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F I S C A L I M P A C T R E P O R T
SPONSOR Trujillo
ORIGINAL DATE
LAST UPDATED
2/02/07
2/12/07 HB 546/aHBIC/aHJC
SHORT TITLE Manufactured Housing Division Powers & Duties
SB
ANALYST C. Sanchez
REVENUE (dollars in thousands)
Estimated Revenue
Recurring
or Non-Rec
Fund
Affected
FY07
FY08
FY09
$100.0*
$100.0* Recurring General Fund
(Parenthesis ( ) Indicate Revenue Decreases)
* Amount shown is estimate submitted by RLD.
SOURCES OF INFORMATION
LFC Files
Responses Received From
Regulation and Licensing Department (RLD)
Office of the Attorney General (OAG)
SUMMARY
Synopsis of HJC Amendment
The House Judiciary Committee amendment of Section 2. Section 60-14-19 NMSA 1978 (being
Laws 1983, Chapter 295, Section 24) as follows:
D. The director may issue a license to an applicant . . . if:
(2) the director is satisfied that no incident of unlicensed work:
(a) caused monetary damage to any person; or
(b) resulted in an unresolved consumer complaint being filed against
the applicant or the division
Striking the words “or the division" appears to be clean-up language since an unresolved
consumer complaint against the division should not hold up an application.
E. Any unlicensed person who has performed unlicensed work may settle the
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House Bill 546/aHBIC/aHJC – Page
2
administrative
claims against that unlicensed person without becoming licensed if the claims
arise from that person’s first offense and that person pays an administrative fee . . .
Synopsis of HBIC Amendment
House Bill 546 amends Section 60-14-4 NMSA 1978 of the Manufacturing Housing Act (“Act").
The amended language is intended to clarify there will be no fiscal impact. The Regulation and
Licensing Department intends to use existing personnel to enforce the provisions specified in
HB546. The language as it previously read appeared to imply the Department/Division was
seeking additional FTE’s to accomplish the goal of investigating and prosecuting unlicensed
activity.
Synopsis of Original Bill
House Bill 546 amends Section 60-14-4 NMSA 1978 of the Manufacturing Housing Act (“Act"),
to allow the Superintendent of the Regulation and Licensing Department to employ personnel
necessary to investigate and institute legal action against licensees and individuals (unlicensed
manufactured housing contractors) violating the Act.
Currently, the Manufactured Housing Act requires administrative actions against manufactured
housing licensees (dealers, brokers, salespersons, repairmen, installers, and manufacturers) to be
instituted by the Office of the Attorney General. HB 546 would allow these administrative
actions to be pursued by Manufactured Housing Division staff.
HB 546 also amends the Act to provide an internal department/division process through which
an unlicensed manufactured housing contractor may administratively resolve criminal
misdemeanor charges against him/her and become licensed—therefore allowing person(s) to
bypass a criminal action by resolving the complaint with Manufactured Housing Division
directly.
According to RLD, before being allowed to pursue such an administrative settlement of
unlicensed charges and licensure, the following must be achieved:
1.
The Director of the Manufactured Housing Division must be satisfied no incident of
unlicensed work caused monetary damage to a consumer, or otherwise resulted in an
unresolved consumer complaint (filed with the Manufactured Housing Division), and
2.
The unlicensed contractor must pay an administrative penalty/fee as follows:
In an amount up to 10% of the contract price or the value of the unlicensed work
(as determined appropriate according to the discretion of the Manufactured
Housing Committee); or
In an amount between 1% and 5% of the total bid amount- if the work was bid for
by the unlicensed contractor, but not awarded to and performed by the unlicensed
contractor.
HB 546 states that an unlicensed contractor may, on a first offense only, resolve claims (for
unlicensed work) without becoming licensed. However, to do this, the administrative penalty
outlined above must be paid.
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House Bill 546/aHBIC/aHJC – Page
3
Finally, HB 546 provides for the assessment of an additional administrative fee in the amount of
10%, to address compliance activity costs incurred by the Manufactured Housing Division staff.
FISCAL IMPLICATIONS
It is expected that the administrative penalties collected through this new Manufactured Housing
Division process will result in income to the General Fund. It is difficult to predict the amount
of income to the General Fund because it is likely that because of increased compliance
enforcement efforts on the part of the department/division, the number of cases pursued and
resolved will increase over the course of the next several years.
SIGNIFICANT ISSUES
The bill does not define its use of the term “claims", or the phrase “settle the claims against that
unlicensed person". By authorizing unlicensed persons to “settle claims" against them without
becoming licensed, the bill appears to be allowing those persons to perform additional unlicensed
work in order to remedy situations. In fact, the bill appears to prevent licensure of unlicensed
persons if their work caused monetary damage to any person or resulted in an unresolved
consumer complaint. Allowing continued unlicensed activity by persons ineligible for licensure
may be construed as a limited exception from the licensing requirements of the act.
The bill would allow division investigators to institute “legal action in the name of the division to
enforce the provisions of Section 60-14-19 NMSA 1978." That section contains penalty
provisions which include criminal penalties, civil penalties upon petition to the court by the
Attorney General, and penalties under the Unfair Trade Practices Act for warranty violations.
Since the division is state agency, those investigators would have to be licensed attorneys
receiving commissions as Special Assistant Attorney’s General from the Attorney General.
Otherwise they may not represent the state in judicial proceedings.
PERFORMANCE IMPLICATIONS
The proposed provisions fit into the purpose of the Manufactured Housing Division, which
includes precluding/mitigating harm to consumers.
ADMINISTRATIVE IMPLICATIONS
The Regulation and Licensing Department is currently planning to absorb the additional
staff/resource costs associated with implementing this new Manufactured Housing Division
administrative process into its (RLD’s) existing staff and budget resources.
As an increased number of cases are pursued and resolved over the next several years, it is
expected that the Manufactured Housing Division may require additional staff and budget
resources. The Regulation and Licensing Department may be capable of absorbing the initial
phases of implementation of this administrative process into its existing staff and budget
resources. However, as the program continues to grow and with successful enforcement,
additional Manufactured Housing Division resources may be necessary.
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House Bill 546/aHBIC/aHJC – Page
4
TECHNICAL ISSUES
New Section 60-14-19D(2)(b) refers to consumer complaints filed “against the applicant or the
division". It is unclear as to the circumstances which could result in a consumer complaint being
filed “against" the division.
The bill places its new licensure and claims settling provisions in NMSA Section 60-14-19,
which is the penalty section of the act. It does not amend or refer to NMSA Section 60-14-7
which prohibits unlicensed activity.
OTHER SUBSTANTIVE ISSUES
RLD holds that given their other significant responsibilities, most law enforcement agencies, the
Office of the Attorney General and most District Attorneys do not have the resources to
investigate and prosecute these related crimes, particularly cases involving unlicensed dealers,
salesperson, broker, repairman, manufacturer or installers.
This HB 546 will allow RLD to address manufactured housing matters without having to go
through these other judicial agencies.
The proposed legislative language is modeled after the administrative process available to the
Construction Industries Division of the Regulation and Licensing Department. The process has
proven to be an effective and expeditious manner of resolution of unlicensed contracting matters
for the Construction Industries Division.
WHAT WILL BE THE CONSEQUENCES OF NOT ENACTING THIS BILL
Status Quo
POSSIBLE QUESTIONS.
Will consumers benefit from the changes proposed in HB 546.
CS/nt:csd