(a) If a state agency referred matters to the office during any of the three most recent state fiscal years for which complete information about the agency’s hourly usage is available and the costs to the office of conducting hearings and alternative dispute resolution procedures for the state agency are not to be paid by appropriations to the office during a state fiscal biennium, the office and the agency shall enter into an interagency contract for the biennium under which the referring agency pays the office either a lump-sum amount at the start of each fiscal year of the biennium or a fixed amount at the start of each fiscal quarter of the biennium for all services provided to the agency during the fiscal year. The office shall report to the Legislative Budget Board any agency that fails to make a timely payment under the contract. The lump-sum or quarterly amount paid to the office under the contract must be based on:
(1) an hourly rate that is set by the office:
(A) in an amount that sufficiently covers the office’s full costs in providing services to the agency, including costs for items listed in Subsection (c)(2); and
(B) in time for the rate to be reviewed by the legislature, as part of the legislature’s review of the office’s legislative appropriations request for the biennium, in determining the office’s legislative appropriations for the biennium; and
(2) the anticipated hourly usage of the office’s services by the referring agency for each fiscal year of the biennium, as estimated by the office under Subsection (a-1).
(a-1) Before the beginning of each state fiscal biennium, the office shall estimate for each fiscal year of the biennium the anticipated hourly usage for each state agency that referred matters to the office during any of the three most recent state fiscal years for which complete information about the agency’s hourly usage is available. The office shall estimate an agency’s anticipated hourly usage by evaluating:
(1) the number of hours spent by the office conducting hearings or alternative dispute resolution procedures for the state agency during the three most recent state fiscal years for which complete information about the agency’s hourly usage is available; and
(2) any other relevant information, including information provided to the office by the state agency, that suggests an anticipated increase or decrease in the agency’s hourly usage of the office’s services during the state fiscal biennium, as compared to past usage.

Terms Used In Texas Government Code 2003.024

  • Appropriation: The provision of funds, through an annual appropriations act or a permanent law, for federal agencies to make payments out of the Treasury for specified purposes. The formal federal spending process consists of two sequential steps: authorization
  • Contract: A legal written agreement that becomes binding when signed.
  • Fiscal year: The fiscal year is the accounting period for the government. For the federal government, this begins on October 1 and ends on September 30. The fiscal year is designated by the calendar year in which it ends; for example, fiscal year 2006 begins on October 1, 2005 and ends on September 30, 2006.
  • Year: means 12 consecutive months. See Texas Government Code 311.005

(a-2) The office, for a contract entered into as provided by Subsection (a) under which a quarterly amount is paid by the referring agency to the office, shall:
(1) track the agency’s actual hourly usage of the office’s services during each fiscal quarter; and
(2) forecast, after each fiscal quarter, the agency’s anticipated hourly usage for the rest of the fiscal year.
(a-3) If a state agency did not refer matters to the office during any of the three state fiscal years preceding a state fiscal biennium for which complete information about the agency’s hourly usage would have been available and did not provide information to the office sufficient for the office to reasonably and timely estimate anticipated usage and enter into a contract with the agency before the start of the state fiscal biennium, and the costs to the office of conducting hearings and alternative dispute resolution procedures for the state agency are not paid by appropriations to the office for the state fiscal biennium, the referring agency shall pay the office the costs of conducting hearings or procedures for the agency based on the hourly rate that is set by the office under Subsection (a) and on the agency’s actual usage of the office’s services.
(b) If the costs to the office of conducting hearings and alternative dispute resolution procedures for a state agency that refers matters to the office are anticipated to be paid by a lump-sum appropriation to the office for a state fiscal biennium, the office shall timely provide to the legislature the information described by Subsection (c).
(c) Each state fiscal biennium, the office as part of its legislative appropriation request shall file:
(1) information, as estimated under Subsection (a-1), related to the anticipated hourly usage of each state agency that refers matters to the office for which the costs of hearings and alternative dispute resolution procedures are anticipated to be paid by appropriations to the office; and
(2) an estimate of its hourly costs in conducting each type of hearing or dispute resolution procedure based on the average cost per hour during the preceding state fiscal year of:
(A) the salaries of its administrative law judges;
(B) the travel expenses, hearing costs, and telephone charges directly related to the conduct of a hearing or procedure; and
(C) the administrative costs of the office, including docketing costs.
(d) This section does not apply to hearings conducted under the administrative license revocation program.