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F I S C A L I M P A C T R E P O R T





SPONSOR: Park DATE TYPED: 02/16/01 HB 409
SHORT TITLE: Chief Public Defender Duties SB
ANALYST: Belmares


APPROPRIATION



Appropriation Contained
Estimated Additional Impact
Recurring

or Non-Rec

Fund

Affected

FY01 FY02 FY01 FY02
NFI



(Parenthesis ( ) Indicate Expenditure Decreases)



Duplicates Senate Bill 198

Relates to House Bill 230 and Senate Bill 166



SOURCES OF INFORMATION



Public Defender Department

Administrative Office of the Courts

Legislative Finance Committee files



SUMMARY



Synopsis of Bill



House Bill 409 exempts the Chief Public Defender from the procurement code when she contracts and expenditures for litigation expenses, including contracts and expenditures for professional and nonprofessional experts, investigators and witness fees, are certified. Attorney contracts are not included. The bill also authorizes the district public defender or the Chief Public Defender to represent indigent persons when they are under investigation for allegedly committing murder or any other felony criminal offense.



Significant Issues



the proposed language in the bill would assist in criminal litigation by not seeking lengthy Department of Finance approval or agreement on a "sole source" exception from the Procurement Code.





FISCAL IMPLICATIONS

No significant fiscal implications have been identified. The Public Defender Department is already called upon by the courts and prosecutors to fulfill functions proposed under 31-15-10B.



DUPLICATION/RELATION



The bill duplicates Senate Bill 198. Additionally, the bill relates to House Bill 230 and its duplicate Senate Bill 166. HB230 and SB166 add a new section of law to require the Department of Finance and Administration to implement a comprehensive system of managing the development and oversight of professional services contracts that are entered into by state agencies. It requires agencies enter into professional services contracts to improve the decision making process they use when determining whether to contract out government services and to prepare cost-benefit analyses.



EB/ar/njw