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F I S C A L I M P A C T R E P O R T
SPONSOR Nunez
ORIGINAL DATE
LAST UPDATED
3/08/2007
HJM 73
SHORT TITLE Climate Change Effect on Flood Control
SB
ANALYST Schuss
ESTIMATED ADDITIONAL OPERATING BUDGET IMPACT (dollars in thousands)
FY07
FY08
FY09 3 Year
Total Cost
Recurring
or Non-Rec
Fund
Affected
Total
$100.0*
$100.0*
Non-
Recurring General
Fund
(Parenthesis ( ) Indicate Expenditure Decreases)
*Office of the State Engineer estimate
SOURCES OF INFORMATION
LFC Files
Responses Received From
Office of the State Engineer (OSE)
SUMMARY
Synopsis of Bill
House Joint Memorial 73 requests that the Office of the State Engineer conduct a one-year study
of the impacts of climate change on the hydrologic design of flood control facilities
FISCAL IMPLICATIONS
OSE states that the memorial provides no financial support to carry out the request. $100,000 is
requested to contract with an engineering firm to summarize the flood plain criteria of various
local governments and changes to frequency-based storms to carry out the request.
SIGNIFICANT ISSUES
House Joint Memorial 73 states that New Mexico state agencies, including OSE, have conducted
reviews of the reality and possible effects of global warming and of associated climate change,
and these agencies have concluded that both are occurring and will have negative impacts on our
state.
A conference of the world’s experts in the field concluded in a February 2007 report that climate
change is happening, that the actions of humans are, in part, responsible and that many of the
associated adverse impacts cannot be reversed and, in the past, criteria for the hydrologic design
pg_0002
House Joint Memorial 73 – Page
2
of storm structures have been based on the historic record of hydrologic events. One of the
associated effects of climate change that has already been observed is an increase in the number
and magnitude of precipitation events of long duration and great intensity. These precipitation
events have led to flooding that has threatened flood control structures, including dams and
levees, and caused injury and damage to people, animals, farms, homes and businesses in New
Mexico.
OSE has included the following in their analysis of the bill:
The memorial raises several concerns that the design of flood control facilities may be
deficient because of the changes in the historic record of precipitation events. The memorial
requests that the OSE study the impact of changes in precipitation on flood control facilities.
The memorial presents the following statements to support the request, which includes OSE
comments on the statements:
1.
Climate change may render inadequate our reliance on the historical record as criteria for
hydrologic design of flood control facilities.
The Federal Government through the National Oceanic and Atmospheric
Association (NOAA) evaluate and update the frequency-based hydrologic criteria.
The Criteria was recently updated for New Mexico. It is likely that if climate
change continues the Federal Government will update the criteria on a more
frequent basis. Local governments charged with flood plain management will
need to evaluate the affects of changing criteria on their facilities.
The OSE has adopted a deterministic event, the probable maximum precipitation
(PMP), as the hydrologic criteria for dams. Methods used by NOAA to determine
the PMP are not generally affected by climate change due to the extreme
conditions already assumed.
2.
There is no state agency responsible for collection and analysis of precipitation data or
tracking and warning of major storms.
This statement is correct; however, the Federal Government through the National
Weather Service currently carries out this activity as a service to the general
public.
3.
NM does not have a network of volunteers to track storm events.
This statement does not reflect that the New Mexico Climate Center, through
NMSU, is coordinating a network of volunteers (CoCoRAHS) to track
precipitation events in NM, whether this effort is as comprehensive as in other
states is unknown.
4.
No licensing procedure for the experts involved in the design of hydrologic facilities.
This statement is correct; however, public facilities are required to be designed by
a professional engineer (PE). Professional Engineers are licensed by the state of
NM and the PE Board requires that engineers provide services in only areas
pg_0003
House Joint Memorial 73 – Page
3
where they have the expertise.
5.
NM does not have a state agency responsible for developing hydrologic criteria for storm
facilities.
This statement is correct. Flood control is a local government issue because local
governments regulate development, which must be coordinated with flood plain
management.
6.
NM does not have a state hydrologist or a committee of engineers to advise the OSE on
hydrologic design.
The state engineer has adopted hydrologic criteria for dams in the state engineer’s
rules and regulations. Engineers, both civil and geotechnical developed the
hydrologic criteria after thoroughly researching the issue. The OSE hydrologic
criteria are consistent with other western state’s criteria. Because the OSE has no
jurisdiction over flood control issues, which are handled at the local government
level, exerting authority over hydrologic criteria for other flood control facilities
would be inappropriate under existing law.
OSE is requested to report its findings and recommendations to the next sessions of the
legislature.
PERFORMANCE IMPLICATIONS
OSE states that major performance implications are anticipated for those programs that must
contribute staff resources to develop a meaningful report to the legislature.
BS/csd