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F I S C A L I M P A C T R E P O R T
SPONSOR HCPAC
ORIGINAL DATE
LAST UPDATED
2/22/07
2/26/07 HB 973/HCPACS
SHORT TITLE Special Needs Child Adoption Tax Credit
SB
ANALYST Francis
REVENUE (dollars in thousands)
Estimated Revenue
Recurring
or Non-Rec
Fund
Affected
FY07
FY08
FY09
($540.0)
($540.0) Recurring General Fund
(Parenthesis ( ) Indicate Revenue Decreases)
SOURCES OF INFORMATION
LFC Files
Taxation and Revenue Department
SUMMARY
Synopsis of Bill
The House Consumer and Public Affairs Committee substituted House Bill 973 which enacts a
new credit against personal income tax liability for taxpayers who adopt a special needs child up
to $1,000. The credit is refundable meaning if the credit exceeds liability then the excess is
refunded to the taxpayer. The credit can be claimed for each year that the taxpayer claims the
special needs child as a dependent on their federal income tax return.
A special needs adopted child is an individual (who may be over 18 years old) who is certified
by the Children Youth and Families Department (CYFD) as meeting the definition of “difficult
to place," with the caveat that if the classification is based on a physical or mental impairment or
an emotional disturbance that impairment or disturbance shall be at least moderately disabling.
The effective date is January 1, 2007.
It appears the substitute was to make the language identical to the executive’s proposal.
pg_0002
House Bill 973/HCPACS – Page
2
FISCAL IMPLICATIONS
TRD:
In tax year 2004, exemptions allowed under present law totaling approximately $1.2
million were claimed on slightly over 300 New Mexico tax returns, and thus averaged
approximately $4,000 per return. Taxpayers claiming the returns were subject to a tax
rate of slightly over 5 percent. Hence the resulting "tax cost" to the State of New Mexico
General Fund totaled approximately $60,000 (i.e., $1,200,000 x .05). The average tax
benefit was approximately $125 per child or 5% of $2,500.
The recurring impact shown above assumes 350 households with 600 special needs
children would get credits totaling $600 thousand per year for an average benefit of
$1,700 per household. The $540,000 recurring fiscal impact above is the difference
between the estimated $60,000 impact of the current program and the estimated $600,000
annual impact of the proposed statute.
SIGNIFICANT ISSUES
From Special-needs.adoption.com:
Over 100,000 children are waiting to be adopted right now out of the more than half
million US children in foster care. The rest will eventually be reunited with birth families
or will "age out" of the system while waiting to be reunited. Of the waiting children with
special needs who are younger than school age, many are of minority race, and all of
them are members of sibling groups, or have mild to severe disabilities, or are at risk of
developing disabilities later due to risk factors. Some children have correctable problems.
Others will "outgrow" their challenges. A few are remarkably resilient and will not
develop expected problems. However, adoptive parents must be ready to face and deal
with all types of outcomes, from the bleak to the near-miraculous.
[Cost of adoption]
The cost varies from place to place but the good news is that with careful planning,
special needs adoption can be a low-cost or no-cost process. Most expenses involved in
most of the authors' domestic special needs adoptions were reimbursed to them.
State or public adoption agencies do not usually charge for any special needs adoption
service. Fees at private adoption agencies for adoption services vary widely from no
charge at all to several thousand dollars, or more.
When a domestic special needs adoption takes place in a state offering "Purchase of
Services", the state with custody of the child may pay some or all of the private adoption
expenses for the adoptive parent or parents. This is how a private agency can afford to
operate without charging the family a home study or placement fee. Adoptive parents
should be sure and ask a private agency about "Purchase of Service adoptions."
In the U.S., up to $2,000 of a family's one-time special needs adoption expenses are
refundable for children who meet the requirements under the federal law. States may
allow up to $2,000 per child, or less, but not more. The expenses are reimbursed after the
adoption has been completed. Adoptive parents should keep receipts for all expenses
pg_0003
House Bill 973/HCPACS – Page
3
from the home study to the cost of photo listing book subscriptions. They should be sure
their agency participates in this refund program, and then be sure and request the
necessary forms after placement has occurred but before the adoption is legally finalized.
State and federal programs are also available to help parents with the cost of raising
adopted children with special needs.
WHAT WILL BE THE CONSEQUENCES OF NOT ENACTING THIS BILL
It is likely that special-needs adoptions take place without regard to any tax credits or incentives
so there is not likely to be a decline of these adoptions. However, the financial burdens are
relieved to a small but significant extent with credits like this.
NF/nt