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F I S C A L I M P A C T R E P O R T
SPONSOR Garcia
DATE TYPED 2/03/05
HB
SHORT TITLE Lottery Scholarship “Stop Out” Period
SB 122
ANALYST Williams
APPROPRIATION
Appropriation Contained Estimated Additional Impact Recurring
or Non-Rec
Fund
Affected
FY05
FY06
FY05
FY06
Indeterminate;
see fiscal impli-
cations
Recurring
Lottery Tuition
Scholarship
Fund
(Parenthesis ( ) Indicate Expenditure Decreases)
Relates to numerous lottery scholarship and student financial aid bills
SOURCES OF INFORMATION
LFC Files
Commission on Higher Education (CHE)
New Mexico Lottery Authority
SUMMARY
Synopsis of Bill
Endorsed by the Legislative Education Study Committee.
Senate Bill 122 expands lottery tuition scholarship program eligibility. The bill permits full-time
resident students pursing a baccalaureate or an associate’s degree who suspend their studies for
up to two consecutive semesters to maintain eligibility for the lottery scholarship. These stu-
dents must maintain all other eligibility requirements.
Significant Issues
This legislation may send a contradictory signal to stakeholders on the importance of timely de-
gree completion as measured by student persistence and graduation for all public, post-secondary
institutions in the state as required under the Accountability in Government Act.
FISCAL IMPLICATIONS
Based on a survey of public, post-secondary institutions, CHE estimates 2.4 percent of lottery
recipients that leave in good academic standing return after one semester of absence. The CHE
pg_0002
Senate Bill 122 -- Page 2
notes “once they are in the program, students make every effort to remain.” CHE notes “most
(students) that “stop out” do so because of health or other extenuating circumstances and may
appeal for reinstatement in the program” See “Other Substantive Issues” for additional discus-
sion.
In its bill analysis, CHE assumes a distribution of lottery scholarship recipients by institution.
Using their model, CHE projects the fiscal impact of the bill at a cost of approximately $330
thousand per year for the lottery tuition scholarship fund.
The LFC views the fiscal impact as indeterminate. There are three potential drivers of the fiscal
cost associated with this bill. First, in the short-run, to the extent students might be freer to leave
college with a formal allowance of a two-semester stop-out period, the overall cost of the lottery
scholarship program could be reduced somewhat. Furthermore, in the middle- to long-run, these
students may not permanently return to college, which would reduce expenditures from the lot-
tery scholarship fund. The long-run cost effect of this bill would stem from additional students
eligible for the lottery scholarship program given that they would maintain elibility under the
provisions of this bill. The later effect could be offset by the first two.
OTHER SUBSTANTIVE ISSUES
CHE notes “most (students) that “stop out” do so because of health or other extenuating circum-
stances and may appeal for reinstatement in the program” CHE has granted reinstatement to stu-
dents who make such an appeal during the last two years.”
If the intent of the legislature is to address limited situations, then CHE may already have this
authority.
To evaluate impacts of potential changes to the lottery tuition scholarship program, the legisla-
ture may wish to consider requiring an annual review and reporting to the Legislative Finance
Committee, Legislative Education Study Committee, Department of Finance and Administration
and the Office of the Governor by:
1.
New Mexico Lottery Authority on revenue situation and outlook and
2. Commission on Higher Education on
a.
expenditure situation and outlook
fund balance situation and outlook
policy and fiscal impacts of each change to lottery scholarship program enacted
by the 2004 legislature
POSSIBLE QUESTIONS
1.
What is the legislative intent regarding the need to address continued lottery scholarship
program eligibility. Is the intent to address limited financial, personal and family cir-
cumstances or should the context be broader.
2.
What are the potential impacts on student persistence and graduation targets for public,
post-secondary institutions.
AW/yr