Kansas 2025 2025-2026 Regular Session

Kansas Senate Bill SB42 Introduced / Fiscal Note

Filed 01/28/2025

                    Division of the Budget 
Landon State Office Building 	Phone: (785) 296-2436 
900 SW Jackson Street, Room 504 	adam.c.proffitt@ks.gov 
Topeka, KS  66612 	http://budget.kansas.gov 
 
Adam C. Proffitt, Director 	Laura Kelly, Governor 
Division of the Budget 
 
January 28, 2025 
 
 
 
 
The Honorable Brenda Dietrich, Chairperson 
Senate Committee on Financial Institutions and Insurance 
300 SW 10th Avenue, Room 546-S 
Topeka, Kansas  66612 
 
Dear Senator Dietrich: 
 
 SUBJECT: Fiscal Note for SB 42 by Senate Committee on Financial Institutions and 
Insurance 
 
 In accordance with KSA 75-3715a, the following fiscal note concerning SB 42 is 
respectfully submitted to your committee. 
 
 SB 42 would create the Kansas Real Time Motor Vehicle Insurance Verification Act.  The 
bill would require the Insurance Commissioner to establish a web-based system for online and real 
time verification of motor vehicle insurance and would require motor vehicle insurers to establish 
functionality for the system.  The Commissioner would be required to adopt rules and regulations 
to operate the provisions of the Act.  The new verification system would supersede any existing 
motor vehicle liability insurance verification system requirements and would become the sole 
electronic system for verifying motor vehicle liability insurance. The bill would outline the 
security, use, interface, information, and functionality of the system.  The system would be 
required to be fully operational no later than July 1, 2026, following an appropriate testing period 
of not less than nine months.   
 
 The Commissioner could conduct a competitive bid and contract with a private service 
provider that has successfully implemented similar systems in other states to assist in establishing, 
implementing, and maintaining the system.  The Insurance Department would provide funding for 
the implementation, ongoing maintenance, and enhancement of the system. The bill would 
provide that insurers would be required to cooperate with the Commissioner and the Kansas 
Department of Revenue to establish and maintain the system.  The bill also would outline other 
items that insurers would be authorized or required to perform.  Insurers would also be immune to 
civil and administrative liability for good faith efforts to comply with the Act.  The Act would not 
apply to vehicles insured under commercial motor vehicle coverage.   
  The Honorable Brenda Dietrich, Chairperson 
Page 2—SB 42 
 
 
 The Commissioner could establish, through rules and regulations, an alternative method 
for verifying motor vehicle liability insurance for insurers that insure 1,000 or fewer vehicles in 
Kansas.  All information and data provided by insurance companies to the system, and all reports, 
responses or other information generated would be confidential and privileged, and would not be 
subject to the Open Records Act, nor would it be subject to discovery or admissible as evidence in 
a private civil action.  
 
 The Kansas Department of Insurance estimates that enactment of the bill would cost $1.0 
million in FY 2026 and $500,000 in FY 2027 from its Insurance Department Service Regulation 
Fee Fund.  The Department indicates that the cost of real time verification can vary depending on 
specific features.  The agency’s estimates include the startup costs and the verification testing in 
FY 2026.  The cost for FY 2027 includes ongoing maintenance and other services required for the 
new system.  
 
 The Department of Revenue estimates that it would require $45,100 from the State General 
Fund in FY 2026 to modify and test agency databases and update publications.  The estimate 
includes development and testing of its internal system as well as creating a new interface between 
the Kansas Department of Insurance and the Department of Revenue.  The required programming 
for this bill by itself would be performed by existing staff of the Department of Revenue.  In 
addition, if the combined effect of implementing this bill and other enacted legislation would 
exceed the Department’s programming resources, or if the time for implementing the changes is 
too short, additional expenditures for outside contract programmer services beyond the 
Department’s current budget may be required. Any fiscal effect associated with SB 42 is not 
reflected in The FY 2026 Governor’s Budget Report.  
 
 
 
 
 	Sincerely, 
 
 
 
 	Adam C. Proffitt 
 	Director of the Budget 
 
 
 
 
cc: Kyle Strathman, Insurance Department 
 Lynn Robinson, Department of Revenue