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F I S C A L I M P A C T R E P O R T
SPONSOR Gutierrez
ORIGINAL DATE
LAST UPDATED
2/03/2007
3/15/2007 HB
208/aHEC/aHAFC
/aHFl
SHORT TITLE School Physical Education Programs & Costs
SB
ANALYST Baca/Aguilar
APPROPRIATION (dollars in thousands)
Appropriation
Recurring
or Non-Rec
Fund
Affected
FY07
FY08
** NFI
Recurring
General Fund
(Parenthesis ( ) Indicate Expenditure Decreases)
** Appropriations contained in House Bill 2 are sufficient to implement the provisions of
this bill with no additional funding.
Relates to SB 232
Relates to Appropriation in the General Appropriation Act
SOURCES OF INFORMATION
LFC Files
Responses Received From
Public Education Department (PED)
SUMMARY
Synopsis of HFl Amendment
House Floor Amendment #1 to House Bill 208 as amended strikes the House Education
Committee amendment #1. This change implements a portion of the original language in the
bill. The amendment provides for PED to first implement programs in schools that have the
highest percentage of students eligible for free and reduced lunch.
Synopsis of HAFC Amendment
The House Appropriations and Finance Committee amendment to House Bill 208 as amended
strikes the phase-in provisions of the bill and provides for the department to annually determine
the programs and consequent number of students in elementary physical education that will
receive state financial support in accordance with the funding available in each school year.
The amendment also strikes the appropriation. Sufficient funding is contained in House Bill 2 to
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House Bill 208/aHEC/aHAFC/aHFl – Page
2
implement the provisions of this bill with no additional funding for FY08.
Synopsis of HEC Amendment
The House Education Committee amendment to House Bill 208 exempts elementary physical
education programs previously approved in the 2006-2007 school year from meeting the
approval criteria provided for in the bill.
The amendment makes non-substantive technical changes to language.
SIGNIFICANT ISSUES
HB208/aHEC requires PED to evaluate programs based on performance standards for
elementary physical education. In 2006 PED adopted performance standards for physical
education which require all schools to align curriculum to these performance standards and help
ensure quality physical education is delivered.
Synopsis of Original Bill
House Bill 208 appropriates $8,000,000 from the general fund to the state equalization guarantee
distribution for expenditure in FYO8 and amends the Public School Finance Act to allow
formula funding for elementary physical education in grades K-6. The bill adds physical
education program units and charter school student activities program units into the program cost
calculation and provides for a four year phase-in period for elementary physical education and
provides that, effective with the 2010-2011 school year, all of the state’s eligible students shall
be in an elementary physical education program.
FISCAL IMPLICATIONS
The appropriation of $8,000,000 contained in this bill is a recurring expense to the general fund.
Any unexpended or unencumbered balance remaining at the end of FY08 shall not revert to the
general fund.
SIGNIFICANT ISSUES
The bill provides for a four year phase-in of the physical education program in grades K-6 and
allows twenty-five percent of the student population served each year. The PED enrollment
figures for SY 2005-2006 indicate there were approximately 172,000 children in grades K-6.
Therefore, roughly 43,000 K-6 students could be added to the program each year for the four-
year implementation in the state’s 449 elementary schools.
According to the Office of Education Accountability (OEA) both the PED and Legislative
Education Study Committee (LESC), project the implementation will include a teacher to student
ratio of 1 to 250. This implementation will result in a teacher holding 10 classes per day. The
resulting configuration would not necessarily be the assignment of one teacher per school, rather
it would be contingent upon school population size. Total projected costs for the four-year
phase-in developed by the PED and the LESC are $28,984,443 and $30,357,990 respectively.
Differences in the projected costs are attributed to the differences in the assumptions used by the
two agencies.
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House Bill 208/aHEC/aHAFC/aHFl – Page
3
The OEA reports the Executive recommendation for the four-year implementation of elementary
physical education is approximately $26.2 million or $6.562 million for each of the four years.
SIGNIFICANT ISSUES
The OEA notes that the impetus for elementary physical education programs came from one the
Governor’s initiatives and is directed at helping to overcome the contagion of diabetes currently
apparent in the Unites States generally and New Mexico specifically. According to the Centers
for Disease Control (CDC) being overweight or obese can result in various serious health
problems including: diabetes, high blood pressure, heart disease, stroke, depression, liver
disease, asthma and other maladies. In turn, these maladies, especially diabetes, contribute to
complications such as amputation, end-stage renal disease, and blindness. The NM Department
of Health (DOH) indicates that Type II disease, previously considered an adult disease, has risen
dramatically in adolescents and children. Regular exercise is one way of combating obesity
while physical education is considered a critical vehicle in helping individuals develop healthy
lifelong habits and that can serve as deterrents to the diseases cited above.
The OEA cites a DOH report that New Mexico that an estimated $324 million is spent in New
Mexico annually on adult obesity-attributable medical expenditures. The report indicates that
“The potential to decrease these expenses through obesity prevention is a significant motivator
for policy makers and public health professionals alike."
The DOH reports that:
57 percent of adults are overweight or obese;
24 percent of high school students or at risk for overweight; and
22 percent of low-income children between 2-5 years of age who participate in federally-
funded nutrition programs are overweight or at risk for overweight.
PERFORMANCE IMPLICATIONS
This bill will positively impact the PED’S performance measures as they relate to
implementation of the governor’s obesity prevention initiative.
ADMINISTRATIVE IMPLICATIONS
The PED will be responsible for implementing the program along with collecting data and
determining the distribution of the appropriation to eligible elementary schools.
CONFLICT, DUPLICATION, COMPANIONSHIP, RELATIONSHIP
HB 208 duplicates SB 232.
TECHNICAL ISSUES
The PED submits the following recommendations:
on page 2 lines 2-5. B: As used in this section, "elementary physical education" means
eligible physical education programs that serve students in kindergarten through grade six
in a public school classified by the department as an elementary school."
on page 4 lines 1-3 (1): "’eligible students’ means students in kindergarten through grade
six in a public school classified by the department as an elementary school." The
wording of these definitions could limit the funding to only those elementary schools that
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House Bill 208/aHEC/aHAFC/aHFl – Page
4
have kindergarten through sixth grade. The intent is to fund all elementary schools for
physical education regardless of the configuration of the school (i.e. K-5 school, or just a
grade 4 school). See Amendment below.
Elementary schools teach by programs not by “courses" (see SB 232 page 5 line 10). See
Amendment below.
AMENDMENTS
The PED proposes the following changes:
Amend page 2 lines 4-5 as follows:
serve students in kinde
rgarten through grade six in a public school classified by the
d
e
partment as an elementary school
enrolled in an elementary school as classified by the
department, starting in kindergarten.
"
Amend page 4 lines 2-3 as follows:
kindergarten through grade si
x in a public school classified by the department as an
el
e
mentary school
enrolled in an elementary school as classified by the department,
starting in kindergarten.
"
Amend page 5 line 10 as follows:
include the elementary physical education courses
program
being taught
POSSIBLE QUESTIONS
This bill requires that physical education teachers be certified. Does the state have the
teachers necessary to carry out the provisions of the bill.
Do elementary schools have the facilities to implement physical education programs.
PA/LRB/nt