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F I S C A L I M P A C T R E P O R T
SPONSOR SCORC
ORIGINAL DATE
LAST UPDATED
2/10/07
3/5/07 HB
SHORT TITLE Corporate Reporting Penalties
SB 402/SCORCS
ANALYST Wilson
APPROPRIATION (dollars in thousands)
Appropriation
Recurring
or Non-Rec
Fund
Affected
FY07
FY08
NFI
(Parenthesis ( ) Indicate Expenditure Decreases)
SOURCES OF INFORMATION
LFC Files
Responses Received From
Attorney General’s Office (AGO)
Public Regulation Department (PRC)
SUMMARY
Synopsis of Bill
The Senate Corporations & Transportation Committee substitute for Senate Bill 402 amends the
Corporate Reports Act and the Nonprofit Corporation Act by adjusting downward
The bill also allows the PRC to extend a filing period for not more than 30 days as opposed to
the12 days in the current law.
The bill requires a domestic or foreign corporation to file a biennial report instead of the current
annual report required by current law. The penalty for late filing of biennial corporate reports
from is lowered from $200 to $50.
In addition a domestic or foreign corporation required to file a supplemental report that fails to
submit the required report within the time prescribed for a reporting period shall also incur a civil
penalty of $50 instead of the current $200.
This bill provides for a fee for filing of a biennial report of $10. For failing to submit a biennial
report within the time required, there is a civil penalty of $10.00 in addition to the fee for filing
the report.
pg_0002
Senate Bill 402/SCORCS – Page
2
The bill sets out the procedures for filing a first and biennial report. There is also a procedure in
this bill for revoking a limited liability company.
FISCAL IMPLICATIONS
The PRC claims there will be no significant fiscal impact to the general fund since the decreases
in late filing fees will offset the increase in the additional filing fee for biennial reports and civil
penalty for failure to timely file such report
SIGNIFICANT ISSUES
The PRC provided the following:
Current statutes impose a civil penalty of $200 for late filing of biennial or supplemental
reports. Entities can pay this amount or re-incorporate under a different name for a lower
cost. The bill will assess a smaller business friendly late fee that is lower than the total
cost to re-incorporate under another name given all costs associated with the transaction
from the corporation to the PRC. The net effect of the bill will be to encourage business
to maintain their corporate status within the State of New Mexico.
The reason for requiring limited liability companies to file biennial reports is keep track
of their existence. Keeping track of their existence has many implications. Currently,
there is no method of knowing whether these entities are still in existence. Without
information provided directly to the PRC that a limited liability company is no longer in
existence, the name of the limited liability company cannot be used by another entity.
More generally, the public has an interest in knowing that the database of a state agency
is updated regularly and therefore reasonably accurate.
ADMINISTRATIVE IMPLICATIONS
The PRC will continue to assess and collect fees and applications. The current staff level is
sufficient to perform these transactions.
DW/mt