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F I S C A L I M P A C T R E P O R T
SPONSOR Gardner
ORIGINAL DATE
LAST UPDATED
2/19/07
HB 849
SHORT TITLE Charitable Organization Info Requirements
SB
ANALYST Ortiz
APPROPRIATION (dollars in thousands)
Appropriation
Recurring
or Non-Rec
Fund
Affected
FY07
FY08
NFI
(Parenthesis ( ) Indicate Expenditure Decreases)
SOURCES OF INFORMATION
LFC Files
Responses Received From
Attorney General’s Office (AGO)
SUMMARY
Synopsis of Bill
House Bill 849 amends Section 57-22-6 of the Charitable Solicitations Act [NMSA 1978, §§ 57-
22-1 et seq.] to impose an additional reporting requirement on charitable organizations already
reporting to the Attorney General on their operating and fundraising activities.
FISCAL IMPLICATIONS
HB 849 provides no appropriation to the attorney general for the newly mandated charitable
organizations filing requirement. To implement, manage and oversee the additional filings made
to the attorney general, the AGO will incur a need for additional resources and staff to provide
the additional oversight.
if the Registry of Charitable Organizations was provided additional funds to purchase a data
system that could automatically extract the information sought by HB 849, the Registry would be
able to post this information on the AGO’s website for access by the general public.
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House Bill 849 – Page
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SIGNIFICANT ISSUES
The Attorney General’s Registry of Charitable Organizations reports that the currently-mandated
filing of annual information by charitable organizations is due to the AGO within six (6) months
of the end of the organization’s fiscal year. Because the different organizations have different
fiscal year ends, these filing documents come into the AGO’s Registry of Charitable
Organizations daily. The Registry currently has more than 5,000 charitable organizations or
nonprofits registered in New Mexico. Thus, the Registry receives more than 5,000 annual report
forms/IRS Form 990s each year. The two Registry staff must process, acknowledge and file
each one of these more than 5,000 annual reports or IRS Form 990s. Additionally, the Registry
receives about 20 new registrations each week and report that the filing of more than 5,000
annual reports or IRS Form 990s are in addition to the registration of professional fundraisers.
The bill would double the number of filings.
HB 849 proposes to amend Section 57-22-6 to add a new subsection D. Subsection D mandates
that, in addition to their required filing of annual reports or IRS Form 990s within six (6) months
of the end of a charitable organization’s fiscal year, that nonprofit must file with the AGO’s
Registry of Charitable Organizations additional documents or information by May 1 of each
year.
Section (D)(1) of HB 849 mandates a May 1 filing of the compensation paid to the charitable
organization’s directors and officers — Registry staff report that this information is already
provided on the organization’s IRS Form 990 that is filed within six (6) months of the
organization’s fiscal year end.
Section (D)(2) of HB 849 mandates a May 1 filing of the amount expended for lobbying state
and federal agencies — Registry staff report that this information is already provided on the
charitable organization’s IRS Form 990 that is filed within six (6) months of the organization’s
fiscal year end.
Section (D)(3) of HB 849 mandates a May 1 filing of the amount expended for political
contributions — Registry staff report that any 501(c)(3) nonprofit entity cannot make political
contributions and, if it does, that charitable organization will lose its tax exempt status as
outlined in Internal Revenue Codes.
Section (D)(4) of HB 849 mandates a May 1 filing of the amount received from any for-profit
entity owned by a charitable organization — Registry staff report that all entities, nonprofit and
for-profit, affiliated with a charitable organization are listed in the organization’s IRS Form 990
that is filed within six (6) months of the organization’s fiscal year end. Additionally, all sales,
exchanges of assets and purchases of assets with any for-profit entity must be included in the IRS
Form 990.
Registry staff reports that creating a May 1 deadline may be burdensome for charitable
organizations. Charitable organizations are permitted to compile their tax information and
mandated reports within six (6) months of the end of their fiscal year. Mandating an additional
filing with the AGO’s Registry of Charitable Organizations that is due on May 1 may cause
many nonprofits to be unable to timely comply. Section (E) of HB 849 permits the Registry to
impose and collect a late filing fee of $100.00. Consequently, those charitable organizations
with a fiscal year end within six (6) months prior to May 1 may not have the information
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mandated by HB 849 available in a timely manner.
For example, a charitable organization or nonprofit with an April 1 fiscal year end may not be
able to compile the newly mandated information by the May 1 deadline. The IRS and the
AGO’s Registry of Charitable Organizations permit the charitable organization six (6) months to
prepare its tax forms and make its required filings. A charitable organization or nonprofit may
not be able to comply by May 1 with the new requirements imposed by HB 849, especially if
they use an outside accounting firm to prepare their annual tax forms and annual reports.
Finally, Registry staff report that they receive many requests from the general public for
information about charitable organizations or nonprofits. Registry staff report that information
about a charitable organization’s lobbying expenses, political contributions and affiliations are
not typically requested. In fact, the Registrar reports that in her four years with the AGO, not
one person has ever asked about a charitable organization’s lobbying expenses, political
contributions or affiliations.
TECHNICAL ISSUES
The information requested by HB 849 is currently available on the IRS Form 990 that charitable
organizations already file with the AGO’s Registry of Charitable Organizations.
ALTERNATIVES
If the intent of the bill is to have charitable organization that own for-profit entities to provide
more disclosure, perhaps the AGO’s Registry of Charitable Organizations could make rules for
the implementation of the existing law, as permitted by Section 57-22-6(B).
EO/nt