Utah 2023 2023 Regular Session

Utah House Bill HB0448 Introduced / Fiscal Note

Filed 02/27/2023

                    H.B. 448 3rd Sub. (Cherry)
2023/02/27 08:19, Lead Analyst: Alexander R. Wilson Attorney: TRV
Fiscal Note
H.B. 448 3rd Sub. (Cherry)
2023 General Session
Election Changes
by Maloy, A. (Maloy, A..)
General, Income Tax, and Uniform School Funds	JR4-4-101
Ongoing	One-time	Total
Net GF/ITF/USF (rev.-exp.) $(860,000) $(730,000) $(1,590,000)
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
General Fund	$0 $860,000 $860,000
General Fund, One-time	$0 $730,000	$0
Total Expenditures	$0 $1,590,000 $860,000
Enactment of this bill appropriates to the Lieutenant Governor''s Office $860,000 ongoing and
$730,000 one-time in FY 2024 from the General Fund to comply with the requirements of this bill
including additional training, compliance, rules writing, and an elections study.
FY 2023 FY 2024 FY 2025
Net All Funds	$0 $(1,590,000) $(860,000)
Local Government	UCA 36-12-13(2)(c)
Enactment of this bill could cost counties an estimated $158,300 ongoing and $330,600 one-time in
FY 2024 and an additional $10,100 in FY 2024 to FY 2028 for additional training, compliance, and
video equipment. This bill could cost cities statewide an estimated $21,200 ongoing an $92,600 one-
time to store drop-box surveillance video.
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. 448 3rd Sub. (Cherry)
2023/02/27 08:19, Lead Analyst: Alexander R. Wilson Attorney: TRV
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.