HF4867
Deposit limit on the consumer protection restitution account removed, and distribution limits set.
Legislative Session 94 (2025-2026)
AI Generated Summary
Purpose
This bill modifies how money recovered by the state in consumer protection cases is handled and paid out to consumers who have unpaid consumer enforcement compensation. It changes the way funds are deposited into the consumer protection restitution account and expands/clarifies rules for distributing money to eligible consumers.
Key Provisions
Deposits into the restitution account (Sec. 1)
- 50% of money recovered by the attorney general in a consumer enforcement action that is payable to the state (and not designated for other purposes) must be deposited into the consumer protection restitution account, but only up to the first $5,000,000 each fiscal year.
- The remaining 50% of such money goes to the general fund.
- The amount deposited into the restitution account is determined at the time the money would have been deposited into the general fund.
Distributions to eligible consumers (Sec. 2)
- Money in the restitution account may be distributed to any eligible consumer with an identified amount of unpaid consumer enforcement public compensation.
- If funds are not enough to pay all eligible consumers, distributions are made first to those with unpaid compensation based on the oldest final order date.
- If the attorney general projects ongoing insufficiency of funds, the attorney general may recommend a legislated formula to prorate or cap payments so more consumers receive some payment.
- Per-claimant payment limits:
- The full identified amount up to $50,000 must be paid in full.
- For the portion over $50,000, only 50% of that excess may be paid, and this excess payment is capped so the total per claimant is limited (effectively up to a maximum of $100,000 per claimant).
Additional context
- The bill refers to “unpaid consumer enforcement public compensation” and to “final orders” of actions.
- The changes involve both deposit rules (how much money goes into the restitution account vs. the general fund) and distribution rules (who gets paid first, and how much each eligible consumer can receive).
Significant Changes to Existing Law
- Changes the deposit allocation from consumer enforcement recoveries to the consumer protection restitution account with a cap ($5,000,000 per fiscal year) before funds go to the general fund.
- Establishes explicit distribution rules to eligible consumers, including a prioritization method (oldest final orders) and a per-claimant payment cap structure (up to $50,000 in full, plus up to half of the excess above $50,000, with an overall cap that limits total payments per claimant).
- Allows the attorney general to propose prorating or capping formulas if ongoing funding is insufficient, effectively creating a framework for adjusting payments to maximize the number of claimants who receive some restitution.
Implementation Notes
- The distribution framework relies on the existence of unpaid compensation amounts and “final orders” from consumer enforcement actions.
- The formula for prorating/capping would be determined by legislative action if the fund remains insufficient, potentially changing how much each eligible consumer may receive over time.
Relevant Terms - consumer protection restitution account - consumer enforcement public compensation - attorney general - general fund - eligible consumer - unpaid consumer enforcement public compensation - final order - oldest date - prorating - capping payments - maximum per-claimant payment - unpaid compensation - money recovered in a consumer enforcement action - Minnesota Statutes 2025 Supplement section 8.37 subdivisions 3 and 5
Bill text versions
- Introduction PDF PDF file
Past committee meetings
- Commerce Finance and Policy on: April 15, 2026 08:15
Actions
| Date | Chamber | Where | Type | Name | Committee Name |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| April 07, 2026 | House | Action | Introduction and first reading, referred to | Commerce Finance and Policy |
Citations
[
{
"analysis": {
"added": [
"Requires 50 percent of all money recovered that is payable to the state and not designated for consumer enforcement public compensation or another purpose, up to the first $5,000,000 per fiscal year, to be deposited into the restitution account.",
"Requires the remaining 50 percent of money recovered that is payable to the state and not designated for consumer enforcement public compensation or another purpose to be deposited into the general fund.",
"Clarifies that the amount to be deposited into the restitution account or the general fund is determined at the time money would otherwise be deposited into the general fund."
],
"removed": [
"Eliminates the prior deposit limit on funds directed to the consumer protection restitution account."
],
"summary": "This bill amends Minnesota Statutes 2025 Supplement section 8.37, subdivision 3, concerning money deposited into the consumer protection restitution account from money recovered in consumer enforcement actions.",
"modified": [
"Replaces prior deposit rules with a 50/50 split up to a $5,000,000 annual cap, with any excess going to the general fund."
]
},
"citation": "Minnesota Statutes 2025 Supplement section 8.37 Subd.3",
"subdivision": "Subd.3"
},
{
"analysis": {
"added": [
"Allows distributions to eligible consumers with an identified amount of unpaid consumer enforcement public compensation.",
"If funds are insufficient to pay all identified payments, priority is given to those eligible for unpaid compensation based on the oldest final order date.",
"Authorizes the attorney general to recommend to the legislature a formula for prorating or capping payments to enable more eligible consumers to receive payment.",
"Imposes a cap framework: up to $50,000 per recipient for the full identified amount of unpaid compensation, and 50 percent of the identified amount of unpaid compensation over $50,000 (or up to $50,000, whichever is less)."
],
"removed": [],
"summary": "This bill amends Minnesota Statutes 2025 Supplement section 8.37, subdivision 5, governing distributions to eligible consumers from the restitution account, including payment priority, potential prorating, and payment caps.",
"modified": [
"Creates a structured distribution scheme with order-based priority and explicit caps to limit individual payments and allow prorating/capping if funds are insufficient."
]
},
"citation": "Minnesota Statutes 2025 Supplement section 8.37 Subd.5",
"subdivision": "Subd.5"
}
]