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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
2/15/07
HB
SHORT TITLE
County Health Facility Revenue Bonds
SB 657
ANALYST Francis
APPROPRIATION (dollars in thousands)
Appropriation
Recurring
or Non-Rec
Fund
Affected
FY07
FY08
* See Narrative
(Parenthesis ( ) Indicate Expenditure Decreases)
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 Finance and Administration (DFA)
Department of Health (DOH)
NM Finance Authority
SUMMARY
Synopsis of Bill
Senate Bill 657 allows the New Mexico Finance Authority to issue bonds secured by the credit
enhancement account for county health facilities and to allow the funds NMFA receives from the
cigarette tax for Department of Health facilities to also be used for county health facilities.
Proceeds from revenue bonds guaranteed by cigarette tax revenues for county health facilities are
pg_0002
Senate Bill 657 – Page
2
appropriated to the Local Government Division of the Department of Finance and
Administration for distribution to the county. Finally, an appropriation to Fort Bayard Medical
Center included in Laws 2005, Chapter 320, Section 8, is reassigned to go to a county health
facility in Grant County.
FISCAL IMPLICATIONS
NMFA reports that the reassignment of the appropriation to Fort Bayard to a Grant County,
county health center should be considered a nonrecurring impact on the amount of bond capacity
for the Department of Health.
There are no changes proposed to the distribution of cigarette tax revenues and so none of the
other beneficiaries are impacted. The Department of Health may feel some competition for these
resources from counties desiring health clinics.
DFA:
Counties have the responsibility to provide suitable quarters for local public health
offices in accordance with Section 24-4-2, NMSA 1978 as amended. Current funding for
county facilities infrastructure comes from county revenue sources. The available
revenue is usually not enough to adequately address all of the county needs and
responsibilities and usually fall short of providing adequate funds for infrastructure
needs.
Currently, NMFA receives 6 and 5/100 percent of net cigarette tax receipts for land
acquisition and the planning, designing, construction and equipping of Department of
Health facilities improvements to such facilities. This bill would not increase the
distribution for this purpose, but add county health facilities in the allowable projects that
can be funded with this revenue stream.
According to NMFA, the revenue stream from the cigarette tax has declined more rapidly
in recent years, declining at about 3 percent annually versus the previous decline of one
percent. That is to say that this revenue stream can only support so much in the way of
bond proceeds. NMFA determines the capacity of this revenue stream and Department of
Finance and Administration determines the order or authorized projects that are funded
based on project readiness. NMFA does not believe this bill will impact the bonds
outstanding because they will not issue more bonds then they have capacity to support.
Also, as the new capital project added to the list merely replaced an existing project for
the same amount, they do not see any impact on their liabilities at this time.
CONFLICT, DUPLICATION, COMPANIONSHIP, RELATIONSHIP
Department of Health reports that the executive capital outlay request includes
$3.0 million to
replace or repair local public health offices in five counties: Bernalillo, McKinley, Mora,
Roosevelt and Socorro counties. These have been identified by DOH as the top five public health
office priorities. The legislative capital outlay request includes $5.0 million to support these
same projects.
NF/mt