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F I S C A L I M P A C T R E P O R T
SPONSOR Gonzales
DATE TYPED 3-11-2005 HB 997/aHTRC
SHORT TITLE School Bus Fuel Excise Tax Exemption
SB
ANALYST Taylor
REVENUE
Estimated Revenue
Subsequent
Years Impact
Recurring
or Non-Rec
Fund
Affected
FY05
FY06
($430.0)
Similar
Recurring Road Fund
($45.0)
Similar
Recurring Local Governments
Road Funds
$140.0
Similar
Recurring State General Fund
$50.0
Similar
Recurring Local Governments
(Parenthesis ( ) Indicate Revenue Decreases)
SOURCES OF INFORMATION
LFC Files
Taxation and Revenue Department
SUMMARY
Synopsis of HTRC Amendment
The HTRC amendment expands the deduction provided to include school buses under contract
with the Public Education Department.
Synopsis of original bill
House Bill 997 provides a special fuels tax deduction for number 2 diesel fuel used by public
school buses.
FISCAL IMPLICATIONS
The Taxation and Revenue Department’s estimate is reported below.
pg_0002
House Bill 997/aHTRC -- Page 2
\Special Fuel Tax Deduction:
Based on information provided by the N.M. Public Education Department, total fuel con-
sumption by private contractors operating public school buses is estimated at 3.0 million
gallons. 25% of these contractors currently purchase tax deductible dyed fuel. Another
25% purchase their fuel in bulk quantities, but do not have access to dyed fuel, and are
therefore paying tax under present law. These buyers would benefit as follows from the
deduction provided in HB 997: 750 thousand gallons at $0.21 per gallon, the special fuel
tax reduction is $158 thousand. Under present distribution formulas, 90.48% of this
amount is attributable to the State Road Fund and the remainder to the Local Government
Road Fund. Gross receipts tax collections would increase by an estimated $66 thousand
due to the provision because fuel that is exempt from the Special Fuels Tax becomes tax-
able under the gross receipts tax.
Special Fuel Tax Refunds:
The refund provisions are estimated to benefit 50% of total fuel used by school bus op-
erators, or 1.5 million gallons. At $0.21 per gallon, this reduces net special fuel tax col-
lections by $315 thousand. Under present distribution formulas, 90.48% of this amount
is attributable to the State Road Fund and the remainder to the Local Government Road
Fund. Compensating tax collections would increase by an estimated $125 thousand due
to the provision because fuel on which refunds are claimed for the Special Fuels Tax be-
comes taxable under the compensating tax. 80% of this revenue is distributed to the
General Fund while the other 20% goes to local governments through the Small Cities
and Small Counties Assistance programs.
ADMINISTRATIVE IMPLICATIONS
TRD’s analysis included this discussion of administrative impacts:
The increase in refund claims will impose additional costs on the Department’s fuels tax
processing unit. Depending on the number of monthly refund claims, the costs could be
as high as 0.5 FTE.
TECHNICAL ISSUES
TRD raised these technical issues:
The language in the bill specifying the type of eligible fuel by reference to the distillation
temperature, etc. causes a significant increase in the complexity of administering the new
deduction. Also, the language limiting the deduction to “number 2 diesel” would exclude
some school bus fuel that is subject to the Special Fuel Tax. If the purpose is to allow the
deduction for all school bus fuel users, the language should simply refer to “special fuel.”
OTHER SUBSTANTIVE ISSUES
TRD reported these issues:
Under present law and regulations, a special fuels tax deduction is available for school
buses that are owned by government entities. In addition, non-government owned school
bus users of special fuel can buy tax-deductible fuel if they purchase dyed fuel from a
pg_0003
House Bill 997/aHTRC -- Page 3
supplier. The dyed fuel requirement enables the Department (and the Federal govern-
ment) to keep track of legitimately tax-deductible fuel. Thus, the only school bus users
currently paying the special fuel tax are private contractors operating school buses who
are not able to get access to dyed fuel.
According to the N.M. Public Education Department, the contractors paying the tax have
been billing the Department for reimbursement. Thus, if the tax is eliminated, the
amount in the Public School budget for this purpose could be reduced by an equivalent
amount.
BT/lg