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F I S C A L I M P A C T R E P O R T
SPONSOR Taylor
ORIGINAL DATE
LAST UPDATED
2/14/07
3/15/07 HB
SHORT TITLE Oil & Gas Property Alternative Unit Valuation
SB 340/aSFC/aHTRC
ANALYST Francis
REVENUE (dollars in thousands)
Estimated Revenue
Recurring
or Non-Rec
Fund
Affected
FY07
FY08
FY09
*See Narrative
(Parenthesis ( ) Indicate Revenue Decreases)
Duplicates HB 665
ESTIMATED ADDITIONAL OPERATING BUDGET IMPACT (dollars in thousands)
FY07
FY08
FY09 3 Year
Total Cost
Recurring
or Non-Rec
Fund
Affected
Total
(232.0)
*See Narrative
(232.0)
(464.0) Recurring Taxation and
Revenue
Dept.
(Parenthesis ( ) Indicate Expenditure Decreases)
Duplicates HB 665 as amended
SOURCES OF INFORMATION
LFC Files
Responses Received From
Energy Minerals and Natural Resources (EMNR)
Taxation and Revenue Department (TRD)
SUMMARY
Synopsis of HTRC Amendment
The House Taxation and Revenue Committee amended Senate Bill 340 to changes a provision
relating to those properties regulated by the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission. In the
original bill, the due date for supplements to the annual report with claims of obsolescence are
pg_0002
Senate Bill 340/aSFC/aHTRC – Page
2
due no
later than April 15 of the tax year following the year in which the property was subject to
valuation. This amendment changes this due date to April 15
th
of the tax year.
Synopsis of SFC Amendment
The Senate Finance Committee amended Senate Bill 340 to redefine the deadlines for the
Taxation and Revenue Department (TRD) to give notice of deficiency. TRD must provide
notice by April 1 or 30 days after the return is filed but no later than April 15
th
. If the property is
regulated by the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (FERC), notice shall be provided
within 15 days of the filing of the FERC report and the taxpayer shall have 10 days to respond.
The SFC amendment also clarifies the title and makes the first applicable tax year as beginning
on or after January 1, 2008.
Synopsis of Original Bill
Senate Bill 340 was introduced for the interim Revenue Stabilization and Tax Policy Committee.
The New Mexico Oil and Gas Association (NMOGA) requested RSTP’s endorsement on this
bill. The bill amends the Property Tax Act, allowing the valuation of pipelines, tanks, sales
meters and plants used in the processing, gathering, transmission, storage, measurement or
distribution of oil, natural gas, carbon dioxide or liquid hydrocarbons to be reduced upon a
showing of “functional obsolescence" or “economic obsolescence." These two concepts are
added to the definition of “other justifiable factors."
.
Economic obsolescence is defined as the loss of value caused by unfavorable economic
influences or factors not including physical depreciations.
.
Functional obsolescence is loss due to functional inadequacies or deficiencies caused by
factors within the property not including physical depreciation.
The amendment requires the taxpayer to claim and document the economic or functional
obsolescence. If the Taxation and Revenue Department (TRD) disagrees it must notify the
taxpayer of the TRD determination in writing setting forth the reasons for its determination and
specifying the supporting information that TRD requires.
FISCAL IMPLICATIONS
The fiscal impact of this change is uncertain. If these clarifications allow for more claims of
economic and functional obsolescence, then assessed property values will decline by the amount
of the claims. According to the New Mexico Oil and Gas Association (NMOGA), there have not
been more or less claims but rather many of those claims that have been rejected are being
litigated. Their position is that TRD began rejecting valid claims of obsolescence and therefore
artificially inflating the assessed value. If the change lowers the amount of litigation, there may
be a net savings for the TRD operational budget.
NMOGA:
By defining functional and economic obsolescence it should clarify that obsolescence is
separate and apart from “physical depreciation" and currently allowed in both statute and
regulation. While the Property Tax Division has allowed “physical depreciation", it has
been ignoring “other justifiable factors" which is functional & economic obsolescence
pg_0003
Senate Bill 340/aSFC/aHTRC – Page
3
and contends that obsolescence is part of physical depreciation.
If assessed values do decrease as a result of this change, the impact depends on what the affected
county requires from property tax collections. If the county requires the revenue prior to this
change in valuation, rates for all property taxpayers will rise or fall to compensate for the change
in valuation. The county could keep the rates the same and the impact would come from tax
collections.
TRD:
Due to the HENRC amendments, fiscal impacts of the proposed legislation are expected
to be minor, but uncertain because: 1) the number of taxpayers, assessed values and
locations of affected properties affected by the proposal are unknown at the moment, and
2) if the proposal results in decreased assessments for some taxpayers, the tax rate setting
process would cause some tax rates to adjust upward, offsetting most of the revenue
impacts. Thus, the bill would not generally reduce revenue but could result in a shift of
the tax burden from properties affected by the legislation to all other taxpayers. The
Department's rough estimate of the extent of tax shifting or loss to property tax recipients
primarily counties, municipalities and school districts – is on the order of several hundred
thousand dollars annually.
SIGNIFICANT ISSUES
As reported in 2006 session for HB375-S:
The New Mexico Oil and Gas Association have indicated that this legislation clarifies the
intent of the current statute. According to NMOGA, the intent embodied in the phrase
“any other justifiable factor" includes economic and functional obsolescence. NMOGA
feels that this obsolescence was generally accepted from 1973 till 2003 when the
Property Tax Division of the Taxation and Revenue Department began rejecting claims
of obsolescence without adequate explanation to the taxpayers.
In the statute, there are already references to functional and economic obsolescence which is
clarified in the regulations as follows:
(c) For purposes of Subsection B of Section 7-36-27 NMSA 1978, “other justifiable
factors" includes, but is not limited to, functional and economic obsolescence.
(i) Functional obsolescence is the loss in value due to functional inadequacies or
deficiencies caused by factors within the property.
(ii) Economic obsolescence is the loss in value caused by unfavorable economic
influences or factors outside the property.
(iii) Requests for economic or functional obsolescence must be made at the time
the annual report is filed. The request must be supported with sufficient documentation,
and must be based on a situation present at least six (6) months prior to January 1 of the
tax year. An economic or functional obsolescence factor must be provided together with
documentation to support and demonstrate how the factor was arrived at. Such
documentation shall consist of objective evidence demonstrating functional or economic
obsolescence such as comparisons to a documented industry standard, to a close
competitor or to an engineer's or appraiser's valuation, or any other comparable objective
evidence of functional or economic obsolescence. Failure to provide documentation or
proof satisfactory to the director will result in denial of an obsolescence adjustment.
(
http://www.tax.state.nm.us/regs/Property_Tax_Code.pdf
page 36-65)
pg_0004
Senate Bill 340/aSFC/aHTRC – Page
4
POSSIBLE QUESTIONS
Functional and economic obsolescence are already referenced in the statutes. What does this bill
do that changes those references.
NF/mt