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AN ACT
RELATING TO DEVELOPMENT; REPEALING SECTIONS OF THE URBAN
DEVELOPMENT LAW; REPEALING THE COMMUNITY DEVELOPMENT LAW;
ADDRESSING THE EMINENT DOMAIN POWER OF MUNICIPALITIES;
REMOVING THE ABILITY TO CONDEMN PROPERTY FOR ECONOMIC
DEVELOPMENT IN THE METROPOLITAN REDEVELOPMENT CODE; AMENDING
AND REPEALING SECTIONS OF THE NMSA 1978.
BE IT ENACTED BY THE LEGISLATURE OF THE STATE OF NEW MEXICO:
Section 1. Section 3-18-10 NMSA 1978 (being Laws 1973,
Chapter 395, Section 1) is amended to read:
"3-18-10. POWER OF EMINENT DOMAIN--PURPOSES--
PROCEEDINGS.--
A. Both within the municipal boundary and for a
distance not extending beyond the planning and platting
jurisdiction of the municipal boundary, a municipality has the
power and right of condemnation of private property for public
use for the purpose of:
(1) laying out, opening and widening
streets, alleys and highways or their approaches; or
(2) constructing, maintaining and operating:
(a) storm drains; or
(b) garbage and refuse disposal areas
and plants.
B. A municipality may acquire by eminent domain
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any property within the municipality:
(1) for park purposes;
(2) to establish cemeteries or mausoleums or
to acquire existing cemeteries or mausoleums; or
(3) for the purpose of correcting obsolete
or impractical planning and platting of subdivisions. For the
purpose of this paragraph, "obsolete or impractical planning
and platting" applies only to property that:
(a) was platted prior to 1971;
(b) has remained vacant and unimproved;
and
(c) threatens the health, safety and
welfare of persons or property due to erosion, flooding and
inadequate drainage.
C. Condemnation proceedings pursuant to this
section shall be in the manner provided by law."
Section 2. Section 3-46-43 NMSA 1978 (being Laws 1965,
Chapter 300, Section 14-47-19, as amended) is amended to read:
"3-46-43. ORDINANCES RELATING TO REPAIR, CLOSING AND
DEMOLITION OF DWELLINGS UNFIT FOR HUMAN HABITATION--
COMPLAINT--SERVICE OF COMPLAINT--APPEAL.--
A. Whenever a municipality finds that there exist
dwellings that are unfit for human habitation due to
dilapidation; defects increasing the hazards of fire,
accidents or other calamities; lack of ventilation, light or
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sanitary facilities; or other conditions, including those set
forth in Subsection C of this section, rendering the dwellings
unsafe and unsanitary or dangerous or detrimental to the
health, safety or morals or otherwise inimical to the welfare
of the residents of the municipality, power is conferred upon
the municipality to require or cause the repair, closing or
demolition or removal of the dwellings in the manner provided
in this section. "Dwelling" means a building or structure or
part thereof used and occupied for human habitation or
intended to be so used and includes any appurtenances usually
enjoyed in the dwelling.
B. Upon the adoption of an ordinance finding that
dwelling conditions of the character described in Subsection A
of this section exist, the governing body of the municipality
may adopt ordinances relating to the dwellings within the
municipality that are unfit for human habitation. The
ordinances shall include the following provisions:
(1) a public officer shall be designated or
appointed to exercise the powers prescribed by the ordinances;
(2) whenever it appears to the public
officer, on the officer's own motion, that a dwelling is unfit
for human habitation, the officer shall, if the officer's
preliminary investigation discloses a basis for the charges,
issue and cause to be served on the owner, every mortgagee of
record and all parties in interest in the dwelling, including
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persons in possession, a complaint stating the charges in that
respect. The complaint shall contain a notice that a hearing
will be held before the public officer or the officer's
designated agent at a place fixed in the complaint not less
than ten days nor more than thirty days after the serving of
the complaint; that the owner, mortgagee and parties in
interest shall be given the right to file an answer to the
complaint and to appear in person or otherwise and give
testimony at the place and the time fixed in the complaint;
and that the rules of evidence prevailing in courts of law or
equity shall not be controlling in hearings before the public
officer;
(3) if after the notice and hearing the
public officer determines that the dwelling under
consideration is unfit for human habitation, the officer shall
state in writing findings of fact in support of that
determination and shall issue and cause to be served upon the
owner an order in writing that advises the owner of the
owner's rights under Subsection E of this section and that:
(a) if the repair, alteration or
improvement of the dwelling can be made at a reasonable cost
in relation to the value of the dwelling, the ordinance of the
municipality shall fix a certain percentage of the cost as
being reasonable for that purpose and require the owner,
within the time specified in the order, to repair, alter or
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improve the dwelling to render it fit for human habitation or
to vacate and close the dwelling as a human habitation; or
(b) if the repair, alteration or
improvement of the dwelling cannot be made at a reasonable
cost in relation to the value of the dwelling, the ordinance
of the municipality shall fix a certain percentage of the cost
as being reasonable for the purpose, and require the owner,
within the time specified in the order, to remove or demolish
the dwelling;
(4) if the owner fails to comply with an
order to repair, alter or improve or to vacate and close the
dwelling, the public officer may cause the dwelling to be
repaired, altered or improved or to be vacated and closed;
(5) if the owner fails to comply with an
order to remove or demolish the dwelling, the public officer
may cause the dwelling to be removed or demolished; and
(6) the amount of the cost of the repairs,
alterations or improvements or the vacating and closing or the
removal or demolition by the public officer shall be a lien
against the real property upon which the cost was incurred.
If the dwelling is removed or demolished by the public
officer, the officer shall sell the materials of the dwelling
and shall credit the proceeds of the sale against the cost of
the removal or demolition. Any balance remaining shall be
deposited in the district court by the public officer and
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shall be secured in the manner as may be directed by the court
and shall be disbursed by the court to the persons found to be
entitled to the balance by final order or decree of the court.
C. An ordinance adopted by a municipality pursuant
to this section shall provide that the public officer may
determine a dwelling is unfit for human habitation if the
officer finds that conditions exist in the dwelling that are
dangerous or injurious to the health, safety or morals of the
occupants of the dwelling, the occupants of neighboring
dwellings or other residents of the municipality or that have
a blighting influence on properties in the area. The
conditions may include the following without limitations:
defects increasing the hazards of fire, accident or other
calamities; lack of adequate ventilation, light or sanitary
facilities; dilapidation; disrepair; structural defects;
uncleanliness; overcrowding; inadequate ingress and egress;
inadequate drainage; or any violation of health, fire,
building or zoning regulations or any other laws or
regulations relating to the use of land and the use and
occupancy of buildings and improvements. The ordinance may
provide additional standards to guide the public officer or
the officer's agents or employees in determining the fitness
of a dwelling for human habitation.
D. Complaints or orders issued by a public officer
pursuant to an ordinance adopted under the provisions of this
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section shall be served upon persons either personally or by
registered mail. If the whereabouts of the persons are
unknown and cannot be ascertained by the public officer in the
exercise of reasonable diligence and the public officer makes
an affidavit to that effect, the serving of the complaint or
order upon the persons may be made by publishing the complaint
or order once each week for two consecutive weeks in a
newspaper printed and published in the municipality or, in the
absence of a newspaper, in one printed and published in the
county and circulating in the municipality in which the
dwellings are located. A copy of the complaint or order shall
be posted in a conspicuous place on the premises affected by
the complaint or order. A copy of the complaint or order
shall also be filed with the clerk of the county in which the
dwelling is located. Filing of the complaint or order shall
have the same force and effect as other lis pendens notices
provided by law.
E. A person affected by an order issued by the
public officer may file an appeal pursuant to the provisions
of Section 39-3-1.1 NMSA 1978.
F. An ordinance adopted by the governing body of
the municipality may authorize the public officer to exercise
powers as may be necessary or convenient to carry out and
effectuate the purposes and provisions of this section,
including the following powers:
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(1) to investigate the dwelling conditions
in the municipality in order to determine which dwellings are
unfit for human habitation;
(2) to administer oaths and affirmations,
examine witnesses and receive evidence;
(3) to enter upon premises for the purpose
of making examinations, provided that the entries shall be
made in a manner as to cause the least possible inconvenience
to the persons in possession, and to obtain an order for this
purpose from a court of competent jurisdiction in the event
entry is denied or resisted;
(4) to appoint and fix the duties of any
officers, agents and employees as the officer deems necessary
to carry out the purposes of the ordinances; and
(5) to delegate any functions and powers
under the ordinance to officers, agents and employees that the
public officer may designate.
G. The governing body of a municipality adopting
an ordinance under this section shall, as soon as possible
thereafter, prepare an estimate of the annual expenses or
costs to provide the equipment, personnel and supplies
necessary for periodic examinations and investigations of the
dwellings in the municipality for the purpose of determining
the fitness of the dwellings for human habitation and for the
enforcement and administration of its ordinance or ordinances
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adopted under this section.
H. Nothing in this section shall be construed to
abrogate or impair the powers of the courts or of a department
of a municipality to enforce any provisions of its charter or
its ordinances or regulations or to prevent or punish
violations thereof. The powers conferred by this section
shall be in addition and supplemental to the powers conferred
by any other law.
I. Nothing in this section shall be construed to
impair or limit in any way the power of the municipality to
define and declare nuisances and to cause their removal or
abatement by summary proceedings or otherwise."
Section 3. Section 3-60A-2 NMSA 1978 (being Laws 1979,
Chapter 391, Section 2) is amended to read:
"3-60A-2. FINDINGS AND DECLARATIONS OF NECESSITY.--
A. It is found and declared that there exist in
municipalities of the state slum areas and blighted areas that
constitute a serious and growing menace, injurious to the
public health, safety, morals and welfare of the residents of
the state; that the existence of these areas contributes
substantially to the spread of disease and crime, constitutes
an economic and social burden, substantially impairs or
arrests the sound and orderly development of municipalities
and retards the maintenance and expansion of necessary housing
accommodations; that economic and commercial activities are
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lessened in those areas by the slum or blighted conditions,
and the effects of these conditions include less employment in
the area and municipality, lower property values, less gross
receipts tax revenue for the state and municipalities and
reduces the use of buildings, residential dwellings and other
facilities in the area that the prevention and elimination of
slum areas and blighted areas and the prevention and
elimination of conditions that impair the sound and orderly
development of municipalities is a matter of state policy and
concern in order that the state and its municipalities shall
not continue to be endangered by these areas that contribute
little to the tax income of the state and its municipalities
and that consume an excessive proportion of its revenues
because of the extra services required for police, fire,
accident, hospitalization or other forms of public protection,
services and facilities.
B. Certain slum areas and blighted areas or
portions thereof may require land acquisition and clearance by
the municipality, since prevailing conditions may make
impracticable their reclamation or development; other areas or
portions of the slum or blighted area may be suitable for
conservation or rehabilitation efforts and the conditions and
evils enumerated in Subsection A of this section may be
eliminated, remedied or prevented by those efforts; and to the
extent feasible, salvageable slum and blighted areas should be
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conserved and rehabilitated through voluntary action, the
regulatory process and, when necessary, by government
assistance.
C. The powers conferred by the Metropolitan
Redevelopment Code regarding the use of public money are for
public uses or purposes for which public money may be
expended. The individual benefits accruing to persons as the
result of the powers conferred by the Metropolitan
Redevelopment Code and projects conducted in accordance with
its provisions are found and declared to be incidental to the
objectives of that code and are far outweighed by the benefit
to the public as a whole. Activities authorized and powers
granted by the Metropolitan Redevelopment Code are hereby
declared not to result in a donation or aid to any person,
association or public or private organization or enterprise.
The necessity for these provisions and the power is declared
to be in the public interest as a matter of legislative
determination.
D. The legislature finds that the problems of the
large metropolitan areas are unique in this state because of
the size and magnitude of the problems when such large numbers
of people are affected. The legislature further finds and
declares that the strategies and methods for solving these
problems in the large metropolitan areas differ from those in
the smaller cities and towns and villages of the state, and it
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is necessary to authorize those home rule metropolitan areas
additional powers and flexibility because of the nature and
size of their problems and because the governments of such
metropolitan areas have sufficient staff to meet and deal with
those problems. Further, these authorizations are merely
explanations of the powers of home rule communities in these
metropolitan areas that can be exercised under home rule
authority notwithstanding any limitations contained in the
Metropolitan Redevelopment Code."
Section 4. Section 3-60A-3 NMSA 1978 (being Laws 1979,
Chapter 391, Section 3) is amended to read:
"3-60A-3. LEGISLATIVE INTENT.--
A. It is the intent of the legislature by the
passage of the Metropolitan Redevelopment Code to authorize
municipalities to acquire, own, lease, improve and dispose of
properties in a metropolitan redevelopment area to the end
that such municipalities may be able to promote industry and
develop trade or other economic activity by inducing profit or
nonprofit corporations, federal governmental offices,
hospitals and manufacturing, industrial, commercial or
business enterprises to locate, expand or remain in such area,
to mitigate the serious threat of extensive unemployment in a
metropolitan redevelopment area and to secure and maintain a
balanced and stable economy in an area declared to be a slum
or blighted area.
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B. It is the further intent of the legislature to
authorize municipalities to acquire, own, lease, improve and
dispose of properties so that adequate medical care,
residential housing and facilities for the disposal of sewage
and solid waste may be provided; and industrial,
manufacturing, commercial or business activities may be begun
or expanded in these areas; furnishing water, energy and gas
may be provided; more adequate facilities for sports events
and activities and recreation activities, conventions and
trade shows may be provided; more parking facilities or
storage or training facilities may be provided; and more
adequate research, product-testing and administrative
facilities may be provided, all of which promote the public
health, welfare, safety, convenience and prosperity.
C. It is, therefore, the intention of the
legislature to vest municipalities with all powers, other than
the power of eminent domain, that may be necessary to enable
them to accomplish such purposes, which powers shall in all
respects be exercised for the benefit of the inhabitants of
this state and municipalities of the state for the promotion
of their health, safety, welfare, convenience and prosperity.
D. It is not intended by the Metropolitan
Redevelopment Code to authorize any municipality to operate
any manufacturing, industrial, commercial or business
enterprise or any research, product-testing or administrative
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facilities of such enterprise. Nor is it the intent of that
code to prohibit the operation by a municipality of
residential housing facilities, health care facilities, sewage
or solid waste disposal facilities or the furnishing of water,
sports or recreation facilities, convention or trade show
facilities, airports, public transportation facilities or
operations, parking facilities or storage or training
facilities by any municipality."
Section 5. Section 3-60A-10 NMSA 1978 (being Laws 1979,
Chapter 391, Section 10) is amended to read:
"3-60A-10. POWERS OF MUNICIPALITY.--A municipality
shall have all the powers, other than the power of eminent
domain, necessary or convenient to carry out and effectuate
the purposes and provisions of the Metropolitan Redevelopment
Code, including but not necessarily limited to the following
powers:
A. to undertake and carry out metropolitan
redevelopment projects within its area of operation, including
clearance and redevelopment, rehabilitation, conservation and
development activities and programs; to make, enter into and
execute contracts and other agreements and instruments
necessary or convenient to the exercise of its powers under
the Redevelopment Law; and to disseminate information
regarding slum clearance, prevention of blight and the
metropolitan redevelopment projects and areas;
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B. to provide, arrange or contract for the
furnishing or repair by a public or private person or agency
for services, privileges, works, streets, roads, public
utilities, public buildings or other facilities for or in
connection with a metropolitan redevelopment project; to,
within its area of operation, install, acquire, construct,
reconstruct, remodel, rehabilitate, maintain and operate
streets, utilities, parks, buildings, playgrounds and public
buildings, including but not limited to parking facilities,
transportation centers, public safety buildings and other
public improvements or facilities or improvements for public
purposes, as may be required by the municipality, the state or
a political subdivision of the state; to agree to conditions
that it may deem reasonable and appropriate that are attached
to federal financial assistance and imposed pursuant to
federal law, including conditions relating to the
determination of prevailing salaries or wages or compliance
with federal and state labor standards, compliance with
federal property acquisition policy and the provision of
relocation assistance in accordance with federal law in the
undertaking or carrying out of a metropolitan redevelopment
project; and to include in a contract let in connection with
the project provisions to fulfill these conditions as it may
deem reasonable and appropriate; provided, however, that all
purchases of personal property shall be in accordance with the
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Procurement Code;
C. within its area of operation, to inspect any
building or property in a metropolitan redevelopment area in
order to make surveys, appraisals, soundings or test borings
and to obtain an order for this purpose from a court of
competent jurisdiction in the event inspection is denied by
the property owner or occupant; to acquire, by purchase,
lease, option, gift, grant, bequest, devise or otherwise, any
real property or personal property for its administrative or
project purposes, together with any improvements thereon; to
hold, improve, clear or prepare for redevelopment any such
property; to mortgage, pledge, hypothecate or otherwise
encumber or dispose of any real property; to insure or provide
for the insurance of real or personal property or operations
of the municipality against risks or hazards, including the
power to pay premiums on that insurance; and to enter into
contracts necessary to effectuate the purposes of the
Metropolitan Redevelopment Code;
D. to invest metropolitan redevelopment project
funds held in reserve, sinking funds or other project funds
that are not required for immediate disbursement in property
or securities in which municipalities may legally invest funds
subject to their control; to redeem bonds as have been issued
pursuant to the Metropolitan Redevelopment Code at the
redemption price established in the bonds or to purchase the
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bonds at less than redemption price. Bonds so redeemed or
purchased shall be canceled;
E. to borrow or lend money subject to those
procedures and limitations as may be provided in the
constitution of New Mexico or the Municipal Code and to apply
for and accept advances, loans, grants, contributions and
other forms of financial assistance from the federal
government, the state, the county or other public body or from
sources, public or private, for the purposes of the
Metropolitan Redevelopment Code; and to give security as may
be required and subject to the provisions and limitations of
general law except as may otherwise be provided by the
Redevelopment Law and to enter into and carry out contracts in
connection with that law. A municipality may include in a
contract for financial assistance with the federal government
for a metropolitan redevelopment project conditions imposed
pursuant to federal law that the municipality may deem
reasonable or appropriate and that are not inconsistent with
the purposes of the Metropolitan Redevelopment Code;
F. within its area of operation, to make plans
necessary for the carrying out of the purposes of the
Metropolitan Redevelopment Code and to contract with any
person, public or private, in making and carrying out such
plans and to adopt or approve, modify and amend the plans.
The plans may include without limitation:
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(1) a general plan for redevelopment of the
metropolitan area as a whole;
(2) redevelopment plans for specific areas;
(3) plans for programs of voluntary or
assisted repair and rehabilitation of buildings and
improvements;
(4) plans for the enforcement of state and
local laws, codes and regulations relating to the use of land
and the use and occupancy of buildings and improvements and to
the compulsory repair, rehabilitation, demolition or removal
of buildings and improvements; and
(5) appraisals, title searches, surveys,
studies and other preliminary plans and work necessary to
prepare for the undertaking of metropolitan redevelopment
projects;
G. to develop, test and report methods and
techniques and carry out demonstrations and other activities
for the prevention and elimination of slums and urban blight
and to pay for, accept and use grants of funds from the
federal government for those purposes;
H. to prepare plans for the relocation of families
displaced from a metropolitan redevelopment area to the extent
essential for acquiring possession of and clearing the area or
its parts or permit the carrying out of the metropolitan
redevelopment project;
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I. to appropriate under existing authority the
funds and make expenditures necessary to carry out the
purposes of the Metropolitan Redevelopment Code and under
existing authority to levy taxes and assessments for such
purposes; to close, vacate, plan or replan streets, roads,
sidewalks, ways or other places; in accordance with applicable
law or ordinances, to plan or replan, zone or rezone any part
of the municipality or make exceptions from building
regulations; and to enter into agreements with a metropolitan
redevelopment agency vested with metropolitan redevelopment
project powers, which agreements may extend over any period,
notwithstanding any provision or rule of law to the contrary,
respecting action to be taken by the municipality pursuant to
the powers granted by the Redevelopment Law;
J. within its area of operation, to organize,
coordinate and direct the administration of the provisions of
the Redevelopment Law as they apply to the municipality in
order that the objective of remedying slum areas and blighted
areas and preventing the causes of those areas within the
municipality may be most effectively promoted and achieved and
to establish any new office of the municipality or to
reorganize existing offices as necessary;
K. to acquire real property that is appropriate
for the preservation or restoration of historic sites; the
beautification of urban land; the conservation of open spaces,
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natural resources and scenic areas; or the provision of
recreational opportunities; or that is to be used for public
purposes;
L. to engage in the following activities as part
of a metropolitan redevelopment project:
(1) acquisition, construction,
reconstruction or installation of public works, facilities and
site or other improvements, including but not limited to
neighborhood facilities, senior citizen centers, historic
properties, utilities, streets, street lights, water and sewer
facilities, including connections for residential users,
foundations and platforms for air-rights sites, pedestrian
malls and walkways, parks, playgrounds and other recreation
facilities, flood and drainage facilities, parking facilities,
solid waste disposal facilities and fire protection or health
facilities that serve designated areas;
(2) special projects directed to the removal
of materials and architectural barriers that restrict the
mobility and accessibility of elderly and disabled persons;
(3) provision of public services in the
metropolitan redevelopment area that are not otherwise
available in the area, including but not limited to the
provisions of public services directed to the employment,
economic development, crime prevention, child care, health,
drug abuse, welfare or recreation needs of the people who
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reside in the metropolitan redevelopment area;
(4) payment of the nonfederal share of any
federal grant-in-aid program to the municipality that will be
a part of a metropolitan redevelopment project;
(5) if federal funds are used in the project
to provide for payment of relocation costs and assistance to
individuals, families, businesses, organizations and farm
operations displaced as a direct result of a metropolitan
redevelopment project in accordance with applicable law
governing such payment;
(6) payment of reasonable administrative
costs and carrying charges related to the planning and
execution of plans and projects;
(7) economic and marketing studies to
determine the economic condition of an area and to determine
the viability of certain economic ventures proposed for the
metropolitan redevelopment area;
(8) issuance of bonds, grants or loans as
authorized by the Metropolitan Redevelopment Code in
accordance with the requirements of that code; and
(9) grants to nonprofit corporations, local
development corporations or entities organized under Section
301 (d) of the federal Small Business Investment Act of 1958
for the purposes of carrying out the provisions of the
Metropolitan Redevelopment Code;
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M. if payments are to be made by the municipality
or metropolitan redevelopment agency under the terms of a
contract for reconstruction or rehabilitation of private
property payments shall be made from a special fund created
for that purpose and shall not be paid directly to the
property owner but shall instead be paid to the contractor by
the municipality or agency from such fund upon proper
authorization of the property owner and notification that the
terms of the contract have been fulfilled. However, those
rehabilitation contracts shall be between the property owner
and the contractor after a sealed bidding procedure and award
of contract approved by the municipality has taken place;
N. in a metropolitan redevelopment project or
rehabilitation or conservation undertaking or activity, to
exercise the following powers in one or more metropolitan
redevelopment areas to include the elimination and prevention
of the development or spread of slums or blight and may
involve slum clearance and redevelopment in that area or
rehabilitation or conservation in that area or any combination
or part of those areas in accordance with a metropolitan
redevelopment plan and for undertakings or activities of a
municipality in a metropolitan redevelopment area to eliminate
the conditions that caused an area to be so designated and may
include the following:
(1) acquisition of real property within the
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metropolitan redevelopment area pursuant to any powers and for
purposes enumerated in the Metropolitan Redevelopment Code;
(2) clearing the land, grading the land and
replatting the land in accordance with the metropolitan
redevelopment plan; installation, construction or
reconstruction of roads, streets, gutters, sidewalks, storm
drainage facilities, water lines or water supply
installations, sewer lines and sewage disposal installations,
steam, gas and electric lines and installations, airport
facilities and construction of any other needed public
facilities or buildings whether on or off the site if deemed
necessary by the local governing body to prepare the land in
the metropolitan redevelopment area for residential,
commercial, industrial and public use in accordance with the
metropolitan redevelopment plan; and
(3) making the land available for
development by private enterprise or public agencies,
including sale, initial leasing, leasing or retention by the
municipality itself, at its fair market value for uses in
accordance with the metropolitan redevelopment plan for the
area;
O. the municipality is empowered in a metropolitan
redevelopment area to undertake slum clearance and
redevelopment that includes:
(1) acquisition of a slum area or a blighted
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area or portion thereof;
(2) demolition and removal of buildings and
improvements;
(3) installation, construction,
reconstruction, maintenance and operation of streets,
utilities, storm drainage facilities, curbs and gutters,
parks, playgrounds, single- or multi-family dwelling units,
buildings, public buildings, including but not limited to
parking facilities, transportation centers, safety buildings
and other improvements, necessary for carrying out in the area
the provisions of an approved plan for the area; and
(4) making the real property available for
development or redevelopment by private enterprise or public
agencies, including sale, leasing or retention by the
municipality itself, at its fair value for uses in accordance
with the metropolitan redevelopment area plan; and
P. to engage in rehabilitation or conservation
that includes the restoration and renewal of a slum or
blighted area or portion thereof in accordance with any
approved plan, by:
(1) carrying out plans for a program of
voluntary or compulsory repair and rehabilitation of buildings
or other improvements;
(2) acquisition of real property and
demolition or removal of buildings and improvements thereon
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where necessary to eliminate unhealthful, unsanitary or unsafe
conditions, lessen or increase density, eliminate obsolete or
other uses detrimental to the public welfare or to otherwise
remove or prevent the spread of blight or deterioration or to
provide land for needed public facilities;
(3) installation, construction or
reconstruction of streets, utilities, parks, playgrounds and
other improvements necessary for carrying out in the area the
provisions of the Metropolitan Redevelopment Code;
(4) the disposition of any property acquired
in such an area, including sale, leasing or retention by the
municipality itself, for uses in accordance with such an
approved plan;
(5) acquisition of real property in the area
which, under a plan, is to be repaired or rehabilitated;
(6) repair or rehabilitation of structures
within the area;
(7) power to resell repaired or
rehabilitated property;
(8) acquisition, without regard to any
requirement that the area be a slum or blighted area, of air-
rights in an area consisting principally of land on which is
located a highway, railway, bridge or subway tracks or tunnel
entrance or other similar facilities that have a blighting
influence on the surrounding area and over which air-rights
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sites are to be developed for the elimination of such
blighting influences; and
(9) making loans or grants or authorizing
the use of the proceeds of bonds issued pursuant to the
Metropolitan Redevelopment Code for the purpose of repairing,
remodeling, modifying or otherwise reconstructing a building
or buildings located in the metropolitan redevelopment area.
Such rehabilitation or conservation with use of funds expended
by authority of the Metropolitan Redevelopment Code or by
metropolitan revenue bonds authorized by that code shall be
authorized only after approval by the local governing body and
after it has been determined that such expenditure is in
accordance with the metropolitan redevelopment plan for that
area."
Section 6. Section 3-60A-15 NMSA 1978 (being Laws 1979,
Chapter 391, Section 15) is amended to read:
"3-60A-15. EXERCISE OF POWERS IN CARRYING OUT
PROJECTS.--
A. The local governing body may directly exercise
its metropolitan redevelopment project powers or it may, by
ordinance if it determines such action to be in the public
interest, elect to delegate the exercise of such powers to the
metropolitan redevelopment agency created pursuant to the
Redevelopment Law. If the local governing body so determines,
the agency shall be vested with all of the powers in the same
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manner as though all the powers were conferred on the agency
or authority instead of the municipality.
B. As used in this section, the term
"redevelopment project powers" includes any rights, powers,
functions and duties of a municipality authorized by the
Redevelopment Law except the following, which are reserved to
the local governing body; the power to:
(1) declare an area to be a slum or a
blighted area or combination thereof and to designate the area
as appropriate for a redevelopment project;
(2) approve or amend redevelopment plans;
(3) approve a general plan for the
municipality as a whole;
(4) make findings of necessity prior to
preparation of a metropolitan redevelopment plan as provided
in the Redevelopment Law and the findings and determinations
required prior to approval of a metropolitan redevelopment
plan or project as provided in the Redevelopment Law;
(5) issue general obligation bonds and
revenue bonds authorized in the Municipal Code;
(6) approve loans or grants;
(7) approve leases of more than one year's
duration;
(8) issue municipal redevelopment bonds; and
(9) appropriate funds and levy taxes and
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assessments."
Section 7. REPEAL.--Sections 3-46-1 through 3-46-42,
3-46-44, 3-46-45, 3-60-1 through 3-60-37 and 3-60A-11 NMSA
1978 (being Laws 1965, Chapter 300, Section 14-47-1, Laws
1971, Chapter 200, Section 2, Laws 1969, Chapter 221, Sections
1 through 20, Laws 1971, Chapter 200, Sections 5 through 7,
Laws 1965, Chapter 300, Sections 14-47-3 through 14-47-9, Laws
1969, Chapter 279, Section 1, Laws 1965, Chapter 300, Sections
14-47-10 through 14-47-18, Laws 1971, Chapter 200, Section 22,
Laws 1975, Chapter 333, Section 2, Laws 1975, Chapter 341,
Sections 1 through 37 and Laws 1979, Chapter 391, Section 11,
as amended) are repealed.
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