SESSION OF
2002
SUPPLEMENTAL NOTE
ON SENATE BILL NO. 398
As
Amended by Senate Committee
on
Financial Institutions and
Insurance
Brief
SB 398, as
amended, concerns the regulation of securities transactions in this
state. The bill makes several technical and clarifying amendments
to the Kansas Security Act, as well as the
following:
- Allows the
Securities Commissioner to consider any criminal conviction (not
just a felony conviction) in determining the character and
reputation of an applicant for registration under the
act;
- To ensure compliance
with the act, allows the Commissioner to deny, suspend, or revoke
the registration of persons registered under the act who fail to
reasonably supervise their
employees;
- Adds investment
adviser representative in several sections of the bill as an update
of the act in conformity with the National Securities Market
Improvement Act;
- Authorizes the
Commissioner to participate in additional central registration
depositories, i.e, the Investment Adviser Registration
Depository;
- Modernizes the
acceptable methods of communication between the Commissioner and
registrants to allow electronic
means;
- Updates descriptions
of financial statements in conformity with generally accepted
accounting principles and allows the Commissioner, by rule and
regulation or order, to require financial statements of a
securities issuer to be reviewed or audited by independent
certified public accountants;
- Deletes from the act
sections that specify exempt securities issued by Kansas-based
nonprofit organizations thereby recognizing the preemption of the
state law by the federal Philanthropy Act of
1995;
- Specifies that, in
an administrative proceeding, service of process under the act is
made in accordance with the Kansas Administrative Procedure Act,
and that every hearing in such a proceeding is public unless the
Commissioner grants a request joined in by all parties that the
hearing be private;
- Allows the
Commissioner to issue an order requiring a person who has violated
the act to pay restitution for any loss arising from the violation,
or require the person to disgorge any profits arising from the
violation (an interest penalty of 15 percent also may be assessed);
and
- Allows the
Commissioner to require persons subject to examination to reimburse
the agency for all reasonable costs of the
examination.
The amendment
allows the Commissioner, by rule and regulation or by order, to
require the filing of a notice and specify conditions for an exempt
security issued by any person organized and operated not for
private profit but exclusively for religious, educational, and
other benevolent purposes set out in the
act.
Background
SB 389 was
recommended by the Securities Commissioner who explained that the
bill updates or removes obsolete provisions of the act, promotes
uniformity with other states’ and federal securities laws,
improves the understandability of the act, and reduces the
likelihood of noncompliance due to
misunderstanding.
The fiscal
note prepared by the Division of the Budget indicates that some
revenue from the reimbursed costs of examination would offset the
expenses of the examination, but it is not possible to provide an
estimate of the reimbursement amount at the present
time.