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F I S C A L I M P A C T R E P O R T
SPONSOR Nunez
DATE TYPED 02-22-05 HB 866
SHORT TITLE NMSU Vegetation Monitoring Studies
SB
ANALYST Woods
APPROPRIATION
Appropriation Contained Estimated Additional Impact Recurring
or Non-Rec
Fund
Affected
FY05
FY06
FY05
FY06
$250.0
Recurring General Fund
(Parenthesis ( ) Indicate Expenditure Decreases)
Relates to the appropriation for New Mexico State University in the General Appropriations Act.
Duplicates SB894
SOURCES OF INFORMATION
LFC Files
Responses Received From
New Mexico State University (NMSU)
No Response Received From
New Mexico Commission on Higher Education (CHE)
SUMMARY
Synopsis of Bill
House Bill 866 – Making an Appropriation for Vegetation Monitoring Studies to Assist the Live-
stock Industry by the College of Agriculture at New Mexico State University – appropriates
$250,000 from the general fund to the Board of Regents of New Mexico State University for ex-
penditure in FY06 to assist the livestock industry with vegetation monitoring studies by the Col-
lege of Agriculture. Any unexpended or unencumbered balance remaining at the end of FY06
shall revert to the general fund.
pg_0002
House Bill 866 -- Page 2
Significant Issues
NMSU indicates that this legislation will provide the requisite funds to allow the NMSU
Cooperative Extension Service (CES) and Agricultural Experiment Station (AES) assist the New
Mexico livestock industry with vegetation monitoring studies.
NMSU further notes that sound science and site-specific monitoring and assessment data are
critical for management decisions, which need to be dynamic and flexible in order to respond to
rapidly changing resource conditions. Long-term range condition and trend data are
fundamentally necessary for grazing operations and agency personnel to make comprehensive
assessments of resource conditions, livestock management strategies and wildlife numbers.
Federal agency objectives, rancher livestock management objectives, and New Mexico
Department of Game and Fish responsibilities may all be simultaneously addressed with solid
monitoring data. Without these types of site-specific data, officials and ranchers cannot make
informed decisions and carry out their responsibilities. A core team of objective, impartial
resource monitoring expertise is necessary to: be proactive to the challenge of resource
management; provide continuity of management; provide a foundation of vegetation data
collected with established methodologies and an inventory of improvements on the ground.
NMSU adds that this legislation will support NMSU’s rangeland vegetation monitoring
programs and will facilitate increased growth in external research funding generated by faculty
with dedicated appointments to rangeland system function. Moreover, this initiative will
compound fiscal benefits by increasing professional expertise, providing state matching funds,
making grant requests more successful, and leading to more resolutions of costly rangeland
natural resource problems.
This initiative is not included in CHE’s 2005-2006 Higher Education Funding Recommendation.
PERFORMANCE IMPLICATIONS
Cooperative Extension Service and Agricultural Experiment Station will employ the NMSU
Range Improvement Task Force (RITF) – a response team approach in conjunction with
traditional education outreach methods – to address rangeland health issues. The RITF
investigates impacts to federal lands, focusing at the ranch-unit level, while providing objective
information to ranchers and governmental policy makers, and offering scientific solutions to
rangeland issues and disputes. NMSU notes that the RITF is nonpartisan, and concerned only
with the long-term health of rangeland.
FISCAL IMPLICATIONS
The appropriation of $250,000 contained in this bill is a recurring expense to the general fund.
Any unexpended or unencumbered balance remaining at the end of FY06 shall revert to the gen-
eral fund.
ADMINISTRATIVE IMPLICATIONS
New Mexico State University will retain oversight of this appropriation.
pg_0003
House Bill 866 -- Page 3
CONFLICT, DUPLICATION, COMPANIONSHIP, RELATIONSHIP
Relates to the appropriation for New Mexico State University in the General Appropriations Act.
Duplicates SB894 in that SB894 also seeks to appropriate $250,000 from the general fund to the
Board of Regents of New Mexico State University for expenditure in FY06 to assist the livestock
industry with vegetation monitoring studies by the College of Agriculture.
TECHNICAL ISSUES
NMSU suggests that new resources will allow the RITF to enhance its role as a provider of
unbiased, state-of-the-art, scientific information, evaluation, and assessment. For NMSU to
continue providing leadership, new strengths must be included in our natural resource Extension
and research programs. To ensure uniform and planned implementation of management policies,
these scientists, along with the existing RITF team, must provide input and assessment on
policies affecting both public and private land users in the West. This expanded RITF focus will
assist in good stewardship and long-term health of the West’s natural resources, while
recognizing the multi-cultural heritage of the region and the importance of management for long-
term sustainability.
OTHER SUBSTANTIVE ISSUES
As general background, NMSU indicates that the New Mexico range livestock industry has gross
revenues of greater than $1 billion. The industry affects more than 70 million acres within the
state. Forage supply has been shrinking state-wide over the last century. Reduction of timber
harvesting during the last decade, exclusion of frequently occurring low-intensity fires,
increasing densities of small-diameter trees, piñon-juniper encroachment, and a decreasing area
of mountain meadows due to tree encroachment have all contributed to reducing forage available
for ungulates and other ecological functions. Additionally, a rapidly expanding elk population
has intensified the competition for forage with a static, or decreasing, livestock population. These
phenomena, coupled with extended drought, have created an imbalance between already stressed
forage conditions and the demands being placed upon them. The manner in which these
imbalances are addressed will make the difference between success and failure. Lack of proper
funding will impede, and possible prevent, the cooperative and adaptive resource management
strategies needed to successfully address these challenges of maintaining valuable natural
resources while preserving the economic viability and structure of small New Mexico
communities.
BFW/lg