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F I S C A L I M P A C T R E P O R T
SPONSOR Trujillo
ORIGINAL DATE
LAST UPDATED
2-18-07
3-08-07 HB 1130/aHENRC
SHORT TITLE Liquid Waste Revolving Loan Fund Act
SB
ANALYST Aubel
APPROPRIATION (dollars in thousands)
Appropriation
Recurring
or Non-Rec
Fund
Affected
FY07
FY08
$5,000.0
Non
-
Rec
urring
General Fund
(Parenthesis ( ) Indicate Expenditure Decreases)
REVENUE (dollars in thousands)
Estimated Revenue
Recurring
or Non-Rec
Fund
Affected
FY07
FY08
FY09
$5,000.0
Non
-
Rec
urring
Liquid Waste
Revolving Loan
Fund
(Parenthesis ( ) Indicate Revenue Decreases)
ESTIMATED ADDITIONAL OPERATING BUDGET IMPACT (dollars in thousands)
FY07
FY08
FY09 3 Year
Total Cost
Recurring
or Non-Rec
Fund
Affected
Total
*See
narrative
$0.01* Recurring General
Fund
$5,000.0
$5,000.0
Non-
Recurring General
Fund
(Parenthesis ( ) Indicate Expenditure Decreases)
No longer duplicates SB 920
Relates to SB 702 and HB 859
SOURCES OF INFORMATION
LFC Files
Responses Received From
New Mexico Environment Department (NMED)
Energy, Minerals and Natural Resources Department (EMNRD)
pg_0002
House Bill 1130/aHENRC – Page
2
New Mexico Finance Authority (NMFA)
SUMMARY
Synopsis of HENRC Amendment
The House Energy and Natural Resources Committee Amendment include three primary
changes:
1.
The “indigent recipient" maximum threshold income is reduced from 250 percent of the
federal poverty level to 150 percent of the federal poverty level. For a four person
household, the maximum household income under the original bill of $51.6 thousand
would now be just under $31 thousand.
2.
The loan rates are adjusted to reflect the new 150 percent threshold by removing the 1
percentage point below the prime rate for household income between 150 and 200
percent below poverty level.
3.
The appropriation of $5.0 million is removed and language is inserted to reflect a future
appropriation by the Legislature.
Synopsis of Original Bill
House Bill 1130 appropriates $5.0 million from the general fund to a newly created fund in the
state treasury, the liquid waste revolving loan fund, to be administered by the New Mexico
Environment Department to make low-interest loans to indigent homeowners to purchase,
permit, install and maintain on-site liquid waste treatment systems.
FISCAL IMPLICATIONS
The appropriation of $5.0 million contained in this bill is a non-recurring expense to the general
fund. Any unexpended or unencumbered balance remaining at the end of fiscal year 2008 shall
not revert to the general fund. The fund consists of appropriations, gifts, grants, donations and
bequests to the fund.
No appropriation is made in HB 1130 for administrative costs to NMED, although it provides for
administrative costs to be paid from the fund when accrued interest income is sufficient to cover
the costs. It should be noted that a successful program of making the loans would reduce the fund
balance fairly quickly, and because of the long-term nature of these loans (up to 40 years), the
fund would not be quickly replenished. Thus, any interest revenue would likely be minimal
unless additional funds were acquired.
No estimate of administrative costs for NMED was provided. These on-site systems would most
likely not require the technical expertise of the Construction Program Bureau, but would require
administrative support from the Environmental Health Program and at least one loan coordinator.
Because the program is unique to the menu of funds currently managed by NMED, the total
costs are indeterminate, but should not be excessive.
pg_0003
House Bill 1130/aHENRC – Page
3
Continuing Appropriations
This bill creates a new fund and provides for continuing appropriations. The LFC has concerns
with including continuing appropriation language in the statutory provisions for newly created
funds, as earmarking reduces the ability of the legislature to establish spending priorities.
SIGNIFICANT ISSUES
Septic systems are the leading source of groundwater pollution and have impaired 355 river
miles in New Mexico. Low-income households may not have the financial resources to install
modern liquid waste systems that comply with the Liquid Waste Regulations or to replace
substandard existing liquid waste systems with proper systems.
HB 1130 will establish a method for low-income individuals to receive assistance to address
installation of liquid waste and disposal systems. This bill creates a new revolving loan fund
within the state treasury, administered by the NMED. Any expenditure will be authorized by the
Secretary of Finance and administration by warrant on vouchers signed by the Secretary of
Environment.
NMED will provide low-interest, long-term loans to indigent recipients for permitting, site
evaluation, design, purchase and installation costs of new on-site liquid waste treatment and
disposal systems, and up to two years of maintenance, operation and any required testing of the
systems. HB 1130 defines “indigent recipient" as an owner of an owner-occupied single-family
dwelling, an owner-occupied single-family dwelling with a guest house or an owner-occupied
duplex whose household income does not exceed two hundred fifty percent of the federal
poverty level.
The Federal poverty level rates are as follow for calendar year 2007:
2007 POVERTY LEVEL GUIDELINES
ALL STATES (EXCEPT ALASKA AND HAWAII) AND DC
Income Guidelines as Published in the Federal Register on January 24, 2007
ANNUAL GUIDELINES
FAMILY
100% 133% 150% 170% 175% 185% 200% 250%
SIZE POVERTY*
1
10,210 13,579 15,315 17,357 17,868 18,889 20,420 25,525
2
13,690 18,208 20,535 23,273 23,958 25,327 27,380 34,225
3
17,170 22,836 25,755 29,189 30,048 31,765 34,340 42,925
4
20,650 27,465 30,975 35,105 36,138 38,203 41,300 51,625
5
24,130 32,093 36,195 41,021 42,228 44,641 48,260 60,325
6
27,610 36,721 41,415 46,937 48,318 51,079 55,220 69,025
7
31,090 41,350 46,635 52,853 54,408 57,517 62,180 77,725
8
34,570 45,978 51,855 58,769 60,498 63,955 69,140 86,425
The number of households that would be eligible for the program is not known. However, the
following data from the 2005 U.S. Data Abstract, when combined with the NMED data that
shows that the greatest contamination to groundwater in New Mexico comes from cesspools or
failed on-site systems, indicates a highly probable need for such assistance.
pg_0004
House Bill 1130/aHENRC – Page
4
Median Household Income
$37,492
Persons Below Poverty Level
18.5%
HB 920 stipulates that NMED shall not determine minimum credit standards as a condition to
receive a loan from the fund. In determination of a loan application, the criteria will be made to
approve loan proceeds based upon rules and regulations as determined by the Environment
Department and the New Mexico Finance Authority. Loans made from the fund will have a
maximum term of 40 years with the interest rate equal to the prevailing prime rate as published
in the Wall Street Journal. The interest rate can be reduced during the term of the loan in the
following manner:
.
1 percent below prime rate, if the household drops below 150 percent but no more than
200 percent of the federal income poverty level;
.
2 percent below prime rate, if the household drops below 100 percent but no more than
150 percent of the federal income poverty level;
.
3 percent below prime rate, if the household drops below 100 percent of the federal
income poverty level.
The loan has equal installment payments due one year from approval of the loan. Loan
documents shall be produced declaring the intent to repay the funds borrowed.
ADMINISTRATIVE IMPLICATIONS
Under HB 920, NMED and the NMFA will devise rules to implement the loan program,
including the application procedure and requirements for disbursing proceeds. NMFA maintains
that there could be a considerable amount of time to be spent working on the rules and
regulations of creation of a new fund that is devised to be a revolving loan fund.
CONFLICT, DUPLICATION, COMPANIONSHIP, RELATIONSHIP
Relates to SB 702, a similar bill proposing to establish an assistance fund that provides funding
for indigent individuals or households for installing liquid waste systems. SB 702 does not
require the repayment of these funds.
Relates to HB 859, which provides grant funding to low-income households for replacing
cesspools with on-site septic systems.
Duplicates HB 1130.
TECHNICAL ISSUES
NMED notes that HB 1130 does not differentiate between the construction of new liquid waste
systems and the replacement of substandard existing systems, nor does it establish a standard for
the type of liquid waste system to be financed to the minimum level of treatment system required
by the Liquid Waste Regulations. Thus, loan recipients could acquire financing to install a
more-expensive, advanced liquid waste treatment system for property where a conventional
septic system would be allowed.
EMNRD believes that NMED acts strictly as a financial institution in administering the loan
program, and has very little discretion in that role. It is not functioning as a regulatory agency
pg_0005
House Bill 1130/aHENRC – Page
5
setting and enforcing standards for waste treatment and disposal systems.
OTHER SUBSTANTIVE ISSUES
EMNRD maintains that although the act is titled the “Liquid Waste Revolving Loan Fund Act,"
it is not set up to be a revolving fund for many years, if ever. Loan terms can be as long as 40
years, so amounts loaned out may not return to the fund for many years. The lender is not
permitted to consider the borrower’s credit qualifications and there are no express provisions for
canceling or collecting on the loans in event of default. The interest rate is set at the prime rate
at the time the loan is made. The interest rate can only go down, it can never go up, during the
life of the loan, which may be as long as 40 years.
NMFA indicates that HB 1130 is balancing a fine line between the anti-donation clauses,
working as an independent funding source for individual household members.
WHAT WILL BE THE CONSEQUENCES OF NOT ENACTING THIS BILL
Substandard liquid waste systems owned by indigent persons and households will continue to
degrade water quality, resulting in hazards to public health and interference with property rights
and welfare.
POSSIBLE QUESTIONS
1.
Since NMED is primarily a regulatory agency, would this loan program be more
effectively administered by NMFA, which has a successful track record in running loan
programs.
Questions raised by EMNRD are as follows:
2.
Whether and under what circumstances loans can be cancelled;
3.
What collection proceedings are available in the event of default;
4.
What happens if the property is transferred (must the loan be repaid immediately, or
does it transfer to the new owner – who may not be indigent.); and
5.
If the recipient installs a liquid waste-system qualifying for the $1,500 income tax credit
provided for in HB 802, will the recipient receive the credit in addition to the loan.
MA/nt