STATE GOVERNMENT-TECH
Arizona SB 1126 creates dedicated funds to boost equine industry and racing activities, directing distributions to breeders, stallion owners, and retirement horse adoption.
Arizona SB 1126 creates dedicated funds to boost equine industry and racing activities, directing distributions to breeders, stallion owners, and retirement horse adoption.
Note: the materials you provided include multiple, distinct bills all labeled “SB 1126” from different jurisdictions. They are unrelated substantively. Below I summarize each identifiable version with key provisions, affected parties, and status. If you want a focused summary for one jurisdiction, tell me which state and I’ll expand that section.
Summary — multiple SB 1126 drafts
1) Arizona — “Equine economic improvement fund” (Sen. Shope)
- Purpose and intent
- Promote Arizona horse breeding, stallion quality, county fair racing, and retired racehorse adoption by creating and funding several dedicated racing-related funds.
- Key provisions
- Amends A.R.S. §5-113 and adds §5-113.02 (racing statutes).
- Directs deposits into and distributions from multiple funds:
- Arizona Breeders’ Award Fund: receives 5% of annual revenue from the Fantasy Sports Contest Fund (A.R.S. §5-1212) and 5% of monthly revenue from the Event Wagering Fund (A.R.S. §5-1318). The department distributes breeder awards per commission rules.
- Arizona Stallion Award Fund: receives 5% of annual Fantasy Sports fund revenue and pays awards to owners/lessees of qualifying Arizona stallions; commission to adopt rules on eligibility, award amounts, certification, and eligible races.
- Retirement Racehorse Adoption Fund: established and administered by the department; funded by retired racehorse adoption surcharges (A.R.S. §5-104(G)) and contributions. The department is required to distribute $25,000 annually from both the Breeders’ Award Fund and Stallion Award Fund to this adoption fund.
- County fairs racing betterment fund and county fairs livestock & agriculture promotion fund: administration, distributions, and governance (livestock committee composition/appointments).
- Funds do not revert to the general fund; departmental/commission rulemaking authority retained.
- Who is affected
- Thoroughbred and quarter-horse breeders and stallion owners in Arizona, county fair racing associations, nonprofit adoption groups approved by the racing commission, and the Arizona Department of Racing (or equivalent).
- Status (from the provided text)
- Introduced Feb 6, 2025; versions include Introduced and Senate Engrossed. (Legislative action entries in the packet appear mixed with other bills; Senator Shope is listed as the introducer in the Arizona text.)
2) Hawaii — civil asset forfeiture reform (text labeled SB1126)
- Purpose and intent
- End civil asset forfeiture absent conviction; limit government seizures to protect innocent property owners and ensure forfeiture follows felony charge and conviction.
- Key provisions
- Amends Hawaii Rev. Stat. ch. 712A provisions:
- Forfeiture of real property or interest permitted only where the underlying offense is chargeable as a felony.
- No property forfeiture unless the covered offense is a felony and the owner has been convicted (verdict, plea, no-contest, or deferred plea).
- Preserves ability to seize property prior to conviction but restricts ultimate forfeiture; protects conveyances used as common carriers unless owner consenting or complicit; protects bona fide security interests where secured party lacked knowledge/consent.
- Redirects forfeiture proceeds (after expenses) up to $3 million per year to the state general fund (including reimbursement to AG for seizure/storage costs) rather than prior distribution formula.
- Effective date: July 1, 2025.
- Who is affected
- Individuals facing civil forfeiture in Hawaii, law enforcement agencies, prosecuting attorneys, the Attorney General’s office, and entities holding secured interests in seized property.
- Status
- Draft includes effective date; no procedural status provided in this packet.
3) Illinois — technical amendment to the Governor’s Office of New Americans Act (Sen. John F. Curran)
- Purpose and intent
- Technical/typographical change to the short title (removes duplicated word).
- Key provisions
- Amend 15 ILCS 55/1 to correct the short title to “Governor’s Office of New Americans Act.”
- Who is affected
- No substantive policy or fiscal impact — purely technical statutory cleanup.
- Status
- Introduced Jan 24, 2025 by Sen. Curran; procedural entries show first reading and referral to assignments.
Procedural/clarity note
- The consolidated “Legislative Actions” you provided appear to mix procedural entries from different states and sessions (e.g., House readings, committee referrals, “Rule 3-9(a) / Re-referred to Assignments,” sponsor name WAKAI). To produce an authoritative, jurisdiction-specific status update I’ll need you to confirm which state’s SB 1126 you want tracked (Arizona, Hawaii, Illinois, or another).
Compiled from official sources — confirm details with the bill’s official record.
Sign in to ask a question.