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F I S C A L I M P A C T R E P O R T
SPONSOR Williams
ORIGINAL DATE
LAST UPDATED
2/12/07
2/22/07 HB 988/aHVEC
SHORT TITLE Special Zoning District Terms & Commissions
SB
ANALYST Propst
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
Department of Finance and Administration (DFA)
Taxation and Revenue Department (TRD)
New Mexico Association of Counties
SUMMARY
Synopsis of HVEC Amendment
DFA notes that the amendments clarify the type of taxing powers and election methods for their
imposition and makes the imposition of the tax constitutional and legal.
In order to meet constitutional muster and avoid taxation limits and non representation, the
amendment clarifies the type of taxing powers and election methods for their imposition.
The amendment also clarifies the issue of imposition of mill levy beyond maximum allowed
under law for operating. By allowing elections of affected parties to tax themselves, DFA reports
that the bill now meets constitutional muster.
Before the HVEC amendment, HB 988 would have allowed the special district commissioners to
impose up to 1 mill ($1 per $1,000 of taxable value) for operating purposes without the approval
of district voters. This would have illegally allocated taxes under the 20 mill constitutional limit
and would have had the potential to exceed the 20 mill limit in some counties.
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House Bill 988/aHVEC – Page
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The Department of Taxation and Revenue notes that prior to amendment, the proposed measure
would have probably violated the New Mexico constitution and related statutes. Article 8,
Section 2 of the constitution states that property tax rates in excess of 20 mills may not be
imposed unless approved by voters. Section 7-37-7 NMSA 1978 allocates the 20-mill total that
may be imposed without voter approval as follows: 11.85 mills to counties, 7.65 mills to
municipalities and .5 mills to school districts. Hence special zoning district commissioners may
not approve property tax levies without voter approval. The Voters and Election Committee
amendment requires commissions to seek voter approval of proposed (maximum 1-mill)
property tax levies in special or general elections. The amendment also requires special zoning
districts to compensate counties for the cost of the associated elections.
The New Mexico Association of Counties takes the position that this bill will create a morass of
conflicting zoning and taxing problems within a county by granting an excessive amount of
authority to special zoning commissions. These commissions would be given excessive and far
reaching authority to impose zoning regulations and restrictions on top of and in addition to
those already imposed by county commissions or extraterritorial zoning authorities. This creates
an unwieldy and probably unworkable situation in terms of enforcing zoning regulations. In
addition, the authority of the special zoning commission to impose taxes requires additional work
and effort for county assessors and treasurers in assessing and collecting property taxes within
the district. The county has absolutely no authority or control over these special zoning
commissions, yet has to perform a variety of services on behalf of the zoning commission.
Synopsis of Original Bill
House Bill 988 broadens the powers of special zoning districts and authorizes revenue powers to
pay for their operations.
SIGNIFICANT ISSUES
HB 988 broadens the powers of special zoning districts by allowing the division of territory
under its jurisdiction into sub-districts, regulation of building construction and use, hiring a code
enforcement officers, requesting help from the county sheriff to take action against code
violators, and levying an ad valorum property tax to cover operating costs. HB 988 also staggers
terms of zoning district commissioners.
DFA notes that while special zoning districts enable zoning for citizens in an area that want and
need zoning, they must be carefully balanced to maintain a connection to the county's
comprehensive plan and ensure accountability to elected county commissioners. And with the
ability to develop new regulations on building construction and use, builders may face a
bewildering array of differing zoning and building codes.
TECHNICAL ISSUES
DFA reports that the Special Zoning Enabling Act has been rarely used in New Mexico, in part
due to a court case ruling them unconstitutional without a size limit. Subsequent legislation fixed
that. Currently there is a special zoning district in Paradise Hills on the west side in Bernalillo
County. There are two special zoning districts in northern Socorro County, where people wanted
zoning, initially to prevent power plants from coming into the area. As Socorro County does not
have zoning, they organized, voted, and created two special zoning districts. They had to create
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House Bill 988/aHVEC – Page
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two to cover most of the area as these districts are limited in both the size of the area covered and
by population.
WEP/csd