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F I S C A L I M P A C T R E P O R T
SPONSOR HJC
ORIGINAL DATE
LAST UPDATED
2/20/07
3/1/07 HB CS/140/aHAFC
SHORT TITLE Family Opportunity Accounts Act Eligibility
SB
ANALYST Lucero
APPROPRIATION (dollars in thousands)
Appropriation
Recurring
or Non-Rec
Fund
Affected
FY07
FY08
$0.0
Recurring
General Fund
(Parenthesis ( ) Indicate Expenditure Decreases)
Relates to Appropriation in the General Appropriation Act
ESTIMATED ADDITIONAL OPERATING BUDGET IMPACT (dollars in thousands)
FY07
FY08
FY09 3 Year
Total Cost
Recurring
or Non-Rec
Fund
Affected
Total
Minimal Minimal Minimal Recurring
Individual
Development
Account
Fund
(Parenthesis ( ) Indicate Expenditure Decreases)
SOURCES OF INFORMATION
LFC Files
Responses Received From
Office of Workforce Training and Development (OWTD)
New Mexico Higher Education Department (HED)
SUMMARY
Synopsis of HAFC Amendment
The House Appropriations and Finance Committee Amendment strikes language that limits use
of the account of an indigent child to attend school; therefore, making the restriction the same for
all children. The amendment further requires a foster child or an indigent child complete high
school or their GED before using an account, unless a program administrator has approved use
for an allowable serious emergency.
pg_0002
CS/House Bill 140/aHAFC – Page
2
Synopsis of Original Bill
House Judiciary Committee Substitute for House Bill 140 would make several changes to the
current Family Opportunity Accounts Act (FOAA) Program:
Re-name the program to the Individual Development Accounts (IDA) Program; and
Lower the age under the definition of a child in foster care as an eligible individual from
age 16 to 15.
Add a Subsection (C) to Sec. 58-30-4, to read, “ELIGIBLE INDIVIDUALS, C. A child
is an eligible individual if the child: (1) is at least fifteen years of age and not more than
eighteen years of age; (2) is a member of a family whose members are all indigents;"
Requires those serving on the individual development account council obtain subject
matter expertise through attendance at conferences and workshops related to asset
building strategies and the payment of per diem for attendance at meetings, conferences,
and workshops.
Restrict the uses of IDA funds for (C) above (15 – 18 year olds) to costs related to post-
secondary education.
Corrects gender specific language
FISCAL IMPLICATIONS
House Judiciary Committee Substitute for HB 140 contains no funding for the FOAA program.
HAFC substitute for HB2 contains $250,000 for the FOAA program.
The original Act limits the funding for administrative costs to 5 percent of the individual
development account fund. The 5 percent limit may be too limiting to properly administer the
program. Most other states, allow for a 10 percent administrative cost. The ability to pay
Individual development council members additional or per diem, as proposed in the bill, may be
difficult to impossible given the 5 percent administrative cost limit. For FY08, given the HAFC
appropriation of $250,000 for FOAA, the administrative allocation will be $12,500 to administer
the program and pay per diem.
SIGNIFICANT ISSUES
House Judiciary Committee Substitute for House Bill 140 adds a new eligibility category; a child
aged 13 to 18 who is born in New Mexico, is a citizen or legal resident of the United States, is a
resident of New Mexico, and is a member of family whose members are all indigents. Prior to
this, eligibility was limited to those aged 18 or older unless the participant was a foster child in
which case eligibility was established at age 16 or older.
The new eligibility category, children aged 13 – 18 who are members of a family who is
indigent, is restricted in another section of the bill on how the money from the account may be
used. HB 140 limits the use of the money for children aged 13 – 18 to expenses to attend an
approved post-secondary or vocational educational institution, and includes payment for tuition,
pg_0003
CS/House Bill 140/aHAFC – Page
3
books, supplies and equipment required for courses. This restriction does not apply to children
in foster care aged 15 or older. It is unclear why indigent children accounts are restricted while
foster children accounts are not.
OWTD issued an RFP in early FY07 to begin implementing the program. Currently, three
contracts have been executed for more than $1.4 million under the program, and contractors have
begun enrolling and have enrolled participants.
PERFORMANCE IMPLICATIONS
None identified at this time
ADMINISTRATIVE IMPLICATIONS
There is a minimal impact to OWTD to implement the eligibility changes. There may be an
additional cost to pay per diem to the individual development account council for attendance at
required meetings, authorized conferences and workshops. Currently, the Act only allows 5
percent of the individual development fund to be spent administratively, which creates a limited
funding stream.
It is unclear if OWTD and/or the individual development fund will be required to pay for
individual development account council members to become subject matter experts. The bill is
proposing to pay per diem for attendance at a conference but it is unclear who pays for
conference fees, courses, etc.
CONFLICT, DUPLICATION, COMPANIONSHIP, RELATIONSHIP
None identified at this time
TECHNICAL ISSUES
The bill proposes to expand an existing provision of law that provides that payments under the
program may be made only through vouchers signed by the director. The proposed modification
adds authorization for the director’s designee to also sign vouchers. Under the DFA SHARE
financial system, no signatures whatsoever are required on vouchers because SHARE vouchers
are strictly electronic records and no hard-copy vouchers exist in the system. In addition, no
electronic signatures exist for vouchers in SHARE. Thus the proposed expansion of the
provision, and the provision itself, are invalid under the SHARE financial system.
OTHER SUBSTANTIVE ISSUES
House Judiciary Committee Substitute for House Bill 140 changes the age requirement for an
eligible child from 13 to 15 years old and the age requirement for an eligible foster child from 16
to 15 years old. Also, language requiring an eligible foster child to have been born in New
Mexico was removed.
pg_0004
CS/House Bill 140/aHAFC – Page
4
ALTERNATIVES
Make the restriction on the use of the accounts the same for all children under the age of 18. The
bill proposes to limit use of the accounts of an indigent child to attend school while foster
children can use the accounts to purchase a home, car, start a business, go to school, etc.
DL/mt