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Bill

Bill

HF 2846

Attorney general duties and activities funding provided, consumer protection restitution account and related requirements established, consumer litigation account modified, proceeds of litigation or settlement account established, report required, and money appropriated.

2025-2026 Regular Session Introduced by Patty Acomb and 4 co-sponsors

HF 2846 funds Minnesota AG duties in consumer protection and creates accounts for restitution, litigation proceeds, and settlements, with reporting requirements.

Introduction and first reading, referred to State Government Finance and Policy
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Bill Summary · HF 2846

Summary of HF 2846 (2025-2026) – Minnesota

Overview

HF 2846 establishes and funds certainAttorney General duties and activities, and creates new accounts related to consumer protection, litigation proceeds, and settlements. The bill outlines appropriations, operational mandates for the attorney general, and reporting requirements. It was introduced and referred to the State Government Finance and Policy committee on March 26, 2025. Primary and several co-sponsors are listed.

Purpose and Intent

  • To organize and finance the activities of the Minnesota Attorney General (AG) related to consumer protection and litigation, including restitution and settlement proceeds.
  • To create dedicated accounts to manage funds associated with consumer protection activities, litigation, and settlements, and to require reporting on related activities.

Key Provisions and Changes

1) AG Duties and Activities Funding

  • The bill provides funding for specified duties and activities carried out by the Minnesota AG.
  • Goals include strengthening consumer protection enforcement, litigation capacity, and related operations.

2) Consumer Protection Restitution Account and Related Requirements Established

  • Establishes a Consumer Protection Restitution Account.
  • Provisions likely require that restitution funds obtained through consumer protection enforcement be deposited into this account.
  • Sets rules for how restitution can be used, tracked, and reported.

3) Consumer Litigation Account Modified

  • Modifies the existing Consumer Litigation Account (if one exists) or creates a parallel framework.
  • Adjustments may include funding levels, eligible uses, or management procedures for litigation-related expenditures.

4) Proceeds of Litigation or Settlement Account Established

  • Creates a new account to hold proceeds from litigation or settlements.
  • Specifies permissible uses of these proceeds and governance around their distribution.

5) Report Required

  • Requires regular reporting related to the accounts and AG activities funded by the bill.
  • Reports likely cover fund balances, expenditures, restitution distributions, and settlement proceeds allocations.

6) Money Appropriated

  • Authorizes specific appropriations to support the above programs and accounts.
  • Details on appropriation amounts, whether ongoing or one-time, would be included in the fiscal provisions.

Who Would Be Affected

  • Minnesota Attorney General’s Office: Primary administrator and beneficiary of new funding, accounts, and reporting requirements.
  • Consumers: Potential for increased enforcement activity, restitution, and clearer channels for settlement proceeds related to consumer protection.
  • State government: New funding streams and reporting obligations may affect state budgeting and financial management.
  • Courts and litigants: Possible procedural changes in how settlement proceeds and restitution are handled.

Procedural and Timeline Considerations

  • Introduction and first reading occurred March 26, 2025, in the State Government Finance and Policy committee.
  • As a appropriations and governance bill, it would typically progress through committee referrals, potential amendments, and floor action before moving to other chambers, followed by conference committee considerations if needed.
  • Effective dates and implementation timelines (e.g., when accounts commence, when funds are available, reporting periods) would be specified in the bill’s fiscal and implementing sections.

Notes for Further Review

  • The exact dollar amounts of appropriations and the specific statutory language governing fund transfers, allowable expenditures, and beneficiary determinations are not provided here. Readers should consult the bill text for precise figures, definitions (e.g., what constitutes “restoration,” “restitution,” and “proceeds”), and implementing provisions.
  • It is helpful to review fiscal notes and committee analyses for anticipated budgetary impact and implementation timelines.

Compiled from official sources — confirm details with the bill’s official record.

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