Texas 2009 81st Regular

Texas House Bill HB339 Senate Amendments Printing / Fiscal Note

Filed 02/01/2025

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                    LEGISLATIVE BUDGET BOARD    Austin, Texas      FISCAL NOTE, 81ST LEGISLATIVE REGULAR SESSION            May 28, 2009      TO: Honorable Joe Straus, Speaker of the House, House of Representatives      FROM: John S. O'Brien, Director, Legislative Budget Board     IN RE:HB339 by Phillips (relating to driver education and driver's licensing requirements for minors.), As Passed 2nd House   Estimated Two-year Net Impact to General Revenue Related Funds for HB339, As Passed 2nd House: an impact of $0 through the biennium ending August 31, 2011. The bill would make no appropriation but could provide the legal basis for an appropriation of funds to implement the provisions of the bill. 

LEGISLATIVE BUDGET BOARD
Austin, Texas
FISCAL NOTE, 81ST LEGISLATIVE REGULAR SESSION
May 28, 2009





  TO: Honorable Joe Straus, Speaker of the House, House of Representatives      FROM: John S. O'Brien, Director, Legislative Budget Board     IN RE:HB339 by Phillips (relating to driver education and driver's licensing requirements for minors.), As Passed 2nd House  

TO: Honorable Joe Straus, Speaker of the House, House of Representatives
FROM: John S. O'Brien, Director, Legislative Budget Board
IN RE: HB339 by Phillips (relating to driver education and driver's licensing requirements for minors.), As Passed 2nd House

 Honorable Joe Straus, Speaker of the House, House of Representatives 

 Honorable Joe Straus, Speaker of the House, House of Representatives 

 John S. O'Brien, Director, Legislative Budget Board

 John S. O'Brien, Director, Legislative Budget Board

HB339 by Phillips (relating to driver education and driver's licensing requirements for minors.), As Passed 2nd House

HB339 by Phillips (relating to driver education and driver's licensing requirements for minors.), As Passed 2nd House

Estimated Two-year Net Impact to General Revenue Related Funds for HB339, As Passed 2nd House: an impact of $0 through the biennium ending August 31, 2011. The bill would make no appropriation but could provide the legal basis for an appropriation of funds to implement the provisions of the bill. 

Estimated Two-year Net Impact to General Revenue Related Funds for HB339, As Passed 2nd House: an impact of $0 through the biennium ending August 31, 2011.

The bill would make no appropriation but could provide the legal basis for an appropriation of funds to implement the provisions of the bill.

General Revenue-Related Funds, Five-Year Impact:  Fiscal Year Probable Net Positive/(Negative) Impact to General Revenue Related Funds  2010 $0   2011 $0   2012 $0   2013 $0   2014 $0    


2010 $0
2011 $0
2012 $0
2013 $0
2014 $0

 All Funds, Five-Year Impact:  Fiscal Year Probable Savings/(Cost) fromGeneral Revenue Fund1  Probable Revenue Gain/(Loss) fromGeneral Revenue Fund - Driver Education Fees1  Change in Number of State Employees from FY 2009   2010 ($348,598) $348,598 2.5   2011 ($178,086) $178,086 2.5   2012 ($178,086) $178,086 2.5   2013 ($178,086) $178,086 2.5   2014 ($178,086) $178,086 2.5   

  Fiscal Year Probable Savings/(Cost) fromGeneral Revenue Fund1  Probable Revenue Gain/(Loss) fromGeneral Revenue Fund - Driver Education Fees1  Change in Number of State Employees from FY 2009   2010 ($348,598) $348,598 2.5   2011 ($178,086) $178,086 2.5   2012 ($178,086) $178,086 2.5   2013 ($178,086) $178,086 2.5   2014 ($178,086) $178,086 2.5  


2010 ($348,598) $348,598 2.5
2011 ($178,086) $178,086 2.5
2012 ($178,086) $178,086 2.5
2013 ($178,086) $178,086 2.5
2014 ($178,086) $178,086 2.5

Fiscal Analysis

The bill would require all school districts to consider offering driver education and traffic safety courses each year. The bill states if the district offers the course, they may conduct the course and charge a fee for the course or contract with a driver education school that holds a license to conduct the course. The bill directs the Commissioner of Education to establish or approve standard minimum number of actual driving hours required in the curriculum. The bill also provides process and procedures for when a provisional license expires. The bill states that the fee for issuance of a provisional license is $15 per permit. The bill also requires the Department of Public Safety (DPS) and the Texas Education Agency (TEA) to enter into a memorandum of understanding under which DPS may access TEAs electronic enrollment records to verify a students enrollment in a public school.  The bill would take effect on September 1, 2009.

The bill would require all school districts to consider offering driver education and traffic safety courses each year. The bill states if the district offers the course, they may conduct the course and charge a fee for the course or contract with a driver education school that holds a license to conduct the course. The bill directs the Commissioner of Education to establish or approve standard minimum number of actual driving hours required in the curriculum. The bill also provides process and procedures for when a provisional license expires. The bill states that the fee for issuance of a provisional license is $15 per permit. The bill also requires the Department of Public Safety (DPS) and the Texas Education Agency (TEA) to enter into a memorandum of understanding under which DPS may access TEAs electronic enrollment records to verify a students enrollment in a public school.  The bill would take effect on September 1, 2009.

Methodology

The bill includes provisions that would prohibit DPS from issuing a driver's license to a person younger than age 25 unless the person presents a certificate indicating completion of an approved driver education course. Persons aged 17 and younger would be required to provide proof of completion of a driver education course approved by TEA. The bill would require the Commissioner of Education to establish curriculum and designate educational materials for driver education programs for both minors and adults only. The bill would permit the Commissioner to charge a fee to driver education programs to cover the expense of regulating adult-only courses approved by TEA. For these provisions of the bill, TEA estimates 2.5 additional FTEs would be required to review and approve teen and adult-only driver education programs, including online courses, according to the provisions of the bill at a cost of $187,879 in fiscal year (FY) 2010 and $167,129 in each subsequent year inclusive of salary, benefits, travel, and other operating costs. TEA estimates technology costs of $160,719 in FY 2010 and $10,957 in subsequent years. TEA estimates that fees authorized by the bill would provide sufficient revenue to offset these costs. DPS estimates a one-time technology cost of $27,800 to modify systems to comply with the new criteria for driver applicants between age 18 and age 25 established by the bill. The agency is expected to be able to absorb this cost with existing resources. For the provisions of the bill regarding driver license and drivers licensing requirement for minors, TEA estimates that 2.0 FTEs would be required to conduct training and compliance monitoring for new driver education programs resulting from the provisions of the bill. For these provisions of the bill, DPS is required to publish collision rate statistics regarding the students trained by each driver education program and would restrict the ability of persons with certain traffic violations from serving either as certified instructors or from conducting a "Parent-taught" course. The bill changes the fee for issuance of a provisional license to $15 per permit verses current law that states a $5 fee for issuance or renewal of a provisional license. DPS states these bill provisions would be revenue neutral since current law charges $5 per year for either an issuance or renewal up to three years maximum. The provisions state only one issuance fee of $15 with no renewal requirement which leaves the state collecting the same amount of revenue as they currently collect.  This analysis assumes these provisions of the bill have no significant fiscal impact to DPS. For the provisions of the bill that would require driver education curriculums to include information regarding distractions while driving, it is assumed these provisions would pose no significant fiscal impact to the State.

The bill includes provisions that would prohibit DPS from issuing a driver's license to a person younger than age 25 unless the person presents a certificate indicating completion of an approved driver education course. Persons aged 17 and younger would be required to provide proof of completion of a driver education course approved by TEA. The bill would require the Commissioner of Education to establish curriculum and designate educational materials for driver education programs for both minors and adults only. The bill would permit the Commissioner to charge a fee to driver education programs to cover the expense of regulating adult-only courses approved by TEA.

For these provisions of the bill, TEA estimates 2.5 additional FTEs would be required to review and approve teen and adult-only driver education programs, including online courses, according to the provisions of the bill at a cost of $187,879 in fiscal year (FY) 2010 and $167,129 in each subsequent year inclusive of salary, benefits, travel, and other operating costs. TEA estimates technology costs of $160,719 in FY 2010 and $10,957 in subsequent years. TEA estimates that fees authorized by the bill would provide sufficient revenue to offset these costs. DPS estimates a one-time technology cost of $27,800 to modify systems to comply with the new criteria for driver applicants between age 18 and age 25 established by the bill. The agency is expected to be able to absorb this cost with existing resources.

For the provisions of the bill regarding driver license and drivers licensing requirement for minors, TEA estimates that 2.0 FTEs would be required to conduct training and compliance monitoring for new driver education programs resulting from the provisions of the bill.

For these provisions of the bill, DPS is required to publish collision rate statistics regarding the students trained by each driver education program and would restrict the ability of persons with certain traffic violations from serving either as certified instructors or from conducting a "Parent-taught" course. The bill changes the fee for issuance of a provisional license to $15 per permit verses current law that states a $5 fee for issuance or renewal of a provisional license. DPS states these bill provisions would be revenue neutral since current law charges $5 per year for either an issuance or renewal up to three years maximum. The provisions state only one issuance fee of $15 with no renewal requirement which leaves the state collecting the same amount of revenue as they currently collect.  This analysis assumes these provisions of the bill have no significant fiscal impact to DPS.

For the provisions of the bill that would require driver education curriculums to include information regarding distractions while driving, it is assumed these provisions would pose no significant fiscal impact to the State.

Local Government Impact

School districts might incur some administrative costs to comply with DPS standards, but these costs are not expected to be significant.

Source Agencies: 405 Department of Public Safety, 701 Central Education Agency

405 Department of Public Safety, 701 Central Education Agency

LBB Staff: JOB, MN, GG, LG, ESi, KJG, JSp, JGM, JSc

 JOB, MN, GG, LG, ESi, KJG, JSp, JGM, JSc