By Puente                                              H.B. No. 247
         76R763 DRH-D                           
                                A BILL TO BE ENTITLED
 1-1                                   AN ACT
 1-2     relating to the use of neighborhood associations in the enforcement
 1-3     of certain municipal health and safety ordinances.
 1-4           BE IT ENACTED BY THE LEGISLATURE OF THE STATE OF TEXAS:
 1-5           SECTION 1.  Subchapter B, Chapter 54, Local Government Code,
 1-6     is amended by adding Section 54.020 to read as follows:
 1-7           Sec. 54.020.  USE OF NEIGHBORHOOD ASSOCIATIONS IN ENFORCEMENT
 1-8     OF CERTAIN ORDINANCES.  (a)  In this section, "neighborhood
 1-9     association" means an association that is dedicated to the
1-10     improvement or upkeep of a defined residential area and that is
1-11     registered by the municipality.
1-12           (b)  A municipality may institute a program to use volunteers
1-13     from a neighborhood association to help enforce certain municipal
1-14     health and safety ordinances in the association's neighborhood.
1-15     The health and safety ordinances included in the program may only
1-16     be those for which a violation can be observed without entering the
1-17     property at which the violation occurs.
1-18           (c)  The municipality shall establish a training program for
1-19     the volunteers.  The training must include instruction on:
1-20                 (1)  which ordinances are covered by the volunteer
1-21     enforcement program; and
1-22                 (2)  whether and how a volunteer should inform a
1-23     property owner or resident of an alleged violation.
1-24           (d)  A person trained under Subsection (c) who observes a
 2-1     suspected violation of an ordinance covered by the program may
 2-2     inform:
 2-3                 (1)  the owner of, or a person residing on, the
 2-4     property at which the alleged violation occurs; or
 2-5                 (2)  the appropriate agency of the municipality.
 2-6           (e)  A person trained under Subsection (c):
 2-7                 (1)  is not a peace officer;
 2-8                 (2)  has no authority other than the authority
 2-9     applicable to a citizen to enforce a law other than this section;
2-10     and
2-11                 (3)  may not carry a weapon while performing activities
2-12     under this section.
2-13           (f)  A municipality by ordinance may provide that the notice
2-14     of violation served on the owner or a person residing on the
2-15     property under Subsection (d) is considered the first warning of a
2-16     violation of a municipal ordinance.
2-17           (g)  A person trained under Subsection (c) is not entitled
2-18     to:
2-19                 (1)  compensation for performing activities under this
2-20     section; or
2-21                 (2)  indemnification from the municipality or the state
2-22     for:
2-23                       (A)  injury or property damage the person
2-24     sustains in performing duties under this section; or
2-25                       (B)  liability the person incurs in performing
2-26     duties under this section.
2-27           (h)  The municipality and the state are not liable for any
 3-1     damage arising from an act or omission of a person trained under
 3-2     Subsection (c) in performing activities under this section.
 3-3           (i)  A person trained under Subsection (c) who under this
 3-4     section makes more than one complaint to the municipality of a
 3-5     violation of an ordinance against the same owner of property is
 3-6     liable to the owner if a court determines the person acted in bad
 3-7     faith in making the complaints.
 3-8           (j)  For purposes of Subsection (i):
 3-9                 (1)  liability is limited to all attorney's fees and
3-10     reasonable costs  incurred by the owner in establishing to the
3-11     satisfaction of the municipality that no violation occurred; and
3-12                 (2)  it is a rebuttable presumption that the person
3-13     acted in bad faith if the municipality has found three or more
3-14     complaints brought by the person during a six-month period to be
3-15     invalid.
3-16           SECTION 2.  The importance of this legislation and the
3-17     crowded condition of the calendars in both houses create an
3-18     emergency and an imperative public necessity that the
3-19     constitutional rule requiring bills to be read on three several
3-20     days in each house be suspended, and this rule is hereby suspended,
3-21     and that this Act take effect and be in force from and after its
3-22     passage, and it is so enacted.