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F I S C A L I M P A C T R E P O R T
SPONSOR Swisstack
ORIGINAL DATE
LAST UPDATED
2/23/07
HB 738/aHCPAC
SHORT TITLE Public Disclosure of Child Info
SB
ANALYST Peery-Galon
APPROPRIATION (dollars in thousands)
Appropriation
Recurring
or Non-Rec
Fund
Affected
FY07
FY08
NFI
(Parenthesis ( ) Indicate Expenditure Decreases)
SOURCES OF INFORMATION
Responses Received From
Department of Public Safety (DPS)
New Mexico Sentencing Commission (NMSC)
Public Education Department (PED)
New Mexico Corrections Department (NMCD)
Administrative Office of the Courts (AOC)
Children, Youth and Families Department (CYFD)
No Responses Received From
New Mexico Municipal League
New Mexico Association of Counties
SUMMARY
Synopsis of HCPAC Amendment
The House Consumer and Public Affairs Committee amendment to House Bill 738 adds to page
2, line 3, after the word “child" the following language: “except information required to be
disclosed pursuant to the Sex Offender Registration and Notification Act." The language creates
an exception for information that would be posted on the Department of Public Safety sex
offender registry for a juvenile convicted as an adult for commission of a sex offense.
Synopsis of Original Bill
House Bill 738 requires that a state agency or a political subdivision of the state, including a
school district, county, municipality or home-rule municipality, not to disclose on a public access
pg_0002
House Bill 738/aHCPAC – Page
2
web site maintained by it any information on the following: an arrest or detention of a child,
delinquency proceedings for a child, an adjudication of a child, an adult sentence imposed on a
child, or social records pertaining to a child as provided by Section 32A-2-32 NMSA 1978.
SIGNIFICANT ISSUES
CYFD states when not strictly necessary for public safety, it is preferable to maintain the highest
level of confidentiality possible concerning children’s information, thereby protecting them from
unintended long-term stigma and leaving future opportunities for employment and other social
involvement open and available to them. CYFD notes this is based on the premise that youth
should be rehabilitated, not punished.
DPS maintains the state’s sex offender registry and, as such, information on certain juvenile
offenders that have been adjudicated as an adult. If the juvenile has been adjudicated as an adult
and meets the criteria for placement in the registry, it is possible the juvenile will be on the
state’s sex offender web site.
PED states that social records pertaining to a child prohibits disclosure of information already
deemed to be confidential records according to Section 32A-2-32 NMSA 1978 of the Children’s
Code. PED notes that disclosure of such records is a crime.
PED notes that given the proposed legislation does not impose consequences for disclosing the
information placed on a public access web site and that almost all of information prohibited by
this proposed legislation is public information that can lawfully be reported by the media or the
public, a court reviewing a violation might consider it to be “directory" as opposed to
“mandatory." PED references Board of Education v. Jennings, 98 N.M. 602, 610 (Ct. App.
1982) and Stokes v. Tatman, 11 N.M. 188 (S. Ct. 1990).
ADMINISTRATIVE IMPLICATIONS
NMCD states if the proposed legislation passes, the department will have to manually remove
the prohibited information from its web site. Another option is to assign an employee to develop
and implement a computer program to automatically exclude the information regarding minors
sentenced as adults from the department’s website.
OTHER SUBSTANTIVE ISSUES
CYFD states because adult convictions are a matter of pubic record, it is unclear legally whether
the proposed legislation can prevent the release of information concerning the imposition of an
adult sentence on a youth. CYFD reports the disposition of a youthful offender provides that
while the district court may sentence the child to less than the mandatory adult sentence, a
youthful offender given an adult sentence shall be treated as an adult offender and shall be
transferred to the legal custody of an agency responsible for incarcerations of persons sentenced
to adult sentences.
ALTERNATIVES
CYFD suggest incorporating the prohibition on the public dissemination of details concerning
the arrest or detention of a child, delinquency proceedings of a child, an adjudication of a child
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House Bill 738/aHCPAC – Page
3
and social records pertaining to a child into Section 32A-2-32 NMSA 1978, and address the adult
sentencing of a youth in a separate provision, such as amending the current provision on
disposition of a youthful offender to include the proposed prohibition on release of this
information by public entity web sites.
RPG/mt