ILLEGAL ADOPTION RECRUITMENT S.B. 924 & 925:
SUMMARY OF BILL
REPORTED FROM COMMITTEE
Senate Bills 924 and 925 (as reported without amendment)
Committee: Families, Seniors and Human Services
CONTENT
Senate Bill 925 would amend the Michigan Adoption Code to do the following:
-- Allow a prospective adoptive parent to advertise for or recruit, as well as solicit, biological parents or guardians of potential adoptees for the purposes of adoption.
-- Allow a prospective adoptive parent or guardian, or a court, department, or child-placing agency, to advertise for or recruit, as well as solicit, potential adoptive parents for purposes of adoption.
-- Refer in these provisions to "court-supervised adoption".
-- Provide that no person or entity other than one specified in the Code could advertise for, solicit, or recruit prospective parents for the purpose of facilitating the transfer, adoption, or other permanent placement of a child.
A violation of the current provisions is a misdemeanor punishable by imprisonment for up to 90 days or a maximum fine or $100, or both, for the first violation. A subsequent violation is a felony punishable by imprisonment for up to four years and/or a maximum fine of $2,000. These penalties also would apply to a violation of the bill's provisions.
The Code defines "solicit" as contact in person, by telephone or telegraph, by letter or other writing, or by other communication directed to a specific recipient. The term does not include public communication that is not directed to specific individuals. The bill, instead, would define "advertise for, solicit, or recruit" as to communicate in person, in writing, or via any medium, public or private, for the purpose of locating a previously unknown person or entity with whom to temporarily or permanently place a child.
Senate Bill 924 would amend the sentencing guidelines in the Code of Criminal Procedure to revise the description of the offense that Senate Bill 925 would modify.
The bills are tie-barred to each other.
MCL 777.15f (S.B. 924) Legislative Analyst: Patrick Affholter
710.55 (S.B. 925)
FISCAL IMPACT
Senate Bill 925 could have a
negative fiscal impact on the State and local government. More misdemeanor and
felony arrests and convictions could increase resource demands on law
enforcement, court systems, community supervision, jails and correctional facilities.
The average cost to State government for felony probation supervision is
approximately $3,024 per probationer per year. For any increase in prison
intakes, in the short term, the marginal cost to State government would be
approximately $3,764 per prisoner per year. In the long term, if the increased
intake of prisoners increased the total prisoner population enough to
require the Department of Corrections to open a housing unit or an entire facility, the marginal cost to State government would be approximately $34,550 per prisoner per year. Any associated increase in fine revenue would be dedicated to public libraries.
Senate Bill 924 would have no fiscal impact on local government and an indeterminate fiscal impact on the State, in light of the Michigan Supreme Court's July 2015 opinion in People v. Lockridge (in which the Court struck down portions of the sentencing guidelines law). According to one interpretation of that decision, the sentencing guidelines are advisory for all cases. This means that the addition to the guidelines under the bill would not be compulsory for the sentencing judge. As penalties for felony convictions vary, the fiscal impact of any given felony conviction would depend on judicial decisions.
Date Completed: 10-20-16 Fiscal Analyst: Ryan Bergan
This analysis was prepared by nonpartisan Senate staff for use by the Senate in its deliberations and does not constitute an official statement of legislative intent.