Supplement: AL HB55 | 2022 | Regular Session | HB55 for Ways and Means General Fund

For additional supplements on Alabama HB55 please see the Bill Drafting List
Bill Title: Community punishment and corrections, to require every judicial circuit to establish a community punishment and corrections program, Sec. 15-18-187 added; Secs. 15-18-172, 15-18-176 am'd.

Status: 2022-03-10 - Read for the first time and referred to the Senate committee on Finance and Taxation General Fund [HB55 Detail]

Download: Alabama-2022-HB55-HB55_for_Ways_and_Means_General_Fund.html
Committee: Ways and Means General Fund Sponsor: Hill
Analyst: Pete Grogan Date: 02/15/2022

FISCAL NOTE

House Bill 55 as introduced requires the establishment of a community punishment and corrections (CPC) program in each Judicial Circuit in the state by January 1, 2023. In addition, this bill requires the Department of Corrections (DOC) to reimburse each CPC program a per diem rate of $21 per day for each offender in a CPC. This would increase the obligations of the department by 1) a minimum estimated $76,000 to provide start-up costs in each of the eight judicial circuits that do not have a CPC program for an estimated total of $608,000; 2) an estimated $12.1 million for fiscal year 2023, to provide a per diem rate of $21 per day for each inmate that is currently in a CPC program; 3) an estimated $4.4 million for fiscal year 2023 to provide a per diem rate of $21 per day for each inmate that becomes eligible to participate in a CPC program in a judicial circuit that currently does not have a CPC program or an inmate in a county in a judicial circuit without a CPC program that is now eligible to participate in the program within the judicial circuit; 4) an estimated $31 million for fiscal year 2024 and thereafter for per diem costs; and 5) an undetermined amount to provide for annual operating costs for each CPC program established in judicial circuits that currently do not have a program.

This bill could also decrease the administrative obligations of the department by an undetermined amount dependent on the number of offenders sentenced to coummunity corrections that otherwise would have been sentenced to a state facility.

This bill could increase the obligations of county commissions in judicial circuits that do not have a CPC program by an undetermined amount, dependent on whether an authority or nonprofit entity will operate the CPC program in that county. However, this bill provides that the provisions therein shall not require a county commission to provide funding for a CPC program.


  Steve Clouse, Chair
Ways and Means General Fund
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