Connecticut 2023 2023 Regular Session

Connecticut House Bill HB06800 Introduced / Fiscal Note

Filed 04/04/2023

                    OFFICE OF FISCAL ANALYSIS 
Legislative Office Building, Room 5200 
Hartford, CT 06106  (860) 240-0200 
http://www.cga.ct.gov/ofa 
sHB-6800 
AN ACT CONCERNING ELECTRONIC BOOK AND DIGITAL 
AUDIOBOOK LICENSING.  
 
Primary Analyst: SB 	4/3/23 
Contributing Analyst(s): ME   
Reviewer: ME 
 
 
 
OFA Fiscal Note 
 
State Impact: 
Agency Affected Fund-Effect FY 24 $ FY 25 $ 
Consumer Protection, Dept. GF - Potential 
Cost 
105,299 143,908 
State Comptroller - Fringe 
Benefits
1
 
GF - Potential 
Cost 
45,089 61,621 
Library, CT State 	GF - Potential 
Savings 
See Below See Below 
Higher Education Constituent 
Units 
Various - 
Potential Savings 
See Below See Below 
Note: GF=General Fund; Various=Various 
  
Municipal Impact: 
Municipalities Effect FY 24 $ FY 25 $ 
Various Municipalities, Various 
Local and Regional School 
Districts 
Potential 
Savings 
See Below See Below 
  
Explanation 
The bill, which establishes parameters for electronic book (e-book) 
library contracts and enforcement of those parameters, is a potential cost 
to the state due to the enforcement provisions and a potential savings to 
public entities that operate libraries, beginning in FY 24.  
                                                
1
The fringe benefit costs for most state employees are budgeted centrally in accounts 
administered by the Comptroller. The estimated active employee fringe benefit cost 
associated with most personnel changes is 42.82% of payroll in FY 24.  2023HB-06800-R000407-FN.DOCX 	Page 2 of 3 
 
 
The bill prohibits certain licensure and contract agreements between 
libraries and electronic book publishers and makes violations an unfair 
trade practice resulting in a potential cost of $105,299 in FY 24
2
 and 
$143,908 in FY 25 to the Department of Consumer Protection, and 
potential associated fringe benefit costs of $45,089 in FY 24 and $61,621 
in FY 25. 
To the extent that violations occur DCP may have to hire one special 
investigator and one paralegal.  These positions will manage and review 
the complaints, investigate the cases, and conduct settlement 
negotiation and case preparation. 
To the extent the bill produces e-book lending terms that are more 
favorable to libraries, the bill may result in a savings to public entities 
statewide that provide e-books, including the Connecticut State Library 
(CSL), the constituent units, various other state agencies, municipalities, 
and local and regional boards of education. The extent of annualized 
savings would depend upon actual contract terms.  
Currently, there are various e-book licensing models implemented 
across state agencies and municipalities. The CSL spends approximately 
$125,000 annually on e-book content and municipalities aggregately 
spend approximately $150,000 per year on e-book content.  
The higher education constituent units collectively have over 30 
contracts involving e-books. Some of the contracts include terms that the 
bill prohibits, such as restrictions on interlibrary loaning. The bill's 
removal of those terms potentially results in savings associated with less 
costly e-book acquisition, as well as expanded interlibrary loan access. 
The extent of the potential savings depends on contract terms, the cost 
differential between e-books and traditional books, and the extent to 
which interlibrary loan access reduces a library's need to independently 
purchase content. 
                                                
2
 Costs for FY 24 reflect 9 months of expenditures due to the bill's October 1
st
 effective 
date.  2023HB-06800-R000407-FN.DOCX 	Page 3 of 3 
 
 
The Out Years 
The ongoing fiscal impact identified above would continue into the 
future subject to inflation and contract terms.