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F I S C A L I M P A C T R E P O R T
SPONSOR Sanchez, M.
ORIGINAL DATE
LAST UPDATED
2/2/2007
3/16/2007 HB
SHORT TITLE Consistent Traffic Fines
SB 365/aHJC
ANALYST Schuss
REVENUE (dollars in thousands)
Estimated Revenue
Recurring
or Non-Rec
Fund
Affected
FY07
FY08
FY09
(Unknown) (Unknown) Recurring
Supreme Court
Automation Fund/
Court Facilities Fund
(Parenthesis ( ) Indicate Revenue Decreases)
SOURCES OF INFORMATION
LFC Files
Responses Received From
Administrative Office of the Courts (AOC)
Did not Respond
Department of Transportation (DOT)
SUMMARY
Synopsis of HJC Amendment
The amendment proposed by the House Judiciary Committee changes the title to read:
Relating to motor vehicles, limiting the amount of certain fines and fees imposed by local
authorities for certain offenses.
The amendment revises Subsection A of Section 1 to read:
define a nuisance, abate a nuisance and impose penalties upon a person who creates or
allows a nuisance to exist, provided that penalties or fines and costs or fees imposed by an
ordinance for failure to obey a traffic sign or signal including a red light violation or for a
speeding offense or violation shall be subject to the following criteria:
(1) the total amount assessed in fines, fees and costs shall not exceed one hundred dollars
($100);
pg_0002
Senate Bill 365/aHJC – Page
2
(2) except as provided in Paragraph (3) of this subsection, of the amount assessed,
two-thirds shall be retained by the municipality to defray the costs of carrying out the program
and the remainder shall be distributed to the administrative office of the courts, of which five
percent of the total amount assessed shall be credited to the brain injury services fund, three
percent shall be credited to the traffic safety education and enforcement fund and the remainder
shall be credited to the court facilities fund; and
(3) in fiscal year 2008 and not less than once every five fiscal years thereafter, the
municipality shall cause an audit of the program to be conducted by the state auditor or an
independent auditor selected by the state auditor. If an audit shows that the costs of maintaining
the program plus ten percent is less than the amount of the assessment retained by the
municipality, the excess shall be distributed to the administrative office of the courts to be
credited to the court facilities fund.
The amendment removes Sections 2 and 3 and replaces them with the following two sections:
Section 2. TEMPORARY PROVISION--APPLICABILITY.--The provisions of this act
shall apply prospectively to all municipal ordinances enacted before or after the effective date of
the provisions of this act.
Section 3. EFFECTIVE DATE.--The effective date of the provisions of this act is July 1,
2007.
The amendment to Sections 2 and 3 does not properly correspond to the lines of the bill; neither
does the amendment to Subsection A of Section 1.
Synopsis of Original Bill
Senate Bill 365 requires that any civil or criminal ordinance adopted by a local authority provide
the same penalties for failing to obey a traffic sign or signal or for a speeding offense or violation
contained in Section 66-8-116, which is the penalty assessment misdemeanor provision of the
motor vehicle code. This bill declares an emergency.
FISCAL IMPLICATIONS
The Administrative Office of the Courts states that Senate Bill 365 is likely to decrease penalty
assessments that flow into the judiciary’s Supreme Court Automation Fund that provides funds
to pay for automation in the courts and/or the Court Facilities Fund that pays principal and
interest on bonds issued by the New Mexico Finance Authority to build the Bernalillo County
Metropolitan Court as well as to fund security and equipment purchases in the magistrate courts
statewide. AOC has been investigating the substantial decrease in revenues to these funds. It
appears that the present use of camera citations under the Albuquerque STOP program has
contributed to the funds’ decline.
If fees must be reduced in order to become consistent with Section 66-8-116 then SB 365 could
result in a loss of revenue to the municipality.
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Senate Bill 365/aHJC – Page
3
SIGNIFICANT ISSUES
According to AOC, Senate Bill 365 appears to approve a plan such as that used in the
Albuquerque STOP program, where traffic citations are not reported to the New Mexico Motor
Vehicle Department as penalty assessment misdemeanors, but are instead deemed civil violations
that are outside the court and MVD process.
ADMINISTRATIVE IMPLICATIONS
Legal challenges to municipal ordinances that impose civil penalties instead of the motor vehicle
code penalty assessment misdemeanors will continue, according to AOC. It is not clear what
impact enactment of Senate Bill 365 would have on legal challenges that are presently being
challenged under the Albuquerque STOP ordinance, except to reduce the fines imposed under
the STOP ordinance, typically $100 for a first offense and $250 for a second offense, to the
assessment levels provided in the motor vehicle code.
TECHNICAL ISSUES
AOC notes that Senate Bill 365 does not directly address the lawfulness of a municipal
ordinance that makes failure to obey a traffic signal or speeding a civil nuisance instead of
applying the misdemeanor penalty assessment provisions of the motor vehicle code. However,
Senate Bill 365 implicitly recognizes such a plan as lawful as long as the penalty imposed equals
that provided in the motor vehicle code.
BS/csd:nt