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F I S C A L I M P A C T R E P O R T
SPONSOR Taylor
ORIGINAL DATE
LAST UPDATED
2/9/06
HB
SHORT TITLE Municipality Fee For Inmates In County Jails
SB 705
ANALYST Peery
APPROPRIATION (dollars in thousands)
Appropriation
Recurring
or Non-Rec
Fund
Affected
FY06
FY07
NA
NA
NA
NA
(Parenthesis ( ) Indicate Expenditure Decreases)
SOURCES OF INFORMATION
LFC Files
Response Received From
Department of Finance Administration (DFA)
No Responses Received From
New Mexico Sentencing Commission (NMSC)
New Mexico Corrections Department (NMCD)
NM Association of Counties (NMAC)
SUMMARY
Synopsis of Bill
Senate Bill 705 states in a class A county with a population of more than 300,000 persons, mu-
nicipalities shall pay a fee to the Board of County Commissioners for each prisoner housed in a
county-owned jail charged with municipal offenses or arrested by municipal officers. The pro-
posed bill states the fee shall be a reasonable fee established by the Board of County Commis-
sioners and approved by the Local Government Division of the Department of Finance and Ad-
ministration.
FISCAL IMPLICATIONS
DFA states the language in the proposed legislation establishes the ability for counties to set a
fee for prisoners charged with municipal offenses or arrested by municipal officers with the ap-
proval of the Local Government Division of the Department of Finance and Administration.
pg_0002
Senate Bill 705 – Page
2
DFA states at this time the revenue impact is indeterminate. DFA reports the intention of the
counties is to use the fee to help recover operational costs of such prisoners.
SIGNIFICANT ISSUES
DFA states the criteria outlined in the proposed legislation is unique only to Bernalillo county,
which is the only class A county with a population of more than 300,000 persons.
DFA states according to both Bernalillo county and the City of Albuquerque, it is estimated that
approximately 80 percent of prisoner population are charged with municipal offenses or arrested
by municipal officers. DFA states Albuquerque is obviously the largest municipality within the
county; however, Los Ranchos and Edgewood, among others, have been known to utilize the
Metropolitan Detention Center. DFA states it should be noted that a small percentage can be
classified under different jurisdictions, such as federal and state agencies.
ADMINISTRATIVE IMPLICATIONS
DFA states the proposed legislation will have to be administered by the Metropolitan Detention
Center adding to their current workload.
OTHER SUBSTANTIVE ISSUES
DFA reports that recently a lawsuit was filed between the City of Albuquerque and Bernalillo
county regarding the legality of terminating a Joint Powers Agreement (JPA) associated with the
Metropolitan Detention Center (MDC). DFA states a JPA was established between Bernalillo
county and the City of Albuquerque to divide equally the operating costs of the MDC. The JPA
also states the detention center is to be operated by the city with the county owning the facility.
DFA reports Dan Mayfield, Deputy Manager of Bernalillo County, stated in April 2005, Mayor
Martin Chavez gave notice to the county that the city was terminating the JPA effective June 30,
2006. Mr. Mayfield stated that it was the county’s understanding the city would continue to pay
50 percent of operating costs of MDC, but as of January 2006 Bernalillo county has been reim-
bursed $8.5 million (35 percent of the 50 percent). The county is in the process of taking steps to
transfer the operation and management of the MDC. The county is having to absorb the addi-
tional costs of bring the current MDC staff onto the county payroll.
DFA reports Anna Lamberson, Director of Office Management and Budget of the City of Albu-
querque, stated that approximately 80 percent of county residents live within the city limits. Ms.
Lamberson stated city residents per capita costs will increase by $9 per year whereas the county
residents living in unincorporated areas per capita costs will decrease by $36 per year. Ms.
Lamberson noted statute states the counties are responsible to provide and operate jails.
ALTERNATIVES
In the 2004 legislative session, the Legislature gave counties increased taxing authority of a new
1/16
th
of countywide general purpose authority, and expanded 1/8
th
countywide for maintaining
and constructing detention facilities.
RLP/mt