NOTE: As provided in LFC policy, this report is intended for use by the standing finance committees of the legislature.  The Legislative Finance Committee does not assume responsibility for the accuracy of the information in this report when used in any other situation.



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F I S C A L I M P A C T R E P O R T





SPONSOR: Stewart DATE TYPED: 03/14/01 HB 390/aHAFC/aSPAC/aSFl#1
SHORT TITLE: Create Equal Pay Task Force SB
ANALYST: Dunbar


APPROPRIATION



Appropriation Contained
Estimated Additional Impact
Recurring

or Non-Rec

Fund

Affected

FY01 FY02 FY01 FY02
NFI



(Parenthesis ( ) Indicate Expenditure Decreases)



SOURCES OF INFORMATION



NM Department of Labor

Personnel Board



SUMMARY



     Synopsis of SFl#1 Amendment



The Senate Floor amendment #1 amended HB 390 by :



· Increasing the membership in the equal pay task force from 9 to 10 members.

· Increasing the representatives from the business field from 2 to 3 members.

· Indicating that task force members shall represent a geographic balance with in the state.

· Indicating that the task force members shall represent a balance of males and females.



     Synopsis of SPAC Amendment



SPAC amends HB390 to clarify the dates of operation of the "equal pay task force". In addition, the date of the final report, which includes recommendations of the task force, to the governor and legislature was changed to 12/15/02.



Synopsis of HAFC Amendment



The House Appropriation and Finance Committee amendment of HB 390 provides for the following changes to the legislation:



The new language on timeframes is ambiguous in that it could be interpreted to read that the Task Force does not have to begin operations until July 1, 2002. Also, should the final report to the Legislature and Governor be changed to December 15, 2002 in Section 1 E?



Synopsis of Original Bill



HB 390 creates a 9-member task force to study the extent of wage disparities, both public and private, between men and women and between minorities and non-minorities, and to develop actions that are likely to lead to the elimination of wage disparities.



Significant Issues



The Task force will perform a study to determine what factors cause wage discrepancies in the private and public sectors, and will analyze gender differences and minority differences in wages. The task force shall make reports to the Legislative Finance Committee and interim committees. A final report of those findings and suggested actions to eliminate the disparities will be submitted to LFC and the Governor by December 15, 2001. State Personal Office (SPO) and NM Department of Labor (NMDOL) will staff the task force.

PERFORMANCE IMPLICATIONS



The State Personnel Office indicates that this unfunded staffing mandate will force State Personnel to divert resources from other projects.



The State Personnel Office has a very small staff of compensation professionals dedicated to operating and improving the classified compensation system. SPO expresses concern that the potentially huge statewide study implied in this bill will divert these scarce resources from their statutory duties in order to study issues well outside the scope of the Executive branch classified system.

FISCAL IMPLICATIONS



HB 390 appropriates $20.0 from the general fund to pay for the per diem and mileage expenses of the task force members. Any unexpended or unencumbered balance remaining at the end of fiscal year 2002 reverts to the general fund.



There is no appropriation to the State Personnel Office or Department of Labor for the cost of providing staff and other assistance to the task force.



ADMINISTRATIVE IMPLICATIONS



NMDOL staff positions are federally funded and the state is precluded from using federal grant funds to pay for non-federal activities. Therefore, DOL writes that an additional appropriation from the general fund will be needed to pay for NMDOL staff time devoted to non-federal program activities. At a minimum, a one-half (.5) FTE will be required to provide staff support to the task force. Another $20,000 of state funds will be needed to pay for the NMDOL staff position and other incidental costs.

SPO also states that this unfunded mandate could result in substantial staffing personnel costs for the State Personnel Office.

OTHER SUBSTANTIVE ISSUES



SPO maintains that pay equity has long been a concern of the State Personnel Office and that is why it adopted the Hay compensation plan for the state government classified system ten years ago. The Hay plan is designed to determine the relative worth of jobs without regard to race or sex. The mandate in this bill, however, covers the private sector, as well as all the other branches of state government, and all local government entities. This is well beyond the scope of SPO's responsibilities as defined in the Personnel Act.



POSSIBLE QUESTIONS



Is December 15, 2001 a realistic date to complete the study?



BD/ar/njw