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Bill > S1906


NJ S1906

NJ S1906
Provides for payment to small municipalities, in certain cases, of certain penalty moneys assessed for violations of fish and game laws.


summary

Introduced
01/09/2024
In Committee
01/09/2024
Crossed Over
Passed
Dead
01/12/2026

Introduced Session

2024-2025 Regular Session

Bill Summary

This bill would provide for the reimbursement of small municipalities that are involved in the adjudication of State and federal fish and game laws. The Division of Fish and Wildlife is generally responsible for overseeing and enforcing fish and game laws in the State, and State law currently provides that all penalty amounts recovered for violations of the State's fish and game laws, rules, and regulations must be paid, in full, to the division. This provision of law, however, fails to recognize that local governments are often left with the burden of paying, at their own expense, the costs associated with the adjudication of fish and game violations. Small municipalities - defined under the bill as those that have "a permanent population of less than 2,000 persons" - are particularly ill equipped to finance these judicial efforts. This bill would, therefore, amend the law to provide that whenever a court action is undertaken in the municipal court of a small municipality, which court action results in the assessment of penalty moneys for a violation of the State's fish and game laws, 50 percent of the recovered moneys must be paid to the governing body of the municipality in which the court action took place, while the remaining 50 percent of recovered moneys must be paid to the Division of Fish and Wildlife. The bill would also entitle a small municipality to receive 50 percent of the moneys recovered for a violation of a federal fish and game law or regulation when the moneys are recovered as a result of a municipal court action undertaken in the small municipality, so long as such action is not prohibited by federal law. In all other cases of federal fish and game law enforcement, however, and unless prohibited by federal law, any recovered moneys would be paid, in full, to the Division of Fish and Wildlife. A person who fails to forward recovered moneys to the division or the adjudicating small municipality, as required by the bill, would be guilty of a crime of the fourth degree. Although this offense currently exists in the law, it is referenced as a "misdemeanor" - an outdated term that is no longer used in the State. Because a crime that was previously characterized as a misdemeanor is now classified as a crime of the fourth degree, the bill updates the language in the existing law without changing the penalty for the offense.

AI Summary

This bill would allow small municipalities, defined as those with fewer than 2,000 permanent residents, to receive a portion of penalty money collected from violations of state and federal fish and game laws that are adjudicated in their local municipal courts. Currently, all such penalty money goes to the Division of Fish and Wildlife, even though small municipalities often bear the costs of these court proceedings. Under this bill, when a violation of state fish and game laws occurs and is handled in a small municipality's court, 50 percent of the recovered penalty money will go to the municipality and the other 50 percent to the Division of Fish and Wildlife. Similarly, for violations of federal fish and game laws, 50 percent of recovered penalty money will be shared between the small municipality and the Division of Fish and Wildlife, provided federal law allows it; otherwise, all recovered federal penalty money will go to the Division. The bill also updates existing law to classify the failure to forward these recovered moneys to the correct entity as a crime of the fourth degree, replacing the outdated term "misdemeanor" without changing the penalty.

Committee Categories

Agriculture and Natural Resources

Sponsors (1)

Last Action

Introduced in the Senate, Referred to Senate Environment and Energy Committee (on 01/09/2024)

bill text


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