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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
2/2/07
2/26/07 HB
SHORT TITLE
Gas Tax Deductions & Surety Bonds
SB 345/aSF1
ANALYST Francis
REVENUE (dollars in thousands)
Estimated Revenue
Recurring
or Non-Rec
Fund
Affected
FY07
FY08
FY09
NFI
(Parenthesis ( ) Indicate Revenue Decreases)
SOURCES OF INFORMATION
LFC Files
Responses Received From
Department of Transportation
Taxation and Revenue Department
SUMMARY
Synopsis of SFl Amendment
Senate Floor Amendment amends Senate Bill 345 to remove a provision that allows the
Secretary of the Taxation and Revenue Department (TRD) to require a bond of those commercial
drivers deemed in danger of default of reports required.
Synopsis of Original Bill
Senate Bill 345 amends the Gasoline Tax Act to allow for a deduction for gasoline received in
New Mexico when the gasoline tax had already been paid by an out-of-state terminal where the
gasoline was loaded.
SB345 also amends the Weight Distance Tax Act to require commercial truckers who are not
part of the International Fuel Tax Agreement (IFTA) to file a bond guaranteeing payment of the
weight distance tax.
pg_0002
Senate Bill 345/aSF1 – Page
2
FISCAL IMPLICATIONS
TRD:
The fuels tax changes will provide some relief for taxpayers by enabling them to avoid
temporarily paying tax twice. This will only impact the timing of their payments, not the
total amount owed.
The bond requirements for special fuels and weight distance tax purposes will improve
compliance and therefore will avoid the potential loss of revenue but the amount of
additional collections is uncertain due to a lack of experience with these compliance
methods.
SIGNIFICANT ISSUES
DOT:
This bill enhances the state’s ability to collect weight distance and special fuel taxes. While
the bill does not affect NMDOT directly, most (if not all) of the taxes collected are road fund
taxes, so NMDOT should be in favor of passing this bill. The deduction granted for payment
of special fuel excise taxes to an out of state terminal (supplier) for fuel imported into New
Mexico makes a lot of sense. The bill requires (1) that the terminal collect the taxes and (2)
that the special fuel user must declare that the fuel’s intended destination is New Mexico
before allowing the user to deduct that fuel from special fuel excise tax. That gives New
Mexico two potential targets in the event there is tax evasion.
As for the bonds, the bill is clear about what triggers a claim against the bond. It also protects
taxpayers by allowing the requirement to be waived if the taxpayer shows a good compliance
history
.
ADMINISTRATIVE IMPLICATIONS
TRD reports that these changes can be accommodated with existing resources.
OTHER SUBSTANTIVE ISSUES
TRD:
Deduction for imported fuels:
Under present law, an importer who has already paid New Mexico tax to an out-of-state
distributor is required to pay the tax again and then claim a refund. The proposal will allow
the Department to accept taxes remitted by the out-of-state distributor on behalf of the
importer. Tax liabilities are unaffected, but the importer would be spared the foregone cash
flow from having to pay the tax and later claim a refund. Since these are monthly
transactions, the potential cash flow problem is significant for certain importers.
Surety bond requirements:
This proposal would ensure payment of tax by truckers from jurisdictions with whom New
Mexico does not have an enforcement/collection agreement. In particular, this will improve
compliance and enforcement with regard to trucks from Mexico operating in the state.
Currently there are not any Mexican Carriers transporting in the U.S.. However, the U.S.
Government is expected to reach an agreement under the provisions of NAFTA that would
permit Mexican companies to operate trucks in the U.S. Once they are allowed to transport
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Senate Bill 345/aSF1 – Page
3
in the US, they will be adopted by the border state in which they log the majority of their
miles. An estimate of 100 Mexican Trucking companies and over 500 trucks could be
adopted by New Mexico. Under the IFTA, New Mexico will be responsible for filed reports,
collecting tax due and distributing fuel tax due to other states, whether the out of country
carriers pay us the fuel tax due or not. A bond of not less than $500/truck will assure that
New Mexico will not be holding the bag for unpaid tax which must be distributed to other
states. Surety bonds (or cash) (not less than $500/truck) for Weight Distance Tax for carriers
traveling New Mexico highways but based in Mexico will ensure that highway use taxes are
collected even if reports are not correctly filed or taxes paid. Without a surety bond, there
are no avenues to collect tax in Mexico.
NF/mt