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F I S C A L I M P A C T R E P O R T
SPONSOR Berry
ORIGINAL DATE
LAST UPDATED
2/22/07
HB 1074
SHORT TITLE Revaluation Upon Change in Property Ownership
SB
ANALYST Earnest
REVENUE (dollars in thousands)
Estimated Revenue
Recurring
or Non-Rec
Fund
Affected
FY07
FY08
FY09
($0.1) Non-Recurring General Obligation
Bond Capacity
(Parenthesis ( ) Indicate Revenue Decreases)
Duplicates Senate Bill 695
SOURCES OF INFORMATION
LFC Files
Responses Received From
Department of Finance and Administration (DFA)
Taxation and Revenue Department (TRD)
SUMMARY
Synopsis of Bill
House Bill 1074 amends the property tax code to eliminate the provision for revaluation of
residential property upon change of ownership and any language related to “change of
ownership". Change of ownership would not trigger an upward revision of property valuation to
something approximating the market value of the property.
FISCAL IMPLICATIONS
HB 1074 would limit increases in value of property to no higher than 103% of the value in the
prior tax year or 106 1/10th% of the value in the tax year two-years prior to the tax year being
valued.
DFA finds that such a limitation could have a substantial fiscal impact on NM local
pg_0002
House Bill 1074 – Page
2
governments, but does not provide an estimate. A cap on revaluation would reduce the amount
assessed and taxed. This reduction to the NM local government coffers could directly impact
operating and capital budgets, thus affecting provided services.
However, rather than face a reduction of revenue from elimination of revaluation, counties may
choose to raise property taxes, making the fiscal impact indeterminate.
HB 1074 would impact 2008 general obligation bond capacity. Current projections show
residential property growth of 3.1 percent, but past years have been much higher.
SIGNIFICANT ISSUES
DFA also notes that the bill would freeze the notorious inequities in the property valuation
system, with no means of fixing the inequities.
According to TRD, provisions of the proposed measure would:
1.
make property tax obligations more predictable to home purchasers than they currently
are;
2.
limit growth in bonding capacity
1
and thus the amount of projects that could be
constructed with voter-approved bond issues repaid with property taxes;
3.
perpetuate existing differences between market value and assessed value among property
owners, partially because many properties were assessed at much less than market value
when the 3 percent limit on residential valuation was enacted in 2000;
4.
increase prices of properties subject to the new legislation because their assessed values
would essentially never be allowed to increase by more than 3 percent annually, and thus
provide their owners with lower property tax bills than would be the case in the absence
of the proposed legislation; and
5.
decrease values of newly-constructed residential properties because taxes on the new
properties would typically be substantially more than taxes on comparable properties that
are subject to the three percent limitation. The proposal may also increase the cost of
borrowing among property tax recipients (counties, school districts, the State of New
Mexico and other entities) due to decreased ratings and increased interest charges on
bonds.
DUPLICATION
House Bill 1074 duplicates Senate Bill 695.
BE/nt
1
Bonding capacity is the extent to which governments are allowed to borrow – typically to repay debt on capital
construction projects. In New Mexico, for example, counties and municipalities may issue general obligation bonds
totaling no more than 4% of net taxable value.