The Rhode Island Department of Corrections (“Department”) appeals from a district court judgment declaring ultra vires and unconstitutional the Department’s application of a Rhode Island statute which would impose a monthly offender fee upon the appellees, all of whom were sentenced to probationary terms under Department supervision for criminal offenses committed prior to the ef *781 fective date of the statute as implemented by regulations promulgated by the Department. The district court held that the Department’s interpretation of the statute exceeded its authority under the enabling statute and that the statute, as applied to appellees, violated the ex -post facto clauses in the United States and Rhode Island Constitutions. We vacate the district court judgment and remand for the entry of summary judgment for appellants on the ultra vires and ex post facto claims, and for further proceedings on appel-lees’ procedural due process claims.
I
BACKGROUND
Rhode Island General Laws § 42-56-88, P.L.1992, ch. 133, art. 97, § 2, directs that “[ejach sentenced offender committed to the care, custody, or control of the [Department] shall reimburse'the state for the cost or the reasonable portion thereof incurred by the state relating to such commitment.” (Emphasis added.) The offender fee statute itself expressly delegates to the Department the power to determine its effective date by declaring that its provisions “shall not be effective until the date rules and regulations implementing its provisions are filed with the office of the Secretary of State.” Id.
The Department responded by promulgating, inter alia, Regulation 10.07.03, designating July 1, 199k, as the effective date of the “offender fee” program, following its filing of the implementing regulations with the Secretary of State on June 17,1994. See also R.I. Gen. Laws § 42-56-10(v) (Powers of the director); R.I. Gen. Laws § 42-56-38 (Assessment of costs). The Regulation further provides for “offender fee” waivers based on inability to pay, see Regulation § 10.07.03(II)(E), and, in cases of nonpayment, authorizes notification of the appropriate criminal court at any parole or probation revocation hearing, id. § 10.07.03(II)(D), as well as civil actions to collect unpaid offender fees, id. Mere nonpayment does not constitute a parole or probation violation, however. Id. § 10.07.03(II)(D)(3). Nor are offenders in “banked” status (i.e., either residing outside Rhode Island or not on supervised status) hable for the fee, id. § 10.07.03(II)(C)(3).
Appellees, all convicted offenders
sentenced to probation prior to July 1, 199Jt,
each received advance written notice that the $15.00 offender fee would become effective July 1, 1994, and subsequently received monthly bills. Appellees thereafter commenced suit in federal district court claiming that the offender fee statute, as applied, violates the Ex Post Facto and Due Process clauses of the United States and Rhode Island Constitutions. In due course, the parties submitted cross-motions for summary judgment on a stipulated record and the district court ruled that (i) the Department had exceeded its authority under the enabling statute by interpreting the statute so as -to render the offender fee retroactive as to appellees and (ii) the statute violated the Ex Post Facto Clause since it retroactively increased the “punishment” for their pre-enactment crimes.
See Taylor v. State of Rhode Island Dept. of Corrections,
II
DISCUSSION 1
A. The Ultra Vires Claim
The district court concluded that the statutory interpretation adopted by the Department exceeded the scope of its delegated authority because it (i) results in an unauthorized “retroactive” application and (ii) would not be accorded deference by the Rhode Island Supreme Court. As the plain language of the statute demonstrates that the Department did not exceed its mandate, we demur.
Under Rhode Island law, it “is well established ... that statutes and their amendments are presumed to apply prospectively.”
Hydro-Manufacturing v. Kayser-Roth,
The statute itself explicitly states that the offender fee “shall not be effective until the date the rules and regulations are filed.” R.I. Gen. Laws § 42-56-38. Thus, its plain language requires no interpretation,
see Whitehouse v. Rumford Liability & Ins. Co.,
B. The Ex Post Facto Claim
The district court awarded appellees summary judgment on their claims that the offender fee statute violates the Ex Post Facto Clause under both the United States Constitution and the Rhode Island Constitution.
3
As the Rhode Island Supreme Court has held that Federal Ex Post Facto Clause jurisprudence likewise guides the required analysis under the Rhode Island Constitution,
Lerner v. Gill,
The Ex Post Facto Clause effectively prohibits laws
“
‘retroactively altering] the definition of crimes or increas[ing] the punishment for criminal acts.’ ”
California Dept. of Corrections v. Morales,
— U.S. -, -,
It would appear that the parties failed to call the district court’s attention to significant precedents governing the pivotal determina
*783
tion whether civil fees constitute “punishment.”
See Taylor,
Halper
adapted the Supreme Court’s longstanding subjective test for defining “punishment,”
see DeVeau v. Braisted,
For purposes of determining whether a law is penal in nature, “the labels ‘criminal’ and ‘civil’ are not of paramount importance.”
Id.
at 447,
On its face, the offender fee statute, suitably located among other Rhode Island civil statutes, imposes a civil charge.
5
The modest fee authorized by the statute comprises no part of any sentence imposed for the crimes committed by offenders. Rather, it is expressly designed to “reimburse” the Department for costs directly associated with providing goods and services required to supervise probationers and parolees living in the community. R.I. Gen. Laws § 42-56-38. Moreover, all offender fee revenues are dedicated to such use, Regulation 1.12.01(rV)(K), and waivers are available to offenders unable to pay, - Regulation 10.07.03(II)(E). Finally, the same monthly fee is assessed against all offenders released into the community who are currently under Department supervision, without regard to the nature or severity of their respective offenses.
6
In our judgment, so modest a cost-based supervisory fee reasonably cannot
*784
be deemed punitive in
purpose,
especially since any conceivable retributive or deterrent effect could only be inconsequential.
See Martel,
Finally, we inquire whether the fee nonetheless runs afoul óf the objective test announced in
Halper:
a monetary assessment “that cannot be said solely to serve a remedial purpose, but rather can only be explained as also serving either retributive or deterrent purposes, is punishment as we have come to understand the term.”
Halper,
The offender fee statute mandates that “[mjonies received under this section will accrue first to the department of corrections for use to offset costs of the specific care or service.” R.I. Gen. Laws § 42-56-38. The implementing regulations in turn make clear that the offender fee was rationally designed to promote its legislative objective; 'viz., reimbursement of the Department for its costs in providing the required supervisory services to its probationers and parolees. Regulation 1.12.Q1(IV)(K). Furthermore, the implementing regulations explicitly state that the offender fees collected from probationers and parolees must be deposited in a restricted account, exclusively available for defraying Department costs in affording offenders the required community supervision. 8 Thus, the legislative intent actuating the offender fee program is entirely remedial and its practical effect is neither retributive nor deterrent in nature. Under the Halper test, therefore, the offender fee is not punitive. 9
Ill
CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, the district court judgment is reversed and the ease is *785 remanded for farther proceedings on appel-lees’ procedural due process claims under state and federal law. The parties shall bear their own costs.
SO ORDERED.
. We review summary judgment rulings
de novo,
and must uphold them if the record, "viewed in the light most favorable to the nonmoving party, reveals no trialworthy issue of material fact and the moving party is entitled to judgment as a matter of law.”
Velez-Gomez v. SMA Life Assur. Co.,
Notes
. It appears that the district court may have been misled by an ambiguity in the statutory language, which states that the offender fee shall apply to "each sentenced offender
committed
to the care, custody or control of the [Department].” R.I. Gen. Laws § 42-56-38 (emphasis added). The court correctly noted that "[t]he word ‘committed’ could mean either ‘who has been committed,’ which would include existing probationers, or ‘who is committed,’ which would implicate only new probationers.”
Taylor,
We need not decide at this time, however, whether the Department’s interpretation of the term "committed” would be material under a due process analysis.
See Avanzo,
. Article 1, § 10, of the United States Constitution provides: "No State shall ... pass any ... ex post facto Law.” Article 1, § 12, of the Constitution of the State of Rhode Island reads: "No ex post facto law ... shall be passed.”
. Subsequent to the district court decision in this case, the Rhode Island Supreme Court adopted the
Halper
test for determining whether a civil fee constitutes "punishment" under the Double Jeopardy Clause.
See State v. One Lot of $8,560,
. Our research discloses no relevant legislative history.
. In determining that the offender fee constituted "punishment," the district court ruled that it was part of “the law annexed to the crime,”
Calder v. Bull,
First, though a probationary sentence is "punishment," the supervisory services for probationers released into the community are largely rehabilitative, both in nature and purpose.
See
R.I. Gen. Laws § 42-56-4(c) (Organization of department) (“Rehabilitative services shall include ... intermediary sanctions (including but not limited to ... probation, parole, restitution, and community service)....”).
See also United States v. Cardona,
Thus, the offender fee differs materially from the fees at issue in a case relied upon by appel-lees and cited by the district court,
see In re Petition of Delaware for a Writ of Mandamus,
. We note no contention, and no evidence, that the $15.00 monthly fee exceeds the costs associated with providing Department supervision of offenders released into the community.
See Halper,
. Moreover, as already noted,
see supra
p. 781, the offender fee is imposed only on probationers and parolees currently under Department supervision in the community, not upon probationers in "banked” status. Regulation 10.07.03(II)(C)(3). Thus, rather than a blanket fee assessed at sentencing without regard to the commencement or duration of any term of community supervision, the Rhode Island offender fee is directly and rationally related to recouping the State’s costs in providing supervision to the individual offenders for whose benefit the services are rendered.
Cf. In re Petition of Delaware for a Writ of Mandamus,
.The fact that nonpayment of the fee can be brought to the attention of the court at a parole/probation revocation hearing,
see supra
p. 781, does not transform the fee into punishment. While revocation of parole/probation might constitute punishment, the Supreme Court explained in
Morales
that courts must determine whether a legislative change “produces a sufficient risk of increasing the measure of punishment."
Morales,
— U.S. at -,
