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F I S C A L I M P A C T R E P O R T
SPONSOR Altamirano
ORIGINAL DATE
LAST UPDATED
1/25/06
HB
SHORT TITLE
AVIATION DIVISION COLLECTION
REVERSIONS
SB 237
ANALYST Schardin
APPROPRIATION (dollars in thousands)
Appropriation
Recurring
or Non-Rec
Fund
Affected
FY06
FY07
960.0
Recurring
State Aviation Fund
(Parenthesis ( ) Indicate Expenditure Decreases)
REVENUE (dollars in thousands)
Estimated Revenue
Recurring
or Non-Rec
Fund
Affected
FY06
FY07
FY08
(960.0)
(2,004.0) Recurring General Fund
960.0
2,004.0 Recurring State Aviation
Fund
(Parenthesis ( ) Indicate Expenditure Decreases)
Duplicates HB441.
SOURCES OF INFORMATION
LFC Files
Responses Received From
Taxation and Revenue Department (TRD)
Department of Transportation (DOT)
Department of Finance and Administration (DFA)
SUMMARY
Synopsis of Bill
Senate Bill 237 creates a new distribution to the state aviation fund from gross receipts tax reve-
nue that would otherwise go to the general fund. This distribution will be $80 thousand per
month FY07, $167 thousand per month in FY08, and $250 thousand per month in FY09 and be-
pg_0002
Senate Bill 237 – Page
2
yond. These distributions will be used for planning and program administration, construction,
equipment, materials and maintenance of a system of airports, navigation aids and related facili-
ties.
The effective date of these provisions is July 1, 2006.
FISCAL IMPLICATIONS
DOT’s analysis of Senate Bill 237 includes both direct impacts and indirect, or dynamic, impacts
that were estimated using the REMI model.
Direct Fiscal Impact: The bill creates a new monthly distribution to the state aviation fund from
gross receipts tax collections that are distributed to the general fund under current law. The dis-
tribution will total $960 thousand in FY07, $2.0 million in FY08, and $3 million in FY09 and
beyond. All money in the state aviation fund is automatically appropriated to the Aviation Divi-
sion of DOT.
Indirect Fiscal Impact: Additional federal matching funds generated by this bill will be used for
airport construction. While state funds will only pay about 2.5 percent of construction costs, the
effective gross receipts tax rate in municipal areas is 3.775 percent. This means the state could
actually make more money through the gross receipts tax on airport construction than it spends
to secure the additional federal match. In addition to increased gross receipts tax revenues, the
REMI model suggests personal income tax collections will increase due to higher wages and
salaries generated by airport construction activity.
The table below incorporates both the direct and indirect impacts of Senate Bill 237. Including
REMI analysis suggests that the bill will actually have a positive impact on both general fund
revenue and the state aviation fund.
Direct
Impact
Dynamic
Impact
Total
Impact
Direct
Impact
Dynamic
Impact
Total
Impact
Direct
Impact
Dynamic
Impact
Total
Impact
General Fund
-960.0 1,561.4 601.4 -2,004.0 2,207.0 203.0 -3,000.0 3,453.6 453.6
State Aviation Fund 960.0 0.0 960.0 2,004.0 0.0 2,004.0 3,000.0 0.0 3,000.0
FY07
FY08
FY09
Revenue Impact of Senate Bill 237
SIGNIFICANT ISSUES
According to DOT, Senate Bill 237 will help leverage additional matching funds from the Fed-
eral Aviation Administration (FAA) for use on statewide airport construction projects. These air-
port construction projects need only 5 percent in combined state and local funds to earn a 95 per-
cent federal match.
In FY05, New Mexico received about $2.3 million in FAA matching funds, the lowest amount of
all states in the FAA’s southwestern region (Arkansas received $22.3 million, Louisiana received
$51.5 million, Oklahoma received $21.3 million, and Texas received $96.7 million).
DOT reported that New Mexico’s airport infrastructure, excluding the Albuquerque Sunport,
needs over $248 million in improvements between FY03 and FY07. Currently, these projects are
only being addressed with about $16 million per year, so the backlog is growing.
pg_0003
Senate Bill 237 – Page
3
Another consideration is that states that dedicate a reliable revenue stream to aviation improve-
ments may be considered by the FAA for block grant status, which leads to significantly higher
federal funding. Texas, which received $96.7 million in FAA matching funds in FY05, is cur-
rently the only block grant state in the southwestern FAA region.
EDD notes that this bill will allow small airports in New Mexico to continue to improve their
infrastructure, systems and equipment, and navigation aids in order to better serve the communi-
ties throughout the state.
PERFORMANCE IMPLICATIONS
DOT notes that the FAA currently ranks New Mexico as a “poor performer” in terms of provid-
ing airport infrastructure. Without dedicating funding to aviation infrastructure, it will be diffi-
cult for New Mexico to increase its performance ranking and attract additional federal funding
ADMINISTRATIVE IMPLICATIONS
DFA notes that DOT’s Aviation Division currently has seven FTE, and that an influx of funding
provided by this bill may require additional FTE.
OTHER SUBSTANTIVE ISSUES
The bill changes the requirement in Section 64-1-15(B) NMSA 1978 that all state aviation fund
expenditures be made in accordance with budgets approved by DFA so that approval will be
given by DOT. DFA is concerned about this change because of recent findings that state road
fund revenue for the “100 percent state” construction program was not used exclusively for that
purpose.
WHAT WILL BE THE CONSEQUENCES OF NOT ENACTING THIS BILL
DOT suggests that New Mexico’s backlog of airport improvement projects will continue to
grow, and the state’s construction sector will not benefit from the stimulus of federal matching
funds available for airport construction.
SS/nt