Connecticut 2024 2024 Regular Session

Connecticut House Bill HB05413 Introduced / Fiscal Note

Filed 04/18/2024

                    OFFICE OF FISCAL ANALYSIS 
Legislative Office Building, Room 5200 
Hartford, CT 06106  (860) 240-0200 
http://www.cga.ct.gov/ofa 
sHB-5413 
AN ACT CONCERNING THE ILLEGAL USE OF CERTAIN 
VEHICLES AND STREET TAKEOVERS. 
As Amended by House "A" (LCO 3875) 
House Calendar No.: 297  
 
Primary Analyst: LG 	4/18/24 
Contributing Analyst(s):    
Reviewer: RW 
 
 
 
OFA Fiscal Note 
 
State Impact: None  
Municipal Impact: 
Municipalities Effect FY 25 $ FY 26 $ 
Various Municipalities Potential 
Cost 
Minimal Minimal 
Various Municipalities Savings See Below See Below 
Various Municipalities Potential 
Revenue 
Gain 
See Below See Below 
  
Explanation 
The bill results in various fiscal impacts described below regarding 
changes to street takeovers and the illegal use of motor vehicles.  
Sections 1 and 2 allows municipalities to (1) seize certain all-terrain 
vehicles (ATVs) that violate a local ordinance if the municipality mails 
a letter to the owner or lienholder first and (2) destroy the vehicles 
instead of requiring them to be stored or sold at a public auction. This 
may result in a potential cost to municipalities to the extent that more 
ATVs are seized. There is also a potential savings to municipalities to 
the extent they no longer have to store or auction the vehicles. These 
sections have no impact on municipalities that have not adopted an 
ordinance on the operation of ATVs. 
Section 3 allows municipalities to adopt an ordinance prohibiting  2024HB-05413-R01-FN.DOCX 	Page 2 of 2 
 
 
street takeovers and allows fines to be set for the violation of this 
ordinance. There is a potential revenue gain to municipalities beginning 
in FY 25 to the extent that the ordinance is adopted, and fines are issued 
for violations. The section allows fines to be set up to $1,000 for the first 
violations, $1,500 for second violations, and $2,000 for all subsequent 
violations.  
Section 4 makes various changes to certain license penalties that do 
not result in an impact to the state or municipalities.  
Section 5 adds several municipal ordinance violations to the list of 
offenses for which fines are payable to the Centralized Infraction Bureau 
(CIB). This may result in a potential revenue gain to municipalities from 
fines to the extent that municipalities create ordinances and that 
violations occur. 
House "A" alters the original bill by eliminating Section 6 and its 
associated fiscal impact.   
The Out Years 
The annualized ongoing fiscal impact identified above would 
continue into the future subject to inflation, the number of vehicles 
seized, fines, and violations issued.