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F I S C A L I M P A C T R E P O R T
SPONSOR Youngberg
DATE TYPED 2/7/2005 HB 590
SHORT TITLE Prohibit Stopping Certain Domestic Well Use
SB
ANALYST Aguilar
APPROPRIATION
Appropriation Contained Estimated Additional Impact Recurring
or Non-Rec
Fund
Affected
FY05
FY06
FY05
FY06
NFI
(Parenthesis ( ) Indicate Expenditure Decreases)
Relates to HB-285, HB 500, SB 120, SB 451
SOURCES OF INFORMATION
LFC Files
Responses Received From
Office of the State Engineer (OSE)
New Mexico Environment Department (NMED)
SUMMARY
Synopsis of Bill
House Bill 590 prevents the state engineer from stopping a person, firm or corporation from op-
erating a well in accordance with a permit issued on or before July 1, 2005.
Significant Issues
The State Engineer notes the enactment of this bill may be contrary to the constitutional system
of prior appropriation as it would effectively remove such wells from being administered in the
same manner as all other water rights. The bill may also deny the constitutional right of "equal
protection" to other persons who have non-domestic water rights and who are not exempt from
priority administration.
pg_0002
House Bill 590 -- Page 2
Once a permit is issued the state engineer does not have the authority to stop well operation
unless the conditions of approval are not met or if the state engineer is required to do so by valid
regulatory requirements.
Domestic wells typically have a small impact on water levels but the combined use of many may
reduce stream flows and impair existing senior water rights. Stream impacts will continue fol-
lowing discontinued well use but will decrease with time.
Many domestic wells may be in areas that could be easily served by an existing water supply
system. Domestic wells are a concern because most will have an associated septic system and
each domestic well may provide the potential for contamination of deep aquifers and community
supply wells. There may be a circumstance in the future where domestic wells in certain local-
ized areas should be plugged for public health concerns.
The State Engineer further explains the issue is far from clear-cut. It could be argued that HB
590 does not really exempt domestic wells from the prior appropriation system; it only limits the
state engineer's statutory authority over them. Senior water rights owners would still have the
right to sue to shutdown junior domestic owners in a private lawsuit, if the juniors were impair-
ing the seniors' water rights.
CONFLICT, DUPLICATION, COMPANIONSHIP, RELATIONSHIP
HB590 is related to HB500 and its companion bill Senate Bill 451 (SB451). HB590 is also re-
lated to Senate Bill 120 (SB120) and its companion House Bill 285 (HB285).
SB120 and HB285 allow the State Engineer to deny a domestic well permit if the well is located
in a critical management area unless an applicant obtains an individual water right. If an indi-
vidual water right is required, the applicant must obtain an existing water right from within the
critical management area and change the place or purpose of use of the water.
HB500 and SB451 replace the ability of the State Engineer to deny a domestic well permit in a
critical management area with the ability to limit the use of the domestic well to one-half acre-
foot of water unless an applicant transfers existing water rights from within the critical manage-
ment area to the new location, or the applicant discontinues the use of and caps an existing, per-
mitted domestic well in that critical management area. HB500 and SB451 also contain language
requiring the State Engineer to review a critical management area designation every 5 years to
ascertain whether the critical management area continues to meet the criteria for designation.
OTHER SUBSTANTIVE ISSUES
Section 72-2-9 NMSA 1978 provides for the state engineer to supervise the apportionment of
water according to the licenses he issues and the adjudications of the court.
The State Engineer notes New Mexico is a prior appropriation state, which means the water
rights of junior appropriators ("second in time") may theoretically be curtailed to satisfy the
rights of senior appropriators ("first in time"). (NM Constitution, Art. XVI, Sec. 2). Given the
proper circumstances, the state engineer would be responsible for apportioning water according
to priority, i.e., he may be required to shut down juniors to satisfy seniors under current law.
PA/njw