Committee hears testimony supporting increase in prepaid 9-1-1 fee to fund NG‑911 upgrades
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Summary
Sponsor Chad Perkins told the committee HB 27 67 would raise the prepaid contribution to 4% (from 3%) to allow the State 9-1-1 Board to award grants for equipment and training. Witnesses said the change could bring roughly $1 million more annually and cited declines in prepaid revenue from 2020 levels.
Representative Chad Perkins introduced House Bill 27 67, a targeted change to increase the prepaid 9-1-1 contribution from 3% to 4% to strengthen grant funding for local 9-1-1 centers to update equipment and training.
Scott Penman, speaking for Missouri 9-1-1 stakeholders, said the increase would bolster a state-administered grant pool and estimated about $1,000,000 in additional funding would come in on the higher percentage. Alan Wells, chair of the State Board of Governance for 9-1-1, testified the board's available prepaid-derived funding had fallen from over $5,000,000 in 2020 to roughly $2,250,000 as the market shifted away from prepaid minutes; he said the board needs more consistent revenue to complete NG‑911 upgrades and training across counties.
Committee members asked about distribution, eligibility for grants, and whether the funds could be used for salaries; witnesses said the state-administered grants are restricted to technology, training and consolidation efforts and are not intended to pay salaries.
The committee took testimony in support and concluded the hearing without a committee roll-call vote on the bill in this session.
