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F I S C A L I M P A C T R E P O R T
SPONSOR Begaye
ORIGINAL DATE
LAST UPDATED
2-14-07
3/01/07 HB 781/aHHGAC
SHORT TITLE Office of Water Infrastructure Development
SB
ANALYST Aubel
ESTIMATED ADDITIONAL OPERATING BUDGET IMPACT (dollars in thousands)
FY07
FY08
FY09 3 Year
Total Cost
Recurring
or Non-Rec
Fund
Affected
Total
*See
narrative
.01* Indeterminate Recurring General
Fund
(Parenthesis ( ) Indicate Expenditure Decreases)
Relates to HB 2, HB 7, HB 55, HB 228, HB 230, HB 268 and SB 100, HB 274, HB 330, HB
462, HB 859, SB 485, SB 703, and SB 710
Conflicts with HB 53, HB 1179, SB1058, SB 1060 and HB 780
Companion with SB 639 and SB 749
SOURCES OF INFORMATION
LFC Files
Responses Received From
Department of Finance Authority (DFA)
New Mexico Environment Department (NMED)
Office of the State Engineer/Interstate Stream Commission (OSE/ISC)
New Mexico Finance Authority (NMFA)
Attorney General Office (AGO)
Energy, Minerals, and Natural Resources Department (EMNRD)
SUMMARY
Synopsis of HHGAC Amendment
The House Health and Government Affairs Committee Amendment to House Bill 781 would
change current references to the New Mexico Finance Authority in the Water Project Finance
Act (NMSA Sections 72-4A-1 to 72-4A-10) to the new Office of Water Infrastructure
Development with regard to the following:
Providing staff support for the Water Trust Board;
Developing application procedures and forms for qualifying entities to apply for
grants and loans from the water project fund;
Approving plans and specifications for a water project; and
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Determining if issuance of revenue bonds is necessary to replenish the principal
balance of the water project fund.
The amendment also makes minor stylistic changes.
Synopsis of Original Bill
House Bill 781 would create a new administrative unit known as the Office of Water
Infrastructure Development (OWID), which would be administratively attached to the
Department of Finance and Administration (DFA).
The primary duties and responsibilities of the OWID would be as follows:
1.
Provide staff support to and implement policy decisions of the Water Trust Board (WTB)
pursuant to the Water Project Finance Act;
2.
Analyze the development of water projects;
3.
Monitor the implementation of water projects;
4.
Develop and administer a uniform application for water project financing, including
applications from the water project fund;
5.
Make loans and grants to qualifying entities for water projects;
6.
Coordinate financing of water projects from all sources and develop qualifying
conditions for funding;
7.
Administer technical assistance to water and wastewater systems and acequias;
8.
Coordinate reviews of all sanitary surveys and water system inspection reports with the
Drinking Water Bureau of NMED;
9.
Coordinate review of water projects with the Water Rights Division of the OSE; and
10.
Coordinate review of fiscal capacity and budgets of entities applying for funding of water
projects with the DFA and the NMFA.
In conjunction with these responsibilities, HB 781 provides that the OWID will administer three
existing water and wastewater infrastructure financing programs: the water project fund, the
wastewater facility construction loan fund, and the rural infrastructure revolving loan fund. HB
781 amends the related Acts.
In order to effectively carry out these duties and responsibilities, this bill proposes transferring
the Construction Programs Bureau (CPB) from NMED to OWID. This transfer would include
all powers and duties, staff, existing funds, appropriations, records, equipment, supplies, other
property, all memoranda of understanding, joint powers agreements and contracts of the CPB
effective on July 1, 2007. HB 781 would also transfer the water project fund from NMFA to the
state treasury.
FISCAL IMPLICATIONS
While there is no appropriation included in this bill, the costs are associated with transferring
personnel from CPB to OWID. The agency base budget request for CPB for FY08 included $1.5
million and 17 FTE. Additional personnel will most likely be required to fulfill all of HB 781’s
mandates, which include the current activities that are already stretching the CPB staff thin.
One such expansion will require the 4 FTE currently providing the support function for the
Water Trust Board by NMFA.
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House Bill 781/aHHGAC – Page
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In addition, DFA notes that HB 781 relates to the $1.0 million recurring appropriation and 4.0
FTE to provide administrative staff and expenses for implementing OWID that was included in
the executive's recommendation for DFA's budget for FY 08. No details of this funding were
specified.
HB 781 language also transfers all money, appropriations and equipment of CPB to OWID.
However, all such property belongs to NMED, not CPB, which raises the issue of whether
OWID would need to equip its own office using additional funding.
SIGNIFICANT ISSUES
According to EMNRD, the HHGAC Amendment should clarify the administration of water
projects in the state under the new centralized system established by HB 781.
NMED concurs that the HHGAC amendments to the Water Projects Finance Act (Sections 72-
4A-5, 6, & 7) make them consistent with other provisions in HB 871. NMED also notes that by
replacing NMFA with the new Office in Section 72-4A-9.C as the one to determine when to
issue revenue bonds eliminates a potential conflict of having NMFA decide when to issue bonds,
but having the Office responsible for the program. According to EMNRD, the Amendment
should clarify the administration of water projects in the state under the new centralized system
established by HB 781.
NMED expresses concern
regarding having sufficient staff to fulfill all the tasks and duties
presented in the bill.
Background
Funding agencies for water-related capital outlay include NMED Construction Program Bureau
(CPB), New Mexico Finance Authority (NMFA), Department of Administration – Local
Government Division (LGD), and the United States Department of Agriculture Rural
Development. Additional funding programs include the Water Trust Board, US Environmental
Protection Agency’s State Tribal Assistance Grants (STAG), Governor’s Tax Relief Fund, and
the Governor’s Innovative Fund.
For infrastructure projects, technical expertise and oversight has been provided by CPB. Since
2001, increases in legislative appropriations for capital projects administered by the CPB have
risen more than 2,000 percent, from an average of $5.2 million to over $63 million in FY06. For
the first half of fiscal year 2007, CPB managed 767 active Special Appropriations Projects
(SAPs). CPB also provides oversight and technical assistance for the following additional
programs:
8 clean water state revolving fund (CWSRF) projects with an outstanding balance of $46
million; 1 loan in progress for $7 million; 31 loans in repayment;
11 rural infrastructure revolving loan program (RIP) projects with an outstanding balance of
$3.1 million; 120 loans in repayment; and
6 active projects in the Solid Waste Facility Grant Fund (SWFGF) with an outstanding
balance of $764 thousand.
CPB has also provided technical assistance to the other funding agencies for over 200 projects
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House Bill 781/aHHGAC – Page
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during the same time period.
NMFA assists qualified governmental entities in the financing of capital equipment and
infrastructure projects at any stage of completion – from pre-planning through construction – by
providing low-cost funds and technical assistance through its five main financing sources:
Drinking Water Revolving Loan Fund (DWRLF)
Primary Care Capital Fund (PCCF)
Public Project Revolving Fund (PPRF)
State Buildings and Automation Project Financing
Water and Wastewater Grant Fund (W/WWGF)
The Water Trust Fund (created in 2001) is currently administered by the NMFA, and the NMFA
currently provides staff support to the Water Trust Board, which oversees this fund. These water
projects include water storage, conveyance, or delivery of water to end users; implementation of
federal Endangered Species Act of 1973 collaborative programs; restoration and management of
watersheds; flood prevention; or water conservation.
As of June 30, 2003, the NMFA has financed more than $627.1 million in capital projects across
New Mexico, from all of its funding programs.
Capital Outlay for Water and Wastewater Projects
During the interim, testimony was presented to the Capital Outlay Subcommittee of the
Legislative Council and the Legislative Finance Committee on the history of the capital outlay
process and on how New Mexico compared with other states in capital outlay procedures and
processes. It was noted that New Mexico received a low ranking from Governing Magazine
on
its capital outlay process mainly due to the perceived lack of planning for funding projects
(which can leave projects “stranded" during some stage of the project pipeline), lack of
consistent qualifying factors for recipients, and lack of state-wide prioritization.
HB 781 proposes to address these issues by consolidating funding under one agency for water
and wastewater projects. That would allow prioritization of projects and imposition of conditions
for funding as envisioned under prior legislative efforts.
NMFA maintains that developing a comprehensive funding mechanism that ties system
readiness, project need and fiscal responsibility will, over time, create more self-sufficient water
systems that will not require as many significant outlays of state support for emergencies caused
by inadequate design, maintenance and replacement.
DFA maintains that OWID, by the centralization, will be able to better match projects with
funding sources. NMED adds that the centralization would facilitate state-wide prioritization of
projects.
PERFORMANCE IMPLICATIONS
DFA anticipates that water infrastructure projects, by the centralization in OWID and the one-
stop shop concept, will receive better technical review and better oversight of these projects
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because DFA envisions that everyone dealing with the projects will be housed in one place,
working together on each project. Also, DFA sees fewer instances of funding sitting
underutilized because preparatory requirements were left undone, such as obtaining the
necessary water rights. DFA also believes that the state will save money from the
regionalization of projects, the appropriate scaling of projects, and the reduced duplication of
projects in the same region. DFA assumes that that OWID will be electronically linked to the
Office of the State Engineer's Water Rights Division, which will report information on water
rights statewide. This will assist OWID in prioritizing and regionalization of water systems in
accordance with HJM 86.
NMFA asserts that the development and implementation of a uniform application and qualifying
criteria will provide additional efficiencies at the local level as systems will know what to expect
when they seek state grant or special legislative appropriation support. However, NMFA notes
that requiring this process for already self-sufficient systems seeking only to borrow money to
finance their improvements creates an unnecessary bureaucratic burden on them.
Systems that
need to proceed quickly with their projects may be forced to issue bonds on their own in the tax-
exempt markets and forgo the benefits and low-cost financing available.
NMFA relates that HB 781 continues to place the responsibility of issuing bonds against the
federally-funded wastewater facility construction loan fund (WFCLF) with the State Board of
Finance (BOF), with two consequences. One, while the bonds allowed under HB 781 do not
pledge the state’s general fund or impact its balance sheet, any technical or financial default on
the bonds or loans pledged to the bonds could negatively impact the state’s bond ratings.
Second, NMFA notes that the BOF expertise lies in issuing general obligation bonds and
severance tax bonds, and not bonds backed by loans. This is the expertise held by NMFA, as
demonstrated by its handling of the federally-funded drinking water loan program. NMFA
concludes that amending HB 781 to include the centralization of loan funding for water and
wastewater systems under NMFA would allow for leveraging both programs, which will result in
larger subsidized loan funds for critical drinking water and wastewater projects and increase the
performance of the federal dollars being translated into projects in New Mexico.
ADMINISTRATIVE IMPLICATIONS
HB 781 appears to underestimate the administrative impact on CPB, which would be significant.
Water project fund ventures range from watershed projects undertaken by water conservation
districts to those projects undertaken under the Endangered Species Act. Currently, NMFA
contracts with the relevant agency to provide needed technical expertise, such as with CPB for
those related to water infrastructure. Many of projects are particularly time-consuming and of
long duration, most likely beyond the expertise of the current CPB staff and certainly beyond
their available resources.
NMFA also notes that portions of HB 781 duplicate current responsibilities of the finance
authority. NMFA also expresses concern over The Rural Infrastructure and Wastewater Facility
Construction Loan Acts are amended by HB 781 to replace the bureau with the “Office". HB
781, in effect, transfers all actively-managed grant funds to the office, but keeps the
administration of committed loan funds in less active programs dispersed among several
agencies. Lastly, while HB 781 keeps the Water and Wastewater Facility Grant Fund with the
finance authority, it moves the administration of water project grants and loans to the office.
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House Bill 781/aHHGAC – Page
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CONFLICT, DUPLICATION, COMPANIONSHIP, RELATIONSHIP
The executive capital outlay budget recommends a $25 million appropriation to the water trust
fund and an appropriation of $1.0 million and 4.0 FTE to provide for administrative staff and
expenses for implementation of the OWID.
HB 2 contains an appropriation and FTE for the FY08 operating budget for the Construction
Programs Bureau at the NMED.
HB 7 seeks a general appropriation of $50 million to the water trust fund for fiscal year 2008.
HB 53 amends the Water Project Finance Act to add the DFA Secretary as a member of the
WTB and provides for the WTB Chair to be elected by the membership.
HB 55 appropriates $60 million from the general fund to the water trust fund for implementation
of the Water Project Finance Act.
HB 228 appropriates $130 thousand from the general fund to the DFA to provide staff support to
the Acequia Commission.
HB 230 appropriates $500 thousand from the general fund to the LGD of DFA to provide
governance education, training and technical assistance to the Acequia Commission.
HB 268 and SB 100 (duplicates) authorize the NMFA to make loans and grants from the water
project fund for 30 qualifying projects on terms and conditions established by the WTB and the
NMFA.
HB 274 appropriates $280 million from the general fund for expenditure on seven statewide
water projects.
HB 330, among other provisions, would allow the Interstate Stream Commission to use funds
received for the Strategic Water Reserve (SWR) to be used to develop and construct
infrastructure related to the SWR.
HB 462 appropriates $100 million from the general fund to the Water Trust Fund for
implementation of the Water Project Finance Act.
HB 780 would increase, from 10 percent to 15 percent, the annual set-aside from severance tax
bonding capacity for use by the Water Trust Board to fund water projects statewide.
HB 859 would appropriate $4 million to create a new cesspool fund to help lower income
residents install septic or hookup to a wastewater facility.
HB 1058 would include wastewater in property valuation.
HB 1179 (SB 1058) amend the Rural Infrastructure Program.
SB 105 appropriates $4 million from the public project revolving loan fund to the drinking water
state revolving loan fund to provide state matching funds for water projects funded through the
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House Bill 781/aHHGAC – Page
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federal Safe Drinking Water Act.
SB 485 appropriates $225 million from the general fund to the OSE to initiate, plan and
implement five water projects statewide.
SB 639 and SB 749 (duplicates) would establish a Capital Projects Council composed of twelve
members including the State Engineer. The primary responsibilities of the Council would be to:
a) prioritize proposals for capital projects and make recommendations to the legislature for
funding the prioritized projects; and, b) coordinate all planning, oversight, monitoring and
reporting functions of state government regarding capital projects authorized by law.
SB 703 appropriates funds from the general fund for implementation of a wide variety of capital
projects statewide including water and wastewater projects.
SB 710 appropriates $52.4 million from the general fund for implementation of a wide variety of
capital projects statewide including water and wastewater projects.
SB 1060 sets up an administrative fund for the wastewater facility construction loan fund.
TECHNICAL ISSUES
The bill uses customary language that reflects standard practices for governmental reorganization
where such transfers occur.
NMFA points out a potential conflict of interest issue:
Authority to Issue Revenue Bonds (Page 5, line 18)
A potential conflict of interest is created by having the bonds issuance in one agency and the
need for the money managed elsewhere.
NMED relates that language regarding funds that included federal grants most likely will require
EPA approval:
Administrative Costs (Section 5)
The amount of the administrative costs is not specified and would most likely require
confirmation by the United States Environmental Protection Agency. For example, NMFA is
currently capped at 4 percent.
OTHER SUBSTANTIVE ISSUES
Based on a study by the National Association of State Budget Officers, Capital Budgeting in the
States, best management practices (BMPs) for quality capital budgeting require:
Defining capital expenditures
Defining maintenance expenditures and identifying funding for maintenance
Developing a system to prioritize projects and identify criteria used for selection
Identifying operating costs of each project over a multi-year period
Effective communication between the legislature and the executive during the capital
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budget process
Strengthened review of long-range capital plans
Integrated planning with debt affordability
Review of cost-benefit comparisons for private sector participation in capital projects
Review of long-term leases
Defining of outcomes for capital investments
Validating cost estimating methods
Establishing a tracking system to keep projects on schedule and within budget
Maintaining an updated inventory system of capital assets
Maintaining a centralized oversight for capital projects
DFA has developed a unified loan application, but a true implementation of this BMP is
seriously hampered by so many loan and grant agencies. Not only is it difficult to bring
everyone to the table with the potential recipient, so many “voices" only seem to confuse rather
than elucidate the potential recipient.
ALTERNATIVES
One option would be to designate one loan agency (NMFA) and one grant agency (OWID) to
create a synergy of strengths and optimize efficiencies of scale. The two agencies could then
collaborate with the potential “customer" to develop the optimal project financing package by
first establishing the loan parameters and then looking to a grant for any final funding amount
required. DFA’s current unified application could then be used in the most effective fashion.
NMFA maintains it could administer the rural infrastructure loan and federally funded clean
water state revolving loan programs to become New Mexico’s primary state lender for water and
wastewater projects. By adding these funds to the finance authority’s program listing, the
finance authority specifies it will be better able to match public entities with the most appropriate
finance mechanism available from the state and add to the funding available for critical water
and wastewater projects by leveraging the federal funds. NMFA lists additional benefits that
would accrue:
It would dramatically increase the number of borrowers for the finance authority, which
would add to the economies of scale.
It would replicate the successful BMP of leveraging federal funding by issuing state
revolving fund revenue bonds, which will increase the availability of low-cost funding for
water and wastewater projects. The most efficient of these bonding programs involves the
“cross-collateralization" of both the federal grants. Because the clean water program is an
older program, the loans made under the program are considered more mature and provide a
stronger repayment stream than the newer drinking water program. However, the benefits to
the state of this “cross-collateralized" bonding program are weakened if the finance authority
does not manage the loan funds.
It would utilize NMFA’s reputation among the Wall Street credit rating agencies, bond
insurers and bond purchasers has as an efficient packager of loans and superior manager of
bonding programs.
It would build a successful loan program with no or few defaults.
It would provide greater flexibility than a state-run program for
default work-outs and
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House Bill 781/aHHGAC – Page
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recovering the state’s resources.
It would reduce costs associated with establishing a loan managing computer system at
OWID since NMFA already maintains a separate accounting system dedicated solely to
tracking loans and making payments to bondholders.
WHAT WILL BE THE CONSEQUENCES OF NOT ENACTING THIS BILL
Water and wastewater project administration will remain fragmented among several state
agencies. NMFA would continue to provide programmatic and administrative support to the
water trust board and issue loans and grants from the water project fund pursuant to provisions of
the water project finance act. CPB would remain in NMED and continue to issue grants and
loans pursuant to the provisions of the wastewater facility construction loan act and the rural
infrastructure act.
AMENDMENTS
Section 7, 74-6A-8.E, Page 16, line 25: Delete “division" and replace with “office".
NMFA recommends clarifying language on Section 1.B. (6) on page 2, lines 17 and 18. As
currently drafted, this responsibility appears to duplicate authority given to office of state
engineer, game & fish, NMSU and NMFA on loan funds they currently administer. Recommend
replacing in its entirety Section 1.B. (6) with “coordinate prioritization of water and wastewater
projects and develop qualifying criteria for all grant and special appropriation funding."
Amend further sections of the Water Project Finance Act to effectuate the goals of HB 781.
Specifically, Section 72-4A-5 B: replace the “authority" with the “office." Similarly, in Section
72-4A-7B: replace “authority" with “office." Lastly, repeal section 72-4A-6 Authority; duties
section to not conflict with other provisions of HB 781. In HB 781, Section 4B, on page 5, line
20, replace “authority" with “office."
POSSIBLE QUESTIONS
1.
What is the structure of “administratively attached" to DFA. What is the reporting
structure. Who is in charge—DFA or the Water Trust Board or CPB.
2.
How will the current grant and loan payment transfer be seamless. What plan has been
structured to make sure the recipients do not experience delays, such as those precipitated
by SHARE implementation.
3.
What are the realistic resources in terms of FTE and property that will be required to
fulfill the OWID.
4.
How would the financial expertise developed by NMFA be transferred or utilized.
5.
Who will be making the final project recommendations to the Legislature.
6.
If bills such as HB 859 are enacted, how will the new funds—such as the Cesspool
fund—be managed.
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7.
Who will take over the solid waste capital outlay responsibilities currently handled by
CPB, and will the resources be provided.
8.
Who will provide oversight of the domestic mutual water associations.
9.
Who would administer the Sanitary Projects Act.
10.
Were all stakeholders, such as NMFA, the Rural Water Association, the Acequia
Association, the Environmental Finance Center, USDA Rural Development, the Rural
Community Assistance Corporation invited to participate in crafting the OWID.
11.
How would the various timelines for grants and loans be coordinated.
MA/mt