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SPONSOR: |
Sharer |
DATE TYPED: |
02/06/03 |
HB |
|
||
SHORT TITLE: |
DWI Increased Penalties |
SB |
93 |
||||
|
ANALYST: |
Fox-Young |
|||||
APPROPRIATION
Appropriation
Contained |
Estimated
Additional Impact |
Recurring or
Non-Rec |
Fund Affected |
||
FY03 |
FY04 |
FY03 |
FY04 |
|
|
|
|
|
$0.1 Significant |
Recurring |
GF/OSF |
|
|
|
|
|
|
(Parenthesis
( ) Indicate Expenditure Decreases)
Relates
to HB 40, HB 139, HB 189, SB 16, SB 99
Responses
Received From
Administrative Office
of the Courts (AOC)
Association of
District Attorneys (AODA)
State Highway and Transportation Department
(SHTD)
Attorney General (AG)
Department of Health (DOH)
Corrections Department (CD)
SUMMARY
Synopsis
of Bill
Senate Bill 93
increases penalties for fifth or subsequent DWI convictions and makes a fifth
conviction a third degree felony punishable by a term of imprisonment of three
years, one year of which cannot be suspended or deferred. The bill also makes a sixth or subsequent
conviction a second degree felony, punishable by a term of imprisonment of nine
years, three years of which shall not be suspended or deferred.
FISCAL IMPLICATIONS
Corrections
Department (CD) indicates that the mandatory prison terms contained in the
bill, one year for a 5th DWI conviction and three years for a 6th
or subsequent DWI conviction, will spur significant cost increases for the
department. CD reports that cost
increases due to longer prison terms will begin to appear approximately one
year after the effective date, then beginning to level off after approximately
three years. The department estimates an
annual increase of approximately 30 to 40 longer prison sentences for 5th
DWI convictions and an annual increase of approximately 20 to 30 longer
sentences for 6th or subsequent DWI convictions.
The
department indicates that increasing the penalties from a 4th degree
felony to a 3rd degree felony and 2nd degree felony will
also result in an increase in the period of probation and parole and a
corresponding increase in probation and parole costs.
The
amendments proposed in this bill will yield a significant increase in the
number of felony DWI convictions, therefore necessitating an
increase in the number of felony prosecutors, defense attorneys and court
staff. Cost increases will be further
exacerbated because felony cases are inherently more expensive than
misdemeanors. Public Defender Department
(PDD) reports that clients facing harsher jail terms are less likely to plead
at either the magistrate or district level.
PDD indicates that
this bill will significantly increase the department’s needs for in-house and
contract counsel and that in-house felony counsel cost more than entry-level
misdemeanor attorneys who staff the lower courts. The department estimates that this bill would
increase the need for felony attorneys in each of the eight outlying districts,
Albuquerque and in districts served by contract counsel.
Department of Health
(DOH) indicates that this bill would likely result in increased costs to DOH, the
Department of Finance and Administration (DFA), and municipal governments. Substance abuse treatment costs may increase
if there is increased demand for in-prison treatment services. DOH estimates that of the annual 4,000
multiple offenders only 1,500 would be served by DOH’s Behavioral Health
Services Division (the remaining 2,500 would be served via DFA and
county/municipality funding). DOH reports that an increase of just 500 clients
served for 30 days in residential treatment would cost $1.5 million, and 1,000
clients served for 60 days in outpatient treatment would cost an additional $2
million.
The
cost and availability of substance abuse programming is one of the most
important elements to consider in reforming DWI legislation. Regardless of whether legislation
specifically mandates treatment, populations under CD supervision will grow, as
will offenders potentially eligible for treatment. Increased demand for services inside and outside
of CD facilities poses a significant cost for the state.
CONFLICT, RELATIONSHIP
HB 40-Amends the same Section of law, conflicting language
(jail time); HB 117-Amends the same
Section of law, conflicting language (jail time); HB 139-Amends the same Section of law, no
conflicts; HB 189-Amends same Section of
law, no conflicts; SB 16-Amends the same
Section of law, conflicting language (jail time); and SB 99-Amends the same
Section of law, no confliction language.
JCF/njw