New Jersey 2024 2024-2025 Regular Session

New Jersey Senate Bill S2930 Introduced / Fiscal Note

                       
Office of Legislative Services 
State House Annex 
P.O. Box 068 
Trenton, New Jersey  08625 
 	Legislative Budget and Finance Office 
Phone (609) 847-3105 
Fax (609) 777-2442 
www.njleg.state.nj.us 
  
 
LEGISLATIVE FISCAL ESTIMATE 
[Second Reprint] 
SENATE, No. 2930 
STATE OF NEW JERSEY 
221st LEGISLATURE 
 
DATED: MAY 15, 2024 
 
 
SUMMARY 
 
Synopsis: Makes various changes to process for access to government records; 
appropriates $10 million.  
Type of Impact: Annual State and local cost and revenue impacts. 
Agencies Affected: Department of Community Affairs; State, local government, and 
school district agencies. 
 
 
Office of Legislative Services Estimate 
Fiscal Impact 	Year 1 	Annually Thereafter 
State Cost Impact Increase of up to $10 million Indeterminate 
State Revenue Impact Indeterminate 	Indeterminate 
Local Cost Impact Indeterminate 	Indeterminate 
Local Revenue Impact Increase of up to $4 million Indeterminate 
 
 
 The Office of Legislative Services (OLS) concludes that this bill will result in an indeterminate 
net impact on the finances of State and local public agencies.  
 The OLS determines that the bill may result in a State cost increase of up to $10 million in the 
first year the bill is in effect.  If the full $10 million is not expended in the first year, the residual 
amount will be spent in subsequent fiscal years until the full $10 million is exhausted. 
 The bill appropriates $4 million for the Department of Community Affairs to provide grants to 
political subdivisions of the State to make government records available to the public 
electronically, including through shared services agreements.  The State expenditure increase 
would lead to a concurrent revenue increase for counties, municipalities, and school districts 
that receive grants under the program.    
 The bill also appropriates $4 million to the Department of Community Affairs for the 
operations of the Government Records Council, and an additional $2 million for the 
Government Records Council to implement certain provisions of the bill.  FE to S2930 [2R] 
2 
 
 Beyond the appropriated amount, the OLS is unable to estimate the direction and magnitude 
of the bill’s net impact on State and local finances.  This is so because of the countervailing 
effects of the bill, some examples of which include: 
1) Annual expenditure and revenue decreases for public agencies from an overall reduction in 
the number of requests to which an agency must respond and the number of records which 
must be produced. 
2) Potential annual expenditure increases for public agencies to make any adjustments and 
modifications necessary to meet accelerated records request fulfillment and complaint 
adjudication timelines. 
3) Annual State expenditure increase for a new salary of $12,000 for each of the eight public 
members of the Government Records Council, pursuant to the bill. 
4) Annual expenditure decrease for public agencies resulting from the bill’s provision that 
removes the mandatory awarding of attorney’s fees to a requestor who prevails in any 
complaint proceeding against a public agency. 
 
 
BILL DESCRIPTION 
 
 This bill makes various changes to the law governing access to government records, commonly 
known as the open public records act.  The bill appropriates funds to assist local public agencies 
in moving public records online, where members of the public can search for such documents. 
 Under the bill, records custodians are directed to withhold or redact records which include 
personal identifying information, information which the custodian has reason to believe would 
result in identity theft, and indecent or graphic images or video footage without prior written 
consent from the subject of the images or video footage. 
 The bill makes it a disorderly persons offense to make public indecent or graphic images or 
video footage obtained through a public record request, without the prior written consent of the 
subject of the image or video footage. 
 This bill revises the structure and membership of the Government Records Council and 
provides a salary to each of its members.  
 The bill also modifies several fees which may be charged by the custodian for certain records 
requests; makes the award of attorney’s fees in a dispute over access to a government record 
discretionary unless the public agency is found to have unreasonably denied access, acted in bad 
faith, or knowingly and willfully violated the law; and shifts responsibility for fines and penalties 
awarded as the result of an improper denial of a request for a public record from the custodian to 
the public agency that employs the custodian. 
 The bill creates an extended timeline for records custodians to respond to requests from 
“commercial requestors” who intend to use the record to generate a profit.  The bill authorizes a 
custodian to charge a special service fee to a commercial requestor who would like to receive the 
record in seven business days instead of 14 business days. 
 This bill requires the Administrative Office of the Courts, on behalf of the Superior Court, to 
provide the Government Records Council with a report of all cases related to the open public 
records act at the end of each court year.    FE to S2930 [2R] 
3 
 
FISCAL ANALYSIS 
 
EXECUTIVE BRANCH 
 
 None received. 
 
OFFICE OF LEGISLATIVE SERVICES 
 
 The OLS concludes that this bill will result in an indeterminate net impact on the finances of 
State and local public agencies. 
 The OLS determines that the bill may result in a State cost increase of up to $10 million in the 
first year the bill is in effect.  If the full $10 million is not expended in the first year, the residual 
amount will be spent in subsequent fiscal years until the full $10 million is exhausted.   
 The bill appropriates $4 million for the Department of Community Affairs to provide grants to 
political subdivisions of the State to make government records available to the public 
electronically, including through shared services agreements. The State expenditure increase 
would lead to a concurrent revenue increase for counties, municipalities, and school districts that 
receive grants under the program. 
 The bill also appropriates $4 million to the Department of Community Affairs for the 
operations of the Government Records Council, and an additional $2 million for the Government 
Records Council to implement certain provisions of the bill. 
 Beyond the appropriated amount, the OLS is unable to estimate the direction and magnitude 
of the bill’s net impact on State and local finances.  This is so because of the countervailing effects 
of the bill, some of which are summarized in the following paragraphs. 
 The bill would result in annual expenditure and revenue decreases for public agencies from an 
overall reduction in the number of requests to which an agency must respond and the number of 
records which must be produced.  For example, the bill permits requests for government records 
to be fulfilled by providing the requestor with the online location of the records requested, which 
would reduce agency costs. However, reducing the overall volume of records requests and 
removing the option for a public agency to charge the actual cost of duplicating a record would 
also reduce agency revenues. 
 The bill may also result in potential annual expenditure increases for certain public agencies 
to make any adjustments and modifications necessary to meet accelerated records request 
fulfillment and complaint adjudication timelines.  Under the bill, the Government Records Council 
would be required to adjudicate all complaints that come before it within 90 days of the complaint’s 
filing, with the possibility of extending the deadline by 45 days in certain circumstances.  Also, 
the bill would require State and local election agencies to make records and information specified 
in the bill available within two business days of receiving the request. 
 Pursuant to the bill, there would an annual State expenditure increase for a new salary of 
$12,000 for each of the eight public members of the Government Records Council.  The OLS 
estimates these new salaries and related employment benefits would increase State costs by 
$107,000 annually. 
 The bill would increase State expenditures by shifting the responsibility for civil penalties 
awarded for the improper denial of a record request from the custodian to the public agency that 
employs the custodian. 
 There may also be an annual State expenditure decrease for public agencies resulting from the 
bill’s provision that removes the mandatory awarding of attorney’s fees to a requestor who prevails 
in any complaint proceeding against a public agency.  The bill makes the award of attorney’s fees  FE to S2930 [2R] 
4 
 
in a dispute over access to a government record discretionary, unless the public agency is found to 
have unreasonably denied access, acted in bad faith, or knowingly and willfully violated the law. 
 Additionally, the bill would increase State revenues by establishing fines for requestors who 
intentionally fail to certify that they have made a public record request for a commercial purpose. 
 The bill would also increase State expenditures by requiring the Administrative Office of the 
Courts to compile and provide the Government Records Council with a report detailing every case 
filed with the Superior Court related to the open public records act, at the end of each court year. 
 The bill may also increase State and local expenditures by making it a disorderly persons 
offense to make public indecent or graphic images or video footage obtained through a public 
record request, without the prior written consent of the subject of the image or video footage.  
Implementation of this provision would require increased monitoring and investigation to be 
conducted by law enforcement agencies, and prosecutions for violations. Disorderly persons 
offenses are adjudicated by municipal courts, in most circumstances. 
 Finally, the OLS notes the overall expenditure and revenue impacts for any one public agency 
will depend on the change in the number of government records requests and the change in the 
number of complaints filed by requestors.  The OLS does not have specific data regarding the 
government records requests handled by public agencies in the State. 
 
Section: State Government 
Analyst: Ryan Brinkerhoff 
Deputy Counsel 
Approved: Thomas Koenig 
Legislative Budget and Finance Officer 
 
This legislative fiscal estimate has been produced by the Office of Legislative Services due to the 
failure of the Executive Branch to respond to our request for a fiscal note. 
 
This fiscal estimate has been prepared pursuant to P.L.1980, c.67 (C.52:13B-6 et seq.).