR 	4/27/23 
Contributing Analyst(s):  	() 
Reviewer: MP 
 
 
 
OFA Fiscal Note 
 
State Impact: None 
 Municipal Impact: 
Municipalities Effect FY 24 $ FY 25 $ 
Various Municipalities See Below See Below See Below 
  
Explanation 
The amendment strikes the underlying bill and its associated fiscal 
impact.  
Instead, the amendment requires, by April 1, 2024: (1) smoke detector 
producers to establish a collection and recycling program to collect, 
transport and manage obsolete smoke detectors received at collection 
sites, and (2) make collection containers available to any wholesaler, 
retailer or municipality that participates as a collection site in the smoke 
detector collection and recycling program under the amendment.  
This may result in a one-time cost to some municipalities, as it allows 
smoke detector manufacturers to charge each municipality that 
participates in the collection and recycling program, and that receives a 
collection container, a one-time program administration fee of not more 
than $75.  This cost could occur as early as FY 24, but could occur in any  2023HB-06609-R00LCO07071-FNA.docx 	Page 2 of 2 
 
 
year a town or city joins the program.   
Additionally, the strike-all amendment establishes a ban, starting in 
FY 26, for disposing of smoke detectors in the commercial or municipal 
solid waste stream (MSW) and allows the Department of Energy and 
Environmental Protection (DEEP) to enforce the ban.  While this has no 
fiscal impact in either FY 24 or FY 25, this could potentially result in 
municipal savings, beginning in FY 26, as fewer smoke detectors would 
be part of the municipal solid waste (MSW) stream and subject to any 
costs for shipping MSW out-of-state.
1
 
There is no fiscal impact to DEEP because the department has 
sufficient resources to carry out its responsibilities under the 
amendment.  
 
The preceding Fiscal Impact statement is prepared for the benefit of the members of the General Assembly, solely 
for the purposes of information, summarization and explanation and does not represent the intent of the General 
Assembly or either chamber thereof for any purpose. In general, fiscal impacts are based upon a variety of 
informational sources, including the analyst’s professional knowledge. Whenever applicable, agency data is 
consulted as part of the analysis, however final products do not necessarily reflect an assessment from any 
specific department. 
 
1
 The fee charged by the owner or operator of a landfill for the acceptance of a unit 
weight or volume of solid waste for disposal, usually done by the truckload. The 
tipping fee is passed back along the chain of waste acceptor to hauler to generator in 
the form of fees or taxes. Tipping fees rise as the volume of available landfill space is 
depleted.