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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
1/26/07
2/27/07 HB 297/HJCS
SHORT TITLE Conference Committees as Public Meetings
SB
ANALYST Wilson
ESTIMATED ADDITIONAL OPERATING BUDGET IMPACT (dollars in thousands)
FY07
FY08
FY09 3 Year
Total Cost
Recurring
or Non-Rec
Fund
Affected
Total
$0.1
General
Fund
(Parenthesis ( ) Indicate Expenditure Decreases)
Relates to SB 288 and SB 322
SOURCES OF INFORMATION
LFC Files
Responses Received From
Attorney General’s Office (AGO)
SUMMARY
Synopsis of Bill
The House Judiciary Committee Substitute to House Bill 297 will amend NMSA Section 10-15-
2 of the open Meetings Act to:
Unless otherwise provided by joint house and senate rule, all meetings of any committee
or policy-making body of the legislature held for the purpose of discussing public
business or for the purpose of taking any action within the authority of or the delegated
authority of the committee or body are declared to be public meetings open to the public
at all times.
The open meeting provisions do not apply to matters relating to personnel or matters
adjudicatory in nature or to investigative or quasi-judicial proceedings relating to ethics
and conduct or to a caucus of a political party.
Require “reasonable notice" of meetings to be given to the public via publication on the
daily calendars or by the presiding officer in each house at the time the meeting is
scheduled.
pg_0002
House Bill 297/HJCS – Page
2
This bill defines “meeting" to mean a gathering of a quorum of the members of a standing
committee or a conference committee held for the purpose of taking any action within the
authority of the committee or body.
FISCAL IMPLICATIONS
There will be a minimal administrative cost for statewide update, distribution and documentation
of statutory changes. New laws, amendments to existing laws and new hearings have the
potential to increase caseloads in the courts, thus requiring additional resources to handle the
increase.
SIGNIFICANT ISSUES
Proponents of the bill may cite the mission statement of the Open Meetings Act that say a
representative government is dependent upon an informed electorate and all persons are entitled
to the greatest possible information regarding the affairs of government and the official acts of
those officers and employees who represent them. Section 10-15-1 (A).
Proponents may also cite to Article IV, Section 12 of the state constitution requiring all sessions
of each house shall be public to mean that the legislature should not be holding closed
conference committee meetings, or closed legislative committee meetings on matters relating to
bills not yet presented to either house or general appropriation bills.
Opponents of the bill may cite to a precept of constitutional law that one legislature cannot bind
another (with a few exceptions relating to compacts and contracts), and the legislative branch is
free to conduct its own internal proceedings without interference from the courts. Given these
precepts, it is unclear whether state laws governing the conduct of legislative proceedings are
binding on future legislatures, or even the legislative body enacting the law. In addition,
opponents may point out that the legislature has already adopted rules governing the conduct of
its meetings which appear to conflict with this bill and other provisions in the Open Meetings
Act.
HB297/HJCS appears to allow the public to attend meetings of legislative conference
committees. Those committees are governed by Joint Rule 3-1 and are convened when one house
refuses to concur in the amendments made to a bill in the other house, and the amending house
refuses to recede from its amendments.
Some argue good public policy requires that conference committees should be fully open to the
public, and that will help guard against new matters being inserted in conference reports.
Others argue that opening conference committees will merely drive sensitive discussions
elsewhere in secret and inhibit the frank exchange of ideas needed to resolve disputes in
conference committees.
ADMINISTRATIVE IMPLICATIONS
If there are additional enforcement actions, the AGO or a local district attorney office may need
to commit additional resources and staffing to this issue.
pg_0003
House Bill 297/HJCS – Page
3
DUPLICATION/RELATIONSHIP
HB 297/HJCS relates to SB 288 and SB 322.
DW/csd