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committees of the NM Legislature. The LFC does not assume responsibility for the accuracy of these reports
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F I S C A L I M P A C T R E P O R T
SPONSOR Fidel
DATE TYPED 03/18/05 HB
SHORT TITLE Property Tax on Health-Related Equipment
SB 945/a SFC
ANALYST Padilla-Jackson
REVENUE
Estimated Revenue
Subsequent
Years Impact
Recurring
or Non-Rec
Fund
Affected
FY05
FY06
Insignificant
Insignificant Recurring
Property Tax Re-
cipients
(Parenthesis ( ) Indicate Revenue Decreases)
Relates to House Bill 322 and Senate Bill 501
SOURCES OF INFORMATION
LFC Files
Responses Received From
New Mexico Commission on Higher Education (CHE) (original bill only)
Taxation and Revenue Department (TRD)
SUMMARY
Synopsis of SFC Amendments
The Senate Finance Committee amended Senate Bill 945. The amendments strike the section of
the bill that would allow a compensating tax exemption for the use of property by the New Mex-
ico Hospital Equipment Loan Council and strike the gross receipts/governmental gross receipts
tax deduction for receipts from selling certain property to the Council.
Synopsis of Original Bill
Senate Bill 945 provides a property tax exemption for health-related equipment purchased by a
participating health facility. The equipment must be purchased, acquired, financed or refinanced
with the proceeds of bonds issued under the Hospital Equipment Loan Act and remains exempt
as long as the facility remains liable under any lease, loan or other agreement securing the bonds.
The bill also provides an exemption from compensating tax for the purchase of equipment made
with financing from the New Mexico Hospital Equipment Loan Council (HELC). Lastly, the bill
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Senate Bill 945/aSFC -- Page 2
provides an exemption from gross receipts and governmental gross receipts tax for receipts from
selling certain property to the HELC.
FISCAL IMPLICATIONS
Fiscal Implications of Bill as Amended
The proposed amendments to the bill eliminate the fiscal impact associated with the gross re-
ceipts and compensating tax deductions, leaving only the impact associated with the property
tax. As described below by TRD’s analysis, the fiscal impact of the property tax section of the
bill is estimated to be insignificant.
Fiscal Implications of Original Bill
The total fiscal impact of the original bill is approximately -$4.6 million in FY06, of which -$2.7
million will impact the General Fund and -$1.8 million will impact local governments. TRD’s
analysis assumed, based on information from HELC, that $100 million in equipment is pur-
chased from in-state firms with Council financing, 70 percent of which is purchased by private,
for-profit entities, and subject to the gross receipts tax. Seventy million dollars multiplied by the
statewide average gross receipts tax rate would yield obligations of $4.6 million. TRD notes that
if the property were purchased out of state and subject to compensating tax, similar amounts
would be due and that if the property were subject to Governmental Gross Receipts tax, proceeds
would be distributed to the New Mexico Finance Authority, the Energy, Minerals, and Natural
Resources Department and the Office of Cultural Affairs.
The personal property portion of the bill, according to TRD, is likely to have insignificant fiscal
impacts to property tax recipients. TRD provided the following comments on the personal prop-
erty portion of the bill:
Personal property tax obligations would be based one-third of the value of property purchased
using funding from the Hospital Equipment Loan Act. If $100 million in equipment were to be
purchased and financed by the Loan Council, 70 percent of which was by for-profit institutions,
one-third of $70 million in equipment or $23.3 million would be subject to property taxation.
Assuming the property was taxed at the 30-mill statewide average rate on nonresidential prop-
erty, annual tax obligations would decline by approximately $700,000. The resulting loss of tax-
able property value would not decrease revenues flowing to property tax recipients (primarily
counties, school districts and municipalities) due to rate increases resulting from the yield control
mechanism and the mechanism whereby debt-service rates are calculated. The property tax bur-
den would thus be shifted, decreasing for the beneficiaries of the provisions and increasing for all
other taxpayers. Impacts would increase over time as more equipment is purchased through the
Loan Act and therefore exempted from property tax under the provisions. The resulting shift of
the property tax burden could be significant in a small locality where a for-profit hospital repre-
sents a significant part of the tax base.
ADMINISTRATIVE IMPLICATIONS
Administrative impacts are assumed to be minimal to TRD.
OPJ/yr:lg