Bill Text: NJ A4241 | 2024-2025 | Regular Session | Introduced


Bill Title: Expands "Body Armor Replacement Fund" eligibility.

Spectrum: Partisan Bill (Republican 1-0)

Status: (Introduced) 2024-05-02 - Introduced, Referred to Assembly Public Safety and Preparedness Committee [A4241 Detail]

Download: New_Jersey-2024-A4241-Introduced.html

ASSEMBLY, No. 4241

STATE OF NEW JERSEY

221st LEGISLATURE

 

INTRODUCED MAY 2, 2024

 


 

Sponsored by:

Assemblywoman  DAWN FANTASIA

District 24 (Morris, Sussex and Warren)

 

 

 

 

SYNOPSIS

     Expands "Body Armor Replacement Fund" eligibility.

 

CURRENT VERSION OF TEXT

     As introduced.

  


An Act concerning eligibility for "Body Armor Replacement Fund" grants and amending P.L.1997, c.177.

 

     Be It Enacted by the Senate and General Assembly of the State of New Jersey:

 

     1.    Section 1 of P.L.1997, c.177 (C.52:17B-4.4) is amended to read as follows:

     1.    There is created in the Department of Law and Public Safety a nonlapsing revolving fund to be known as the "Body Armor Replacement" fund.  This fund shall be the repository for moneys provided pursuant to subsection d. of R.S.39:5-41 and shall be administered by the Attorney General.  Moneys deposited in the fund, and any interest earned thereon, shall be used exclusively for the purpose of making grants to local law enforcement agencies, the Division of State Police, the Division of Criminal Justice, the Administrative Office of the Courts, and the Department of Corrections for the purchase of body vests for the law enforcement officers, investigators, probation officers and corrections officers of those agencies, and any other State department or agency that appoints law enforcement officers.  Of the moneys deposited into the fund, an amount not to exceed $75,000 shall be allocated annually to the Department of Law and Public Safety exclusively for the administration of the grant program.

     The grant program shall be designed to effectuate a five-year vest replacement cycle, to the extent practicable, for local law enforcement officers, the officers and troopers of the State Police, investigators in the Division of Criminal Justice and State corrections, and any other law enforcement officers appointed by a State department or agency, and probation officers.  The Attorney General shall provide for the distribution of the initial grants in a manner which is conducive to establishing a balance among the number of local law enforcement officers who are eligible for vest replacement grants in each year of the five-year cycle.  In the same manner and to the greatest extent practicable, the Attorney General shall establish a grant distribution schedule for the officers and troopers of the State Police and investigators in the Division of Criminal Justice that provides for a balance among the number of officers, troopers and investigators receiving vest replacements in each year of the five-year cycle.  In establishing a distribution schedule for State corrections and probation officers, the Attorney General shall give first priority to those State corrections officers assigned inmate supervision and control responsibilities in the State's maximum security correctional facilities and second priority to those officers assigned inmate supervision and control responsibilities in the State's medium security correctional facilities.  The distribution schedule for State corrections and probation officers shall be based on a five-year cycle, but need not provide for a balance among the number of officers receiving vests in each year of the five-year cycle.  The number of probation officers, the replacement of whose vests shall be funded from grants under this section, shall not exceed 200.

     The Attorney General shall promulgate rules and regulations to implement this grant program.  Those rules and regulations shall include, but not be limited to application procedures for local law enforcement agencies seeking vest replacement grants; criteria, such as crime rates and the age and condition of the body vests currently utilized by a local law enforcement agency's officers, to prioritize the awarding of grants; and guidelines identifying those body vests, by manufacturer or brand name, which may be purchased with grant moneys. 

     As used in this section:

     "Body vest" means bullet resistant body armor which is intended to provide ballistic and trauma protection; and

     "Probation officer" means a probation officer whose daily duties expose the officer to a substantial risk of assault by deadly weapon.

     "Law enforcement officer" means a person who is empowered to act for the detection, apprehension, arrest, conviction, detention, or rehabilitation of persons in violation of the law.

(cf: P.L.1999, c.360, s.1)

 

     2.    This act shall take effect on the first day of the sixth month next following enactment, except that the Attorney General may take any anticipatory administrative action in advance as shall be necessary for the implementation of this act.

 

 

STATEMENT

 

     This bill expands the eligibility criteria for recipients of grants provided by the "Body Armor Replacement" fund.

     Currently, local law enforcement agencies, the Division of State Police, the Division of Criminal Justice, the Administrative Office of the Courts, and the Department of Corrections are entitled to grants from the "Body Armor Fund".  This bill would permit the Attorney General to administer grants to any other State agency or department that appoints law enforcement officers, such as the Department of Environmental Protection, which could then procure body vests for conservation officers and State Park Police officers.

     The bill also defines "law enforcement officer" for the purpose of determining eligibility to receive grant funding.

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