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F I S C A L I M P A C T R E P O R T
SPONSOR HBIC
DATE TYPED 3/9/05
HB CS/281/aHBICS/aHJC
SHORT TITLE Telecommunication Provider Property Access
SB
ANALYST Rosen
APPROPRIATION
Appropriation Contained Estimated Additional Impact Recurring
or Non-Rec
Fund
Affected
FY05
FY06
FY05
FY06
$45.0 Recurring General Fund
(Parenthesis ( ) Indicate Expenditure Decreases)
SOURCES OF INFORMATION
Responses Received From
Public Regulation Commission (PRC)
Attorney General’s Office (AGO)
SUMMARY
Synopsis of HJC Amendment
The House Judiciary Committee amendment to House Business and Industry Committee substi-
tute for House Bill 281 provides that a property owner may impose a condition on a telecom
provider to protect the safety or security of property or facilities owned or leased by government
agencies as well as the circumstances set out in the original bill; amends the definition of “com-
mercial private property” to exclude apartments, along with property owned by a governmental
agency and property used as a permanent residence; and adds a section that clarifies that nothing
in this new section is to construed as impairing the obligations of a property owner or tenant
pursuant to a contract in existence as of the effective date of the act, or to limit the right of
parties to such contract to enforce their rights.
Significant Issues
AGO reports the HJC amendment cures a potential defect of the bill by clarifying that it shall not
impair existing contracts.
pg_0002
House Bill CS/281/aHBICS/aHJC -- Page 2
Synopsis of Original Bill
House Business and Industry Committee substitute for House Bill 281 amends the New Mexico
Telecommunications Act to create a series of prohibitions and conditions on commercial private
property owners regarding the installation of and access to public telecommunications facilities
by public telecommunications service providers.
HBICS281 gives PRC the power, authority and responsibility to enforce the provisions of the
bill, which include determinations of whether the property owner is (1) preventing or interfering
with the installation of a telecommunications service facility; (2) discriminating in the terms,
conditions or compensation imposed for the installation of a telecom facility; (3) demanding or
accepting an unreasonable payment from a tenant or a telecom service provider for access to the
property; (4) discriminating in favor of or against a tenant, including rental charge discrimina-
tion, because of the tenant’s choice of a telecom service provider. HBICS281 also provides cer-
tain circumstances under which a commercial private property owner may impose conditions or
limitations on a public telecommunications service provider or tenant.
Significant Issues
According to PRC, the purpose of the bill is to provide for the nondiscriminatory treatment of
public telecommunications service providers by commercial private property owners upon ten-
ants’ requests; promote the rights of consumers of public telecommunications services; encour-
age competition for public telecommunication services; and encourage investment in telecom-
munications infrastructure. Appeals from any PRC order pursuant to this section are to the state
district court.
PRC indicates it may not be the appropriate agency to monitor and enforce the provisions of the
bill, lacking expertise, or the appropriate legal venue for tenant remedies.
FISCAL IMPLICATIONS
Indeterminate, depending upon the number and nature of the complaints and the process utilized
to deal with these complaints because PRC does not have expertise in landlord/tenant issues and
property evaluations. However, since the scope of the responsibility has been narrowed to com-
mercial property PRC has reduced the estimated need to $45,000 for 1 FTE.
ADMINISTRATIVE IMPLICATIONS
See Fiscal Implications, above.
TECHNICAL ISSUES
PRC believes there may be some internal inconsistencies between definitions in this bill and the
Definition Section of the New Mexico Telecommunications Act.
WHAT WILL BE THE CONSEQUENCES OF NOT ENACTING THIS BILL.
PRC indicates property owners, tenants and public telecommunications service providers will
pg_0003
House Bill CS/281/aHBICS/aHJC -- Page 3
seek remedies under the current state of the law with regard to their rights surrounding provision-
ing of public telecommunications services by the tenant’s provider of choice.
JR/njw:yr