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





SPONSOR: Rodriguez DATE TYPED: 03/01/01 HB
SHORT TITLE: Court Automation Fund Appropriation SB 690
ANALYST: Hayes


APPROPRIATION



Appropriation Contained
Estimated Additional Impact
Recurring

or Non-Rec

Fund

Affected

FY01 FY02 FY01 FY02
$ 7,000.0 Non-recurring General Fund



(Parenthesis ( ) Indicate Expenditure Decreases)



Duplicates Appropriation in The General Appropriation Act HB2/a in Section 6, Special appropriations. Relates to HB505

REVENUE



Estimated Revenue
Subsequent

Years Impact

Recurring

or Non-Rec

Fund

Affected

FY01 FY02
$ (7,000.0) Non-Recurring General Fund
$ 7,000.0 Non-Recurring Court Automation Fund



SOURCES OF INFORMATION



LFC Budget Files

Administrative Office of the Courts (AOC)

New Mexico Finance Authority



SUMMARY



Synopsis of Bill



SB690 appropriates $7 million from the general fund to the Court Automation Fund administered by the Administrative Office of the Courts in order to defease all outstanding New Mexico Finance Authority court automation fee revenue bonds, series 1996 and series 1999, and to pay costs relating to the retirement of those bonds.



The appropriation of $7,000.0 is for expenditure in fiscal years 2001 and 2002 for retirement of the bonds. HB505 contains an emergency clause.



Significant Issues



1. Bond proceeds from the last bond issue will be exhausted at the end of fiscal year 2001, meaning that money available for operating costs and judiciary automation projects, totaling approximately $800.0, will no longer be available next fiscal year.



2. AOC revenue forecasts anticipated $3.5 million in fee revenue this fiscal year, an amount reflected in its FY01 budget and used to fund operating costs of the Judiciary's Statewide Automation Program (referred to as "JID"). That number has now been revised to $2.8 million. This is a reduction in expected operating revenue for JID in the sum of $700.0.



3. The structure of bond regulations creates a cash flow problem for the first few months of every fiscal year for JID. Fee revenues received by NMFA from the courts after July 1st accumulate until the bond debt service on the court automation bonds has been satisfied. (Payment of the bond debt service is solely generated from fee revenue.) Only after the debt service has been satisfied does JID receive fee revenue for its operations.



4. JID does not receive a general fund appropriation for its operating costs, only for salaries and benefits ($1,373.8 ).



5. The Statewide Automation Program will not have adequate operating costs for fiscal year 2002 because of the issues detailed above. A decrease in revenues (700.0) and no further bond proceeds ($800.0) equals a budget deficit of $1.5 million in operating costs.



6. The ideal solution proposed was to fund a one-time appropriation in order to completely pay off the bonds. By retiring the bonds, JID would no longer have a cash flow problem, the debt service amount paid each year ($1.6 million) could now be used to support JID's budget deficit (see #5 above), and the fee revenue, estimated at $2.8 million, would be available for other operating expenses in JID.



7. If the non-recurring appropriation proposed in this bill is not approved for defeasance of the court automation bonds, then general fund monies will be requested by the Administrative Office of the Courts for its Statewide Automation Program. Without the bond defeasance, a recurring annual general fund appropriation of $1.5 million will be needed to maintain current staffing levels and basic operating costs until the debt service is paid each year. This would continue until fiscal year 2007.



FISCAL IMPLICATIONS



The appropriation of $7,000.0 contained in this bill is a non-recurring expense to the general fund. Any unexpended or unencumbered balance remaining after the defeasance of the bonds shall revert to the general fund.



ADMINISTRATIVE IMPLICATIONS



This one-time appropriation, if approved, will require an increase in "other state funds" source category in HB2 so that fee revenue can be adjusted and available for use for operating expenses versus being unavailable fee revenue utilized to make bond payments. The estimated adjustment is approximately $900.0



DUPLICATION/RELATIONSHIP



As of this date, HB2/a contains a seven million dollar special appropriation to retire the supreme court automation bonds and interest payments.



SB690 duplicates HB505 except for the latter bill requests that any unexpended or unencumbered balance remaining at the end of FY02 shall not revert back to the general fund, but be maintained as a fund balance in the Court Automation Fund for JID's usage.



POSSIBLE QUESTIONS



1. What is causing lower revenues compared to earlier years? After all, court-related activity seems to have increased throughout the state.



2. In knowing that bond proceeds would be exhausted at the end of FY01, what adjustments, if any, were made in spending and in staffing to account for this decrease in available funds?



CMH/njw:ar:prr