Fiscal impact reports (FIRs) are prepared by the Legislative Finance Committee (LFC) for standing finance
committees of the NM Legislature. The LFC does not assume responsibility for the accuracy of these reports
if they are used for other purposes.
Current FIRs (in HTML & Adobe PDF formats) are a vailable on the NM Legislative Website (legis.state.nm.us).
Adobe PDF versions include all attachments, whereas HTML versions may not. Previously issued FIRs and
attachments may be obtained from the LFC in Suite 101 of the State Capitol Building North.
F I S C A L I M P A C T R E P O R T
SPONSOR Fidel
ORIGINAL DATE
LAST UPDATED
2-3-06
HB
SHORT TITLE
CAPITOL BUILDINGS PLANNING
COMMISSION PLAN
SB 380
ANALYST Hadwiger
APPROPRIATION (dollars in thousands)
Appropriation
Recurring
or Non-Rec
Fund
Affected
FY06
FY07
$500.0
Recurring
General Fund
$65.0
Non-Recurring
General Fund
(Parenthesis ( ) Indicate Expenditure Decreases)
SOURCES OF INFORMATION
LFC Files
Responses Received From
Department of Finance and Administration (DFA)
General Services Department (GSD)
SUMMARY
Synopsis of Bill
Senate Bill 380 appropriates $565 thousand from the general fund to the Property Control Divi-
sion (PCD) of the General Services Department (GSD) for expenditure in FY06 and FY07 to es-
tablish a master planning and asset management function for the needs of state government fa-
cilities under the purview of the Capitol Buildings Planning Commission and to obtain associ-
ated hardware and software necessary to maintain an updated master plan. The appropriation
includes funding for three permanent full-time employees of PCD to provide necessary staff
support to maintain the master plan as required of the capitol buildings planning commission and
to perform the increased asset management function required for accountability on state projects
administered by the property control division.
FISCAL IMPLICATIONS
The appropriation of $500 thousand contained in this bill is a recurring expense to the general
fund; $65 thousand contained in this bill is a non-recurring expense to the general fund. Any un-
expended or unencumbered balance remaining at the end of FY07 would revert to the general
fund.
pg_0002
Senate Bill 380 – Page 2
SIGNIFICANT ISSUES
In January 2006, the Capitol Buildings Planning Commission (CBPC) endorsed this bill as a
means of linking master planning to standards development, design and implementation and to
improve staff efficiency and responsiveness with regard to the state master plan. As approved,
this appropriation would support three full-time permanent positions—a project manager, budsi-
ness operations specialist and IT networks and computer specialist, as well as purchase software.
GSD indicated that the CBPC does not have staff to maintain updated facilities and asset man-
agement information required to fulfill its oversight mandate for state facilities in Santa Fe and
Albuquerque. GSD/PCD’s lack of effective asset management capability has been a weak link
in the master planning activities of the CBPC. As a result, periodic evaluation of overall master
planning objectives has to include update of facilities information. SB 380 will provide a more
efficient, cost-effective method for GSD/PCD to perform master planning functions.
DFA noted that PCD currently has no fixed asset or project management system. Depreciation
of buildings and improvements are calculated on an Excel spreadsheet. The federal government
has disallowed depreciation expense on more than $150.0 million of improvements that could
not be identified with a specific building. Agencies that occupy state buildings are allowed to
charge depreciation expense to federal programs. A new fixed assets management system would
allow for all improvements to be capitalized with the original construction or purchase cost of a
building increasing the amount of depreciation that could be charged to federal programs. The
CPBC does not have staff to maintain updated facilities and asset management information re-
quired to fulfill its oversight mandate for state facilities in Santa Fe and Albuquerque. The lack
of a capitol projects management system has inhibited the Property Control Division's ability to
perform efficient, cost effective master planning functions.
PERFORMANCE IMPLICATIONS
GSD indicated, with a viable asset management system, GSD/PCD could provide timely and ac-
curate project and facility information as needed by CBPC. and SB 380 would allow for signifi-
cantly improved management oversight of GSD/PCD facilities and administration of GSD/PCD
capital projects. Software would allow centralized reporting to GSD/PCD management for pro-
ject status at any time. This would promote better funding decisions, better prioritization of re-
sources, and more proactive identification of poor performing projects and facilities.
ADMINISTRATIVE IMPLICATIONS
DFA reported that having an effective asset management tool would reduce staff time now spent
updating various independent tracking spreadsheets and data bases and eliminate data entry er-
rors.
TECHNICAL ISSUES
No technical issues were identified.
OTHER SUBSTANTIVE ISSUES
GSD indicated the proposed software is an “off-the shelf” real estate portfolio and project man-
pg_0003
Senate Bill 380 – Page 2
agement software system used by the Public School Facilities Authority. It has been proven to
be a highly effective project management tool. This would allow GSD/PCD to replace its in-
house spreadsheets with a fully integrated portfolio management system that is web-based, se-
cure, password protected, and would be available to all GSD/PCD users and vendors. Decentral-
ized information input could be performed by project managers daily from any remote location,
provided internet access is available.
DH/mt:nt