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F I S C A L I M P A C T R E P O R T
SPONSOR Sanchez, M.
DATE TYPED 03/11/05 HB
SHORT TITLE College Affordability Act
SB 669/aSFC
ANALYST Williams
APPROPRIATION
Appropriation Contained Estimated Additional Impact Recurring
or Non-Rec
Fund
Affected
FY05
FY06
FY05
FY06
NFI
(Parenthesis ( ) Indicate Expenditure Decreases)
Relates to various student financial aid bills
SOURCES OF INFORMATION
LFC Files
Commission on Higher Education (CHE)
SUMMARY
Synopsis of SFC Amendment
The Senate Finance Committee amendment removes the appropriation and makes conforming
technical changes. As such, the amendment also defines a “returning adult” as a student enroll-
ing in a public, post-secondary educational institution at any time later than the first semester fol-
lowing high school graduation or the award of a general educational development certificate.
Synopsis of Original Bill
Senate Bill 669 establishes the College Affordability Act to “encourage New Mexico students
with financial need to attend and complete educational programs at public post-secondary educa-
tional institutions in New Mexico.” Provisions would apply to resident students of the state at-
tending a public, post-secondary institution.. Student eligibility for the new scholarship program
would include:
Has not earned a baccalaureate
Enrolled at least half-time in a degree program
Demonstrated financial need
pg_0002
Senate Bill 669/aSFC -- Page 2
The new scholarship program would be administered by the CHE. Distribution criteria would be
determined using data from the free application for federal student aid (FAFSA) and on the per-
centage of an institution’s students classified as returning adults who are otherwise ineligible for
state financial aid. Awards are capped at $1,000 per semester. Awards may continue each se-
mester as long as the student maintains eligibility criteria, but are capped at eight consecutive
semesters or until graduation, whichever is first. Eligibility would be discontinued if a student
withdraws, fails to achieve satisfactory academic progress or exhibits substantial noncompliance
with the Act or associated CHE rules.
The program would be funded with two general fund appropriations. The college affordability
endowment fund as well as the college affordability scholarship fund are established. Until the
corpus of the endowment fund reaches $250 million, the bill authorizes an equal split of income
generated by the fund between the corpus and the scholarship fund.
Monies would be transmitted from the state treasury by CHE to institutions for student accounts.
Students could draw upon the funds for tuition, fees, books and course supplies.
Significant Issues
This proposal is based on the recommendations of a recent report of the Commission on Higher
Education. “Improving Student Success in Postsecondary Education in New Mexico” noted the
state spent $31 million for merit-based student financial aid programs versus $18 million for
needs-based programs in 2003. The report included a recommendation of a $250 million en-
dowment fund established to address needs-based student financial aid. A similar proposal was
included in the report of the Governor’s Task Force on Higher Education.
CHE indicates the target population the scholarship program proposed in this bill would serve is
older students demonstrating unmet financial need. These students would be those not eligible
for the lottery tuition scholarship program. A funding allocation would be made to each institu-
tion based on the eligibility criteria established in CHE regulation. Institutions would then de-
termine student distributions. According to CHE, simulations of potential distributions to stu-
dents are not available because institutions have not been required to utilize the FAFSA in the
past. In its fiscal impact report, CHE notes the $15 million recurring appropriation could support
approximately 7,500 students for two semesters each at the maximum scholarship amount.
Measuring Up 2004 noted net college costs in New Mexico for low- and middle-income students
to attend public two-year colleges and four-year universities represent 33 percent and 40 percent,
respectively, of their annual income. Several recent higher education policy analyses find New
Mexico deficient in the extent of its needs-based student financial aid programs. The lottery tui-
tion scholarship program is considered a merit-based student financial aid program because it is
available to all students meeting certain criteria and maintaining a 2.5 grade point average. The
state typically ranks high among states with merit-based student financial aid programs.
PERFORMANCE IMPLICATIONS
The bill does not address performance reporting criteria to evaluate program effectives and out-
comes.
pg_0003
Senate Bill 669/aSFC -- Page 3
FISCAL IMPLICATIONS
The Senate Finance Committee amendment removed the appropriation.
The original bill contained two appropriations. First, the appropriation of $10 million to the col-
lege affordability endowment fund contained in this bill was a non-recurring expense to the gen-
eral fund. Any unexpended or unencumbered balance remaining at the end of FY06 would not
revert to the general fund. This appropriation was expected to be a multi-year commitment of
non-recurring general funds to reach the goal of establishing a $250 million trust fund.
Second, the appropriation of $15 million to the college affordability scholarship fund contained
in the original bill was a recurring expense to the general fund. Any unexpended or unencum-
bered balance remaining at the end of FY06 would not revert to the general fund. CHE noted
the amount of recurring appropriation would decline over time as the size of the endowment and
associated distribution of interest income increases.
ADMINISTRATIVE IMPLICATIONS
CHE notes there would be a significant one-time effort to initiate the new program as well as on-
going annual allocation of funding. Given current workload, one additional FTE staff would be
“extremely helpful.”
TECHNICAL ISSUES
Page 5, line 4, may need to include the formal name of the fund.
Page 5, line 8, may need to include the formal name of the fund.
OTHER SUBSTANTIVE ISSUES
A recent report of the General Accounting Office found part-time, adult students tend to exhibit
weaker persistence and graduation rates.
The bill does not specify the criteria by which satisfactory academic progress would be deter-
mined.
The sponsor may wish to consider an amendment to the bill to require the fund be invested by
the State Investment Council pursuant to the provisions of 6-8-7G NMSA 1978.
Based on supplementary information requested and received from the CHE, the program would
use data from the FAFSA to determine eligibility solely based on income. Other data collected
from the FAFSA to determine eligibility for other student financial aid programs would not im-
pact eligibility; examples might include felony conviction and drug use.
POSSIBLE QUESTIONS
1.
How would institutions administer the provisions of this bill.
2.
Who would evaluate student eligibility to determine awards ----- the institutions or the
CHE.
pg_0004
Senate Bill 669/aSFC -- Page 4
3.
What are examples of “substantial noncompliance” which might cause a student to lose a
scholarship award.
4.
What are the implications of semester eligibility when two-year college students exceed a
four semester time to degree in comparison with four-year college students exceeding an
eight semester time-to-degree.
5.
To what extent would the program improve New Mexico’s national ranking for needs-
based student financial aid programs.
AW/rs:yr