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F I S C A L I M P A C T R E P O R T
SPONSOR McCoy
ORIGINAL DATE
LAST UPDATED
2/17/07
HB 743
SHORT TITLE Income For Public Assistance Eligibility
SB
ANALYST Weber
ESTIMATED ADDITIONAL OPERATING BUDGET IMPACT (dollars in thousands)
FY07
FY08
FY09 3 Year
Total Cost
Recurring
or Non-Rec
Fund
Affected
Total
Indeterminate
Recurring General
Fund
(Parenthesis ( ) Indicate Expenditure Decreases)
SOURCES OF INFORMATION
LFC Files
SUMMARY
Synopsis of Bill
House Bill 743 amends Section 27-2-1 NMSA 1978 of the Public Assistance Act to delete
extraneous numerical sections and citations included in the act.
In addition, the bill proposes to exclude the income of biological grandparents in determining
eligibility for public benefits. As placed in Section 27-2-1 NMSA 1978 of the Public Assistance
Act would impact all public assistance programs under the act.
FISCAL IMPLICATIONS
HSD notes that the bill makes no appropriation for additional program funding, administration
costs or services.
The result will be an increase in eligible households above of the federal poverty level for some
Human Services Department (HSD) programs. Because no appropriation is included this would
have a significant impact on the Temporary Assistance for Needy Families (TANF) block grant.
The TANF program is targeted to households with gross income less than 85% of the poverty
level (FPL). By excluding income of certain individuals whose income is above the 85% FPL
would have a significant impact on the appropriation targeted for low income households. This
may require additional program funding or require a reduction in benefits for households below
the 85% FPL eligibility level.
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House Bill 743 – Page
2
2000 census data shows there are over 40,000 children living with grandparents and identifies
22,974 grandparents in New Mexico caring for their grandchildren. By excluding the income of
the biological grandparents this would increase the TANF caseload above the current level of
approximately 15,000 cases. The current monthly cash assistance payment per individual is
approximately $120. If half of the 40,000 were eligible at this level of payment the monthly cost
totals $2.4 million, $28.8 million annually. This compares to a current annual cash assistance
projection of approximately $60 million.
As an alternative to reducing cash assistance payments or increasing funding there could be a
reduction in services offered under the TANF program. As an example, over $32 million is
allocated for child care for TANF eligible participants. This relatively large allocation could be
reduced to accommodate the new cash assistance cases. This is only one example as there are
also transportation services, domestic violence services and substance abuse among others that
could be reduced.
HSD adds the automated eligibility system (ISD2) will require an estimated $80,000 (693
programming hours) to meet this statutory change recommended in HB 743.
SIGNIFICANT ISSUES
HSD notes potential conflict with a variety of federal and state programs. HB 743 would be in
violation of federal requirements of the Food Stamp Program CFR 7.273.1(iii) provides a child
under 18 years of age who lives with and is under the parental control of a household member
other than their parent must be considered to be under the parental control for purposes of this
provision. The biological grandparent if the legal guardian would be considered to have parental
control of the child and be financially responsible for the care of that child.
HB 743 is also in direct conflict with the Sections 27-2B.3 A & J NMSA 1978 of the New
Mexico Works Act and Section 27-2D.2 A & J NMSA of the Education Works Act that define
the parent as the natural parent, adoptive parent, stepparent or legal guardian and define benefit
groups as a pregnant woman or a group of people that includes a dependent child, all of that
dependent child’s full, half, step- or adopted siblings living with the dependent child’s parent or
relative within the fifth degree of consanguinity and the parent with whom the children live. The
conflict will produce confusion to the continued implementation of the programs.
ADMINISTRATIVE IMPLICATIONS
The additional caseload would require more FTE. HSD does not offer an estimated cost.
TECHNICAL ISSUES
It should be noted that grandparents may also be defined as parent based on adoption, resulting
in additional conflict. The legal parent in certain situations where adoption has occurred by the
biological grandparent would require the exclusion the income for eligibility, services and
benefit levels.
MW/csd