Texas 2013 83rd Regular

Texas Senate Bill SB166 House Committee Report / Fiscal Note

Filed 02/01/2025

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                    LEGISLATIVE BUDGET BOARD    Austin, Texas      FISCAL NOTE, 83RD LEGISLATIVE REGULAR SESSION            April 16, 2013      TO: Honorable Gary Elkins, Chair, House Committee on Technology      FROM: Ursula Parks, Director, Legislative Budget Board     IN RE:SB166 by Deuell (Relating to the use by certain health care providers of electronically readable information from a driver's license or personal identification certificate.), Committee Report 2nd House, Substituted    No fiscal implication to the State is anticipated.  The bill would amend the Transportation Code to authorize a health care provider to access, use, compile, or maintain a database of electronically readable information derived from certain driver's licenses or personal identification certificates to provide health care services to an individual. A health care provider would be required to use an alternative method for collecting an individual's information if the individual objects. Under current statute, only a hospital is authorized. The bill would include the definition of a health care provider. A health care provider that violates the provisions would commit a Class A misdemeanor offense punishable by a fine of not more than $4,000, confinement in jail for a term not to exceed one year, or both. The Department of State Health Services reported there would be no fiscal impact to the agency. Local Government Impact There could be costs to a health care provider that would be required to obtain information by an alternate method if a person objects to the use of electronically readable information; however, those amounts would vary depending on the number of persons that would object, and the current processes that a health care provider uses to collect information. Costs associated with enforcement, prosecution and confinement could likely be absorbed within existing resources; and revenue gain from fines imposed and collected is not anticipated to have a significant fiscal implication.    Source Agencies:537 State Health Services, Department of   LBB Staff:  UP, RB, TP, SZ    

LEGISLATIVE BUDGET BOARD
Austin, Texas
FISCAL NOTE, 83RD LEGISLATIVE REGULAR SESSION
April 16, 2013





  TO: Honorable Gary Elkins, Chair, House Committee on Technology      FROM: Ursula Parks, Director, Legislative Budget Board     IN RE:SB166 by Deuell (Relating to the use by certain health care providers of electronically readable information from a driver's license or personal identification certificate.), Committee Report 2nd House, Substituted  

TO: Honorable Gary Elkins, Chair, House Committee on Technology
FROM: Ursula Parks, Director, Legislative Budget Board
IN RE: SB166 by Deuell (Relating to the use by certain health care providers of electronically readable information from a driver's license or personal identification certificate.), Committee Report 2nd House, Substituted

 Honorable Gary Elkins, Chair, House Committee on Technology 

 Honorable Gary Elkins, Chair, House Committee on Technology 

 Ursula Parks, Director, Legislative Budget Board

 Ursula Parks, Director, Legislative Budget Board

SB166 by Deuell (Relating to the use by certain health care providers of electronically readable information from a driver's license or personal identification certificate.), Committee Report 2nd House, Substituted

SB166 by Deuell (Relating to the use by certain health care providers of electronically readable information from a driver's license or personal identification certificate.), Committee Report 2nd House, Substituted



No fiscal implication to the State is anticipated.

No fiscal implication to the State is anticipated.



The bill would amend the Transportation Code to authorize a health care provider to access, use, compile, or maintain a database of electronically readable information derived from certain driver's licenses or personal identification certificates to provide health care services to an individual. A health care provider would be required to use an alternative method for collecting an individual's information if the individual objects. Under current statute, only a hospital is authorized. The bill would include the definition of a health care provider. A health care provider that violates the provisions would commit a Class A misdemeanor offense punishable by a fine of not more than $4,000, confinement in jail for a term not to exceed one year, or both. The Department of State Health Services reported there would be no fiscal impact to the agency.

Local Government Impact

There could be costs to a health care provider that would be required to obtain information by an alternate method if a person objects to the use of electronically readable information; however, those amounts would vary depending on the number of persons that would object, and the current processes that a health care provider uses to collect information. Costs associated with enforcement, prosecution and confinement could likely be absorbed within existing resources; and revenue gain from fines imposed and collected is not anticipated to have a significant fiscal implication.

Source Agencies: 537 State Health Services, Department of

537 State Health Services, Department of

LBB Staff: UP, RB, TP, SZ

 UP, RB, TP, SZ