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F I S C A L I M P A C T R E P O R T
SPONSOR Park
ORIGINAL DATE
LAST UPDATED
2/18/2007
HB 500
SHORT TITLE Reduction in School Class Sizes
SB
ANALYST Aguilar
APPROPRIATION (dollars in thousands)
Appropriation
Recurring
or Non-Rec
Fund
Affected
FY07
FY08
$150,000.0
Recurring
General Fund
(Parenthesis ( ) Indicate Expenditure Decreases)
Relates to SB 558
Relates to appropriations in the General Appropriation Act
SOURCES OF INFORMATION
LFC Files
Responses Received From
Public Education Department (PED)
Office of Education Accountability (OEA)
SUMMARY
Synopsis of Bill
House Bill 500 appropriates $150 million from the general fund to the Public Education
Department for distribution through the state equalization guarantee to support class size
reductions.
FISCAL IMPLICATIONS
The appropriation of $150 million contained in this bill is a recurring expense to the general
fund. Any unexpended or unencumbered balance remaining at the end of fiscal year 2008 shall
revert to the general fund.
SIGNIFICANT ISSUES
HB-500 provides for the following maximum class sizes:
pg_0002
House Bill 500 – Page
2
Kindergarten shall not exceed fifteen students and any teacher with a class load of ten to
fifteen shall be entitled to a full-time educational assistant.
Grade one with a class load of twelve or more shall be entitled to a full-time educational
assistant.
Grade two through five shall not exceed a class load of fifteen students.
Grades six through eight shall not exceed eighteen per class with a maximum teaching load
of ninety students.
Grade nine through twelve shall not exceed twenty-four students per class with a maximum
teaching load of one hundred and twenty students.
Students receiving Special education in a regular classroom for any part of the day shall be
counted in the calculation of the individual teachers class load. Students not receiving
services in a regular classroom shall not be counted in the individual class load.
HB-500 also makes provisions for the Secretary of Education to grant waivers to class size
requirements if school districts demonstrate there are no portable classrooms available; no other
available sources of funding exist to meet its need for additional classrooms; the school district is
planning alternatives to increase building capacity for implementation within one year; and the
parents of the students affected by the waiver are notified. Waivers are applied for annually, and
a waiver shall not be granted for more than two consecutive years.
The Office of Educational Accountability notes that HB-500 changes the current language in
Section 22-10A-20 NMSA 1978 from “average" class load requirements to actual numbers of
students per class per grade level. Currently, schools achieved compliance in class load
requirements because the word “average" in the legislation allowed for flexibility in building
class rosters. For example, in a school that has five first grade classrooms, four second grade
classrooms, and five third grade classrooms the first grade classrooms may have 15 students each
for a total of 75 students, the second grade classrooms may have 23 per classroom for a total of
92 children, and the third grade classrooms may have 19 per classroom for 95 students. The
second grade classrooms class size limits are over the state requirements, but averaged together
the school would meet the current requirements of 20 students per class.
OEA further notes by removing the ability to average student counts the legislation will take the
flexibility away from building principals in how class rosters are constructed based on number of
students enrolled at each grade level. For example, if a small school has 35 kindergarten students
and two kindergarten teachers, under HB-500, the principal would have to employ 3
kindergarten teachers even though the number of students would not support an additional FTE.
In 2003, the Public School Capital Outlay Council implemented a new standards-based process
for prioritizing public school capital needs in New Mexico. This process ranks every school
building in the state by relative need, from greatest to least. The rankings are based on nine
different categories with differentiated weights. Categories of higher importance are weighted
higher, which push those projects to a higher priority on the list. The highest weighted category
is Life, Health and Safety and the second highest is Space. Implementing the requirements of
this bill may not cause any changes in these rankings because schools are measured on total
student population and total square footage; this bill will not change either of these factors.
However, it is possible the majority of schools that currently meet capacity requirements, and
probably those that are overcrowded, will need additional classrooms to meet the new required
pupil-teacher ratio (PTR). Portable classrooms may be a potential short-term solution.
pg_0003
House Bill 500 – Page
3
TECHNICAL ISSUES
In elementary schools that have sixth grade students, will the same maximum class size
requirement of 15 students apply.
PA/nt