Fiscal Notes for HB 2062
Prohibit an elected official from working as a lobbyist for two years after leaving office.
Unfortunately, the order is not always in ascending or descending order of the date the FN was issued.
Also legislative fiscal note links do not always fully describe what version of the bill is the subject of the note
But beginning in 2021, the PDF link is divided into three parts, seperated by a period, that indicates the version of the bill covered by the note.
Part 1: The last letter indicates the whether the measure began in the Senate or the House -- i.e. a SB, SJR, HB or HJR.
Part 2: Except for earlier years, the last letter indicates the version:
- I: The introduced version
- C: The committee approved verson
- P: The perfected verson
- S: For the Senate, this indicates a conference committee substitute that might or might not have cleared the legislature.
- F, T or A: The Final version. For measures that cleared the legislature, T inicates what finally cleared the legislature TATFP for Truly Agreed To and Finally Passed or in older years just TAFP for Truly Agreed and Finally passed. The meaning of the other letters is a bit unclear.
Also, in some cases it appears the Oversight Division does not prepare a new fiscal note if the there is no change in the prior FN.
MDN's list of fiscal notes links is based on what the House or Senate listed as FN links for bills that began in the chamber. Unfortunately, in the earlier years until at least 2004, the some of the legislative links do not exist or no longer work.
Also, for 2004 some House fiscal note links for a few bills no longer exist.
Years ago the Oversight Division had its own website with a conformity in fiscal note links, but that site no longer exists.
Background: Fiscal notes are estimates by staff of the legislature's Oversight Division about the potential financial costs or increases for state government and and agencies.
Legislative staff seek cost estimates from a variety of sources, the most important being the agencies directly affected by the legislative measure.
There is a near army staff for various executive-branch agencies who provide detailed financial estimates and descriptions of legislative measures that would affect their agencies.
In fact, the value of a fiscal note can go well beyond just a dollar figure. A fiscal note provides independent descriptions of how a measure would impact government agencies.
But the time pressures to deliver estimates for the large number of measures before the legislature limits the time staff have to determine a detailed estimate of a measure's cost. Often, as you'll find, these estimates often are very rough using words phrases like "could exceed," "$0 or Up to..." or just "unknown."
For most fiscal notes, the most significant figure is the estimated increase or loss in General Revenue collections. That money comes, primarily, from state taxes that the legislature is free to appropriate as it sees fit.
A fiscal note divides the estimates by fiscal years. A fiscal year begins July 1 and concludes June 30 the following year.
Usually, a fiscal note covers only the first three fiscal years. But some measures have a staged or delayed implementation, leading to a fiscal note concluding with the ultimate annual cost when fully implemented.
A legislative sponsor can appeal a fiscal note estimate, but that is not common.