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ARIZONA STATE SENATE

Fifty-Fifth Legislature, First Regular Session

 

FACT SHEET FOR H.B. 2544

 

blockchain and cryptocurrency study committee

Purpose

Establishes the Blockchain and Cryptocurrency Study Committee (Study Committee) and prescribes Study Committee membership.

Background

Blockchain technology is a distributed ledger technology that uses a distributed, decentralized, shared and replicated ledger. The data on the ledger is protected with cryptography, is immutable and auditable and provides an uncensored truth. Blockchain technology may be: 1) public or private; 2) permissioned or permissionless; or 3) driven by tokenized crypto economics or token less (A.R.S. § 44-7061).

A signature, record or contract secured through blockchain technology is an electronic form of signature or record, respectively (A.R.S. § 44-7061).

A city, town or county may not prohibit or restrict an individual from running a node on blockchain technology in a residence. The act of running a node on blockchain technology means providing computing power to validate or encrypt transactions in blockchain technology (A.R.S. §§ 9-500.42 and 11-269.22).

The Legislature appropriated $1,250,000 in FY 2020 from the State Web Portal Fund to the Arizona Commerce Authority to distribute to applied research centers that specialize in blockchain technology across Arizona (Laws 2019, Chapter 263).

There is no anticipated fiscal impact to the state General Fund associated with this legislation.

Provisions

1.   Establishes the Study Committee consisting of:

a)   three members of the Senate, two of whom are appointed by the President of the Senate and one who is appointed by the Minority Leader of the Senate;

b)   three members of the House of Representatives (House), two of whom are appointed by the Speaker of the House and one who is appointed by the Minority Leader of the House;

c)   a president or chief executive officer of an Arizona-based cryptocurrency company, or their designee, who is appointed by the Speaker of the House;

d)   three representatives of the cryptocurrency or blockchain space who may represent private industry in exchanges, payment solutions or non-cryptocurrency transaction purposes who are appointed by the Speaker of the House;

e)   a university professor who specializes in blockchain, who is from a university under the jurisdiction of the Arizona Board of Regents and who is appointed by the Speaker of the House;

f) a representative of a blockchain or cryptocurrency association who is appointed by the Speaker of the House; and

g)   one public member who is appointed by the Speaker of the House.

2.   Directs the Speaker of the House and the President of the Senate to each designate a cochairperson from the appointed legislative members.

3.   Directs the Study Committee to:

a)   review data on the scope of blockchain and cryptocurrency throughout the country;

b)   determine the current status of blockchain and cryptocurrency in relation to previously enacted Arizona legislation on these subjects;

c)   compile an overview of potential legislation;

d)   solicit ideas and opinions of industry experts on additional legislation;

e)   meet as often as the chairperson deems necessary; and

f) submit an initial report by December 31, 2021.

4.   Requires, by December 31, 2022, the Study Committee to submit a final report of the Study Committee's findings and recommendations on what will foster a positive blockchain and cryptocurrency economic environment to the Speaker of the House and provide a copy to the Secretary of State.

5.   Terminates the Study Committee on October 1, 2023.

6.   Becomes effective on the general effective date.

House Action

COM               2/9/21       DP       9-0-0-1

3rd Read          2/23/21                 42-17-1

 

Prepared by Senate Research

March 15, 2021

MG/FDR/gs