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





SPONSOR: Garcia, M.P. DATE TYPED: 03/01/01 HB 870
SHORT TITLE: Payday Loan Act SB
ANALYST: Valdes


APPROPRIATION



Appropriation Contained
Estimated Additional Impact
Recurring

or Non-Rec

Fund

Affected

FY01 FY02 FY01 FY02
$ 447.2 Recurring General Fund



(Parenthesis ( ) Indicate Expenditure Decreases)



Duplicates/Relates to Appropriation in The General Appropriation Act

SOURCES OF INFORMATION



Financial Institutions Division, Regulation and Licensing Department



SUMMARY



Synopsis of Bill



House Bill 870 defines the business practice for payday loan companies. It sets a minimum loan amount of $50.00 and a maximum loan amount of $300.00. Requires the companies to accept partial loan payments of $5.00 or more. Limits renewals to a maximum of two, and requires the payday loan company not to engage in another loan with the same consumer once paid off for a period of thirty days. Requires the payday loan company to inquire about other payday loans the consumer may have, as the maximum combined amount is $300.00. There is an administrative fee limit per loan of $5.00 and a limit on insufficient funds fee not to exceed $15.00 or the lesser of the fee imposed upon the licensee by the financial institution. A consumer may file a class action suit to enforce the Payday Loan Act, and mandatory arbitration clause is not permitted. The payday loan companies will be required to have additional disclosures, and new reporting requirements for renewals.



Significant Issues



The Financial Institutions Division provided the following information on House Bill 870:



























PERFORMANCE IMPLICATIONS



Implementation and enforcement of the bill would require annual and complete examinations of a minimum of 150 to 200 licensees and state or federally regulated institutions that do payday loans, which cannot currently be accomplished with the Division's appropriated budget. The performance of the agency and the unit that supervises the consumer financial industry would be seriously impeded.

This bill, depending on the number of new licensees, may affect the Financial Institutions Division's performance output measure on application processing, which designates that 80% of the applications be processed within a standard number of days. It may also affect an efficiency measure: the average number of days to resolve a Financial Institutions Division complaint. An increased number of licensees with no increase in the number of staff could result in the resolution of complaints taking longer.



FISCAL IMPLICATIONS



There is no appropriation contained in the bill. According to the Financial Institutions Division, there is anticipated increased cost to the agency. The bill would require 8 FTEs (an industry supervisor, legal counsel, 5 examiners, and clerk specialist), vehicle costs, per diem, travel costs, office space, filing cabinets and a toll free number to enforce the provisions of the new laws, and also mediate complaints, conduct investigations, conduct administrative proceedings, and enforce penalties. The Financial Institutions Division would not be able to absorb the additional costs within its present budget.



There will be no new revenue for the agency. The estimated additional cost to the agency as described in Fiscal Implications will be $447,200.00.



ADMINISTRATIVE IMPLICATIONS



The Financial Institutions Division would be inundated with the review and approval of payday contracts and notices required by the law, and the additional review of financial information for licensure of payday lenders.



CONFLICT/DUPLICATION/COMPANIONSHIP/RELATIONSHIP



The bill is duplicative with the Small Loan Act of 1955, Chapter 58, Article 15 NMSA 1978 in that bill, if passed, will require dual licensure pursuant to both acts.



TECHNICAL ISSUES



Page 9 lines 14 though 18 conflicts with page 6 lines 12 through 14, the disclosure requirement for the term of a payday loan is not consistent with Page 6, lines 12 through 14 where the requirement of a minimum term of no less than two weeks for each $50.00 owed on the loan.



The bill needs a grandfather clause to address payday loans that will be in existence at the time the law becomes effective.



Page 5 line 14, and page 9 lines 12 and 13, and page 11 line 14, criminal process is not defined.



OTHER SUBSTANTIVE ISSUES



The Division has not received any complaints on payday lenders during the past year. It is clear that the net effect of the new policies, financial disclosures, limitations, and new consumer disclosures, required will place an expanded regulatory burden upon payday lenders and the Division with no clear benefit to the consumer. The result will be a substantial reduction in payday lenders and loans available in New Mexico.

MV/sb