TO: | Honorable Joe Straus, Speaker of the House, House of Representatives |
FROM: | John S O'Brien, Director, Legislative Budget Board |
IN RE: | HB257 by Hilderbran (Relating to certain unclaimed property that is presumed abandoned.), As Passed 2nd House |
Fiscal Year | Probable Net Positive/(Negative) Impact to General Revenue Related Funds |
---|---|
2012 | $0 |
2013 | $277,700,000 |
2014 | $0 |
2015 | $0 |
2016 | $0 |
Fiscal Year | Probable Revenue Gain/(Loss) from General Revenue Fund 1 |
---|---|
2012 | $0 |
2013 | $277,700,000 |
2014 | $0 |
2015 | $0 |
2016 | $0 |
The bill would implement the recommendation in the report, "Reduce the Unclaimed Property Dormancy Period for Certain Property Types" in the Legislative Budget Board's Government Effectiveness and Efficiency Report, submitted to the Eighty-second Texas Legislature, 2011. The bill would decrease the unclaimed property dormancy period for utility deposits from three years to 18 months; money orders from seven years to three years; and bank deposits, savings accounts, and matured certificates of deposits from five years to three years.
The bill would increase the allowable service, maintenance, or other charges assessed by money order issuers from $0.50 to $1 per month.
The bill would change the due date for unclaimed property that is transferred to the state from November 1 to July 1 of each year.
Provisions regarding the due date change for unclaimed property which would take effect January 1, 2013. All other provisions would take effect September 1, 2011.
The Comptroller based its estimated gain related to the dormancy period changes from its files for the three property types identified in the bill. The agency's estimate reflects a one-time gain of $77,700,000 million in fiscal 2013 associated with these provisions.
The agency derived its estimate for the unclaimed property due date change based on its experience with unclaimed property reporting in general. An estimated one-time gain of $200 million in fiscal year 2013 would result from this change.
The increase in service, maintenance, and other fees that could be assessed by money order issuers would not affect the projected revenue gain because the dormancy period decrease from seven years to three years would offset any potential losses.
Source Agencies: | 304 Comptroller of Public Accounts
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LBB Staff: | JOB, SD, KK, JI, RN
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