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F I S C A L I M P A C T R E P O R T
SPONSOR Varela
ORIGINAL DATE
LAST UPDATED
2/12/07
HB HJM 18
SHORT TITLE PUBLIC BENEFIT APPLICATIONS PROCESSING SB
ANALYST Weber
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
SUMMARY
Synopsis of Bill
House Joint Memorial 18 reports that one-fifth of all New Mexicans live at or below the federal
poverty level, while another twenty-five percent live below two hundred percent of the federal
poverty level. New Mexico was recently rated first in the nation for food insecurity. However
one-third of all New Mexicans who are eligible for food stamps are not receiving food stamps.
One-third of all New Mexicans who live below the federal poverty level are without health
insurance, and one-third of those who earn between one hundred percent and one hundred
eighty-five percent of the federal poverty level are uninsured. New Mexico has the nation's
second-highest percentage of people living without health insurance coverage. Also, almost one-
third of New Mexican children who are eligible for Medicaid are not enrolled.
Health care providers and advocates for the poor report that the current application procedures
for public benefits are burdensome and prevent eligible New Mexicans from receiving the
benefits to which they are entitled.
The combat some of these issues, HSD is requested to:
pg_0002
House Joint Memorial 18 – Page
2
A.
conduct additional outreach so that New Mexicans who are potentially eligible for
public benefits are made aware of existing programs and the steps they must take to
apply for them;
B.
use uniform and simple application procedures and policies in all field offices, so that
eligible applicants are not incorrectly denied benefits;
C.
ensure that applicants receive a receipt for their application so that they can provide
the date and place they applied;
D.
assist all applicants in both filling out the application and obtaining the verifications
necessary to receive benefits;
E.
ensure that anyone who applies for a benefits program be screened for all programs
for which the person may be eligible;
F.
ensure that applicants do not have to wait more than one hour to see a caseworker to
receive assistance with benefits programs;
G.
translate all forms into Spanish and, upon request, other languages used by the
clients; and
H.
identify applicants needing special assistance with the application procedures and
give them that assistance;
The Human Services Department is requested to track the use of the outlined procedures and
report to the interim Legislative Welfare Reform Oversight Committee concerning its progress in
the fall of 2007 and the fall of 2008
FISCAL IMPLICATIONS
HSD indicates there will be additional administrative costs for fulfilling some of the
recommendations such as monitoring, and development of additional forms.
The following are among the procedures requiring addition funds.
Conduct additional outreach for public benefits although no appropriation for expanding
outreach is included.
Ensure that applicants do not have to wait more than one hour to see a caseworker to
receive assistance with benefits programs. This recommendation is difficult to administer
based on existing staff caseloads and number of applicants served in the field office.
Translate all forms into Spanish and, upon request, other languages used by the clients,
HSD has translated most of the application forms into Spanish and adheres to the Civil
Rights Act in administering the programs along with federal program administration
requirements for serving participants and applicants with limited English proficiency.
Additional translating and printing of forms will also have a fiscal impact. Changing all
notices through the automated eligibility system (ISD2) would be extremely complex and
a significant fiscal impact as the current eligibility program does not have that capability.
SIGNIFICANT ISSUES
HSD reports assistance is provided to about 17,000 low-income families for TANF cash
assistance, about 1,900 households for disability assistance (General Assistance), over 90,000
households for Food Stamps, and over 200,000 Medicaid cases along with other large programs
as Low Income Home Energy Assistance Program and The Emergency Food Assistance
Program (TEFAP).
pg_0003
House Joint Memorial 18 – Page
3
PERFORMANCE IMPLICATIONS
HSD’s indicates its strategic plan and performance measures already include many of the
elements of HJM 18, including increasing the:
number of participants in Medicaid and SCHIP;
percent of New Mexicans with health insurance;
number of children and families participating in Food Stamp Program;
percent of expedited Food Stamp cases meeting federal required measures for
timeliness of benefits; and
number of elderly participating in the Food Stamp Program.
MW/nt