Utah 2023 2023 Regular Session

Utah House Bill HB0383 Introduced / Fiscal Note

Filed 02/24/2023

                    H.B. 383 1st Sub. (Buff)
2023/02/24 14:11, Lead Analyst: Alexander R. Wilson Attorney: JC1
Fiscal Note
H.B. 383 1st Sub. (Buff)
2023 General Session
Indigent Defense Amendments
by Wilcox, R. (Weiler, Todd.)
General, Income Tax, and Uniform School Funds	JR4-4-101
Ongoing	One-time	Total
Net GF/ITF/USF (rev.-exp.)	$0	$0	$0
State Government	UCA 36-12-13(2)(c)
Revenues	FY 2023 FY 2024 FY 2025
Total Revenues	$0	$0	$0
Enactment of this legislation likely will not materially impact state revenue.
Expenditures	FY 2023 FY 2024 FY 2025
Total Expenditures	$0	$0	$0
To the extent that indigent defense providers request additional defense resources for aggravated
murder cases as a result of this bill, enactment of this bill could increase expenses to the Indigent
Aggravated Murder Defense Trust Fund by a small unknown amount in FY 2024, both one-time for
backlogged defense resources requests and ongoing for future requests.
FY 2023 FY 2024 FY 2025
Net All Funds	$0	$0	$0
Local Government	UCA 36-12-13(2)(c)
To the extent that participating counties which provide indigent defense request additional defense
resources as a result of this bill, enactment of this bill could result in additional reimbursed expenses
for aggravated murder case defense resources from the Aggravated Murder Defense Trust Fund, both
one-time for backlogged defense resources requests and ongoing for future requests.
Individuals & Businesses	UCA 36-12-13(2)(c)
Enactment of this legislation likely will not result in direct expenditures from tax or fee changes for Utah
residents and businesses.
Regulatory Impact	UCA 36-12-13(2)(d)
Enactment of this legislation likely will not change the regulatory burden for Utah residents or
businesses. H.B. 383 1st Sub. (Buff)
2023/02/24 14:11, Lead Analyst: Alexander R. Wilson Attorney: JC1
Performance Evaluation	JR1-4-601
This bill does not create a new program or significantly expand an existing program.
Notes on Notes
Fiscal notes estimate the direct costs or revenues of enacting a bill. The Legislature uses them to balance the budget. They do not measure a bill's
benefits or non-fiscal impacts like opportunity costs, wait times, or inconvenience. A fiscal note is not an appropriation. The Legislature decides
appropriations separately.