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1 1 (October 30, 2017)

handle is hein.congrec/cbo3826 and id is 1 raw text is: 




                   CONGRESSIONAL BUDGET OFFICE

U                             COST ESTIMATE
                                                                   October 30, 2017


                                    H.R. 3758
                             Senior Safe Act of 2017

  As ordered reported by the House Committee on Financial Services on October 12, 2017


  H.R. 3758 would exempt financial institutions and some of their employees from liability
  in any civil or administrative proceeding in situations where those employees make a
  report about the potential exploitation of a senior citizen to a governmental agency. Based
  on information from the federal banking regulators, CBO concludes that the bill would
  not change their policies towards such reporting. Accordingly, CBO estimates that
  enacting the bill would have no effect on the federal budget.

  Enacting H.R. 3758 would not affect direct spending or revenues; therefore, pay-as-you-
  go procedures do not apply. CBO estimates that enacting H.R. 3758 would not increase
  net direct spending or on-budget deficits in any of the four consecutive 10-year periods
  beginning in 2028.

  H.R. 3758 would impose an intergovernmental mandate as defined in the Unfunded
  Mandate Reform Act (UMRA) by preempting state laws that provide a lower level of
  liability protection for certain financial institutions and their employees than would be
  provided under the bill. The bill would exempt from liability financial institutions and
  employees of those institutions that have received training on the financial exploitation of
  senior citizens and have filed reports of such exploitation to an appropriate government
  authority. Although the preemption would limit the application of state laws and
  regulations, CBO estimates that the bill would impose no duty on state, local, or tribal
  governments that would result in additional spending or a loss of revenues.

  H.R. 3758 also would impose a private-sector mandate by removing a private right of
  action. The bill would eliminate the right of plaintiffs to file a civil action against some
  financial institutions and employees of such institutions for disclosing information about
  the potential exploitation of a senior citizen in compliance with the bill. Similar to the
  intergovernmental mandate, the scope of the private-sector mandate is narrow, applying
  liability protection to only those employees that have received training and filed reports
  as outlined in the bill. The protection is similarly narrow for financial institutions. The
  cost of the mandate would be the forgone net value of awards and settlements that would
  have been awarded for such claims in the absence of the bill. Therefore, CBO estimates
  that the cost of the mandate in any one year would fall below the annual threshold for

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