LEGISLATIVE BUDGET BOARD
Austin, Texas
FISCAL NOTE
74th Regular Session
May 28, 1995
TO: Honorable Bob Bullock Honorable Pete Laney
Lieutenant Governor Speaker of the House
Senate Chamber House of Representatives
Austin, Texas Austin, Texas
IN RE: Conference Committee Report for House Bill No. 1718
FROM: John Keel, Director
In response to your request for a Fiscal Note on House Bill No. 1718 (
relating to the revision of the open records law) this office has
determined the following:
The bill would make no appropriation but could provide the legal basis for
an appropriation of funds to implement the provisions of the bill.
The bill would make various changes to the open records law. Among these
changes the bill would require the Office of the Attorney General's Open
Government Section, which is responsible for addressing requests for open
records decisions, to answer all requests for such decisions within 60
working days of the request, with an extension of an additional 20 working
days upon notification by the Attorney General of the reason for the
delay. The Attorney General received approximately 1,819 requests for
"informal" open records letter rulings in 1994 and currently maintains a
caseload of approximately 1,000 such requests. The Attorney General
projects the volume of requests for open records letter rulings to
increase from 25 percent to 35 percent per year.
The average open records letter takes the Office of the Attorney General
about six months to complete. The bill would require the Attorney
General's Office to answer the requests within 80 working days, as opposed
to the current average 134 working days (six months).
The fiscal implications from other provisions of the bill cannot be
determined.
The probable fiscal implication of implementing the provisions of the bill
during each of the first five years following passage is estimated as
follows:
Fiscal Year Probable Cost Out of
General Revenue Fund 001
1996 $577,688
1997 557,113
1998 557,113
1999 557,113
2000 557,113
Similar annual fiscal implications would continue as long as the
provisions of the bill are in effect.
The fiscal implication to units of local government cannot be determined.
Source: Office of the Attorney General
LBB Staff: JK, DF