Supplement: TX HB4642 | 2023-2024 | 88th Legislature | Fiscal Note (House Committee Report)
For additional supplements on Texas HB4642 please see the Bill Drafting List
Bill Title: Relating to offenses involving the manufacture or delivery of certain controlled substances and the enforcement and prevention of those offenses; creating a criminal offense.
Status: 2023-05-12 - Referred to Criminal Justice [HB4642 Detail]
Download: Texas-2023-HB4642-Fiscal_Note_House_Committee_Report_.html
The bill would establish a fentanyl offenses task force to compile data on criminal activity related to the manufacture or delivery of fentanyl and submit to the governor and the Department of Public Safety a report on its findings. The task force would be abolished on December 1, 2024.
Bill Title: Relating to offenses involving the manufacture or delivery of certain controlled substances and the enforcement and prevention of those offenses; creating a criminal offense.
Status: 2023-05-12 - Referred to Criminal Justice [HB4642 Detail]
Download: Texas-2023-HB4642-Fiscal_Note_House_Committee_Report_.html
TO: |
Honorable Ryan Guillen, Chair, House Committee on Homeland Security & Public Safety |
FROM: |
Jerry McGinty, Director, Legislative Budget Board
|
IN RE: |
HB4642 by Guillen (Relating to offenses involving the manufacture or delivery of certain controlled substances and the enforcement and prevention of those offenses; creating a criminal offense.), Committee Report 1st House, Substituted |
The fiscal implications cannot be determined due to a lack of data to estimate the prevalence of conduct outlined in the bill's provisions that would be a criminal offense and would be dependent on the number of offenses committed and the subsequent penalties.
The bill would create the first degree felony offense of lethal opioid poisoning for the manufacture, delivery, or trafficking of a Penalty Group 1B controlled substance which results in the death of an individual as a result of injecting, ingesting, inhaling, or introducing the controlled substance into the individual's body.
The bill would establish a fentanyl offenses task force to compile data on criminal activity related to the manufacture or delivery of fentanyl and submit to the governor and the Department of Public Safety a report on its findings. The task force would be abolished on December 1, 2024.
The fiscal impact and impact on state correctional populations or on the demand for state correctional resources related to the criminal offense cannot be determined due to a lack of data to estimate the prevalence of conduct outlined in the bill's provisions and would be dependent on the number of offenses committed and the subsequent penalties.
According to the Department of Public Safety, it
is assumed that any agency costs associated with the bill could be absorbed
using existing resources.
Local Government Impact
The fiscal impact to units of local government cannot be determined and would be dependent on the number of offenses committed and the subsequent penalties.
Source Agencies: b > td > | 212 Office of Court Administration, Texas Judicial Council, 304 Comptroller of Public Accounts, 405 Department of Public Safety, 407 Commission on Law Enforcement, 529 Health and Human Services Commission |
LBB Staff: b > td > | JMc, DDel, KFB, DA, LBO |