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F I S C A L I M P A C T R E P O R T
SPONSOR Altamirano
ORIGINAL DATE
LAST UPDATED
2/01/2007
3/14/2007 HB
SHORT TITLE Create Tourism Department Sports Authority
SB 215/aSF1/aHF1
ANALYST Earnest
APPROPRIATION (dollars in thousands)
Appropriation
Recurring
or Non-Rec
Fund
Affected
FY07
FY08
NFI
NFI
(Parenthesis ( ) Indicate Expenditure Decreases)
ESTIMATED OPERATING BUDGET IMPACT (dollars in thousands)
FY07
FY08
FY09 3 Year
Total Cost
Recurring
or Non-Rec
Fund
Affected
Total
($0.1)
($0.1)
($0.1) Recurring General
Fund
(Parenthesis ( ) Indicate Expenditure Decreases)
SOURCES OF INFORMATION
LFC Files
Responses Received From
New Mexico Tourism Department (NMTD)
New Mexico Sports Authority (NMSA)
SUMMARY
Synopsis of HF1 Amendment
The House Floor amendment would maintain the sports authority board as an advisory
committee to the new sports authority division. The original bill would have eliminated the
sports authority board. The House Floor amendment would keep the existing board, but rename
it the “sports advisory committee," and adds Subsection G to require that its membership
“resemble the demographics of New Mexico in conjunction with the three congressional
districts."
pg_0002
Senate Bill 215/aSF1/aHF1 – Page
2
Synopsis of SF1 Amendment
Senate Floor amendment number one removes a duty of the proposed Sports Authority Division
to identify and propose infrastructure and locations.
Synopsis of Original Bill
Senate Bill 215 would amend the enabling statute of the Tourism Department to better align with
the agency’s organizational structure of five divisions and moves the NM Sports Authority into
the department as a new division. The bill also repeals the NM Sports Authority Act (Sections 9-
15B-1 through 9-15B-6).
FISCAL IMPLICATIONS
No significant fiscal impact was identified by the Tourism Department. However, anticipated
administrative efficiencies and the elimination of the board of the sports authority should result
in operating budget savings that could be applied in other areas of the department.
SIGNIFICANT ISSUES
Senate Bill 215 will eliminate the NM Sports Authority as an independent agency and transfer all
of its resources into a new sports authority division of the Tourism Department.
The Sports Authority was created by the NM Sports Authority Act in the 2005 legislative
session. The agency employees 3 FTE, all exempt from the state personnel act, and has an FY07
operating budget of $295 thousand. The agency, housed in the Governor’s Albuquerque office,
is administratively attached to the Tourism Department.
Although the Sports Authority does not recognize any benefit to the reorganization, the Tourism
Department finds that moving the agency into the department will improve accountability and
performance of the agency. According to the Tourism Department, all Sports Authority
performance and accountability measures impact, and are impacted by, the department's own
performance measures. The Governor has indicated support for the reorganization.
*
This reorganization would likely bring additional administrative efficiency by centralizing
budget control in the Tourism Department. As a division of the department, there may be
additional accountability for procurement and contracts at the Sports Authority.
The Sports Authority, however, is concerned that it will lose autonomy under this proposal and
notes that its mission is not aligned with that of the Tourism Department.
In its repeal of the NM Sports Authority Act, the bill eliminates the 25-member board of the
Sports Authority. Board members, all appointed by the Governor, receive per-diem and mileage
reimbursement for the quarterly meetings.
*
“Executive Budget Recommendation, Path to Progress: Expanding Opportunity, Fiscal Year 2008," page
x.
pg_0003
Senate Bill 215/aSF1/aHF1 – Page
3
Senate Bill 215 also amends the Tourism Department’s enabling statute to align it more closely
with the current operating structure. In addition to the creation of a Sports Authority Division,
the bill renames the Travel and Marketing Division as the Promotion Division and adds the
Tourism Development Division and Marketing Division. Tourism Department currently has five
operating division; the Sports Authority would become a sixth division.
PERFORMANCE IMPLICATIONS
According to the Tourism Department, complementary goals of the Sports Authority and the
department will be more easily achieved with a streamlined operating structure. TD already has
responsibility for SA administrative matters and performance. Making SA an operating division
of TD will improve performance and administrative services.
ADMINISTRATIVE IMPLICATIONS
The Tourism Department expects to realize significant administrative efficiencies by moving the
Sports Authority into the agency.
OTHER SUBSTANTIVE ISSUES
In 2006, the agency reorganized from seven programs to four—Marketing and Promotion,
Tourism Development, New Mexico Magazine, and Program Support. The Legislature
appropriates to these four programs, and it isn’t clear where the Sports Authority would fall in
this structure.
Currently, the agency’s five divisions are headed by directors exempt from the personnel act and
are managed by two deputy secretaries
WHAT WILL BE THE CONSEQUENCES OF NOT ENACTING THIS BILL
The Tourism Department’s operating structure will not be aligned with statutory authority and
the Sports Authority will continue to operate as an independent agency, administratively attached
to the Tourism Department.
BE/nt:csd