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F I S C A L I M P A C T R E P O R T
SPONSOR Rawson
ORIGINAL DATE
LAST UPDATED
2/05/2007
2/14/2007 HB
SHORT TITLE Payment For Public Works Materials
SB 683/aSCORC
ANALYST Moser
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
Energy, Minerals and Natural Resources Department (EMNRD)
NM Department of Transportation (NMDOT)
General Services Department (GSD)
SUMMARY
Synopsis of Amendment
The Senate Corporations and Transportation Committee amendments to Senate Bill 683 remove
the NMDOT from the provisions of the bill.
Synopsis of Original Bill
Senate Bill 683 requires an owner, including specifically the NMDOT, to directly pay a
contractor, subcontractor or supplier taking delivery of or storing material at an off-site location
100% of the agreed-upon price for the material. The NMDOT would also be required to pay
based on a bill of lading, rather than an invoice, and cannot inquire of the contractor,
subcontractor or supplier the price actually paid for the material.
FISCAL IMPLICATIONS
GSD indicates that the bill is silent regarding required insurance for materials paid for that are
located off the construction site, and could put the owner at risk of loss should the material be
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Senate Bill 683/aSCORC – Page
2
lost or destroyed prior to installation on the project. For state public works projects, materials
stored at a construction site are insured under Risk Management Division “Builder’s Risk"
policy. Materials stored off the construction site are not insured under that policy.
The NMDOT expresses concern that SB 683 would basically require the NMDOT to finance the
contractor’s materials operation by having to deal directly with the supplier rather than the
contractor.
SIGNIFICANT ISSUES
GSD indicates that the “materialman" defined in the bill is allowed to “accept" the materials as
having been delivered to a location other than the construction site. This is a conflict of interest
in that the supplier would be accepting, and in effect certifying for payment, his own delivery of
goods.
GSD’s Property Control Division (PCD) construction contract contains general conditions that
cover payment
for materials stored off site. The owner has no interest in where materials are
stored until there is a request for payment. Upon payment, the risk of loss of materials shifts
from the contractor to the owner. Payment for materials stored off site can be addressed
adequately in contract documents.
EMNRD reports that SB 683 will require state agencies to pay for materials that have not been
delivered to the agency, but instead are delivered somewhere else. Assuming the materials are
ultimately received by the agency there are still several concerns. One issue of note in this
legislation is to clarify that the owner shall not pay any additional charges (above and beyond the
original agreed upon price) for shipping from an off site location or storage fees at the off site
location.
Additional issues noted include the liability for damage to equipment/materials stored off site
(that the owner has purchased) and that the owner should have the right of inspection at the off-
site location to verify quantity and quality of goods.
The NMDOT indicates that SB 683 conflicts with NMDOT Specification Section 109.8 and
NMDOT practice for many years. Specification Section 109.8 (“Material on Hand"), states that,
in order to be paid up to 95% of delivered materials, whether onsite or off-site, the contractor
must submit paid invoices which are certified by the supplier or manufacturer as having been
paid by the contractor. Specification Section 109.8 also requires lower percentage payments for
instances where the Project Manager determines that it is not practical to determine the delivered
cost of materials. SB 683 would require the NMDOT to pay 100%
for materials delivered to an
off-site location on the strength of a bill of lading (list of items delivered and location)
and not a
paid invoice certified by the supplier or manufacturer as having been paid by the contractor.
Additionally, SB 683 deletes the existing requirement that the contractor pays the materials
supplier and passes the paid invoice on to the NMDOT pursuant to their contract. Further,
NMDOT argues that SB 683 prevents the NMDOT from even asking the amount that was
actually paid for the materials.
SB 683 requires the NMDOT to pay a contractor, subcontractor or supplier directly
rather than
having such payments go through the contractor who has a contractual relationship with the
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Senate Bill 683/aSCORC – Page
3
NMDOT. NMDOT argues that SB 683 would open the department to challenge during an
internal or FHWA audit for paying unsupported amounts to a party without a contract with the
NMDOT.
SB 683 creates a statutory right to direct payment to a subcontractor or supplier without a
contract between the parties. Current New Mexico statutory (NMSA 1978 Section 37-1-23) and
Supreme Court case law (Hydro Conduit Corporation
, 110 NM 173, 793 P.2d 855 (1990),
however, grant immunity to the NMDOT from contract and contract-related actions by a party
without a valid written contract.
Further, under NMDOT Specification Section 105.19, only a contractor can make an
administrative claim to the NMDOT and, in order to do so, must include “references to relevant
portions of the contract," which neither a subcontractor or supplier could do because neither has
a contract with the NMDOT. Thus, a subcontractor or supplier who has been granted a statutory
right to direct payment from the NMDOT has no legal method for enforcing this right.
Unfortunately, though, this may not stop such subcontractors and suppliers from asking for a
claims board and complicating the NMDOT’s administrative claims procedure with legally
unrecognized claims.
PERFORMANCE IMPLICATIONS
SB 683 conflicts with the exiting contractual relationships sites especially with the NMDOT.
NMDOT for example enters into contracts with the contractor who, in turn, has entered into
contracts with its subcontractors and suppliers. In order to ensure that the contractor has the
requisite control over the jobsite, all communications go through the contractor, and the
NMDOT does not communicate directly with the contractor’s subs or suppliers. This bill would
tend to blur these lines of communication because the owner would be directly liable for
payment not just to the contractor but also to a subcontractor or supplier.
TECHNICAL ISSUES
GSD points out that Section 1 of the SB 683 defines “public works project" and would create a
conflict with the definition of a “state public works project" in 13-1-91, NMSA 1978.
CONFLICT, DUPLICATION, COMPANIONSHIP, RELATIONSHIP
Conflicts with NMDOT Specification Section 109.8, NMAC 18.27.2.
OTHER SUBSTANTIVE ISSUES
GSD points out that the bill introduces and defines “materialman" in the procurement code as a
person who furnishes material or supplies to a subcontractor or contractor. In addition, the bill
allows the materialman to determine the necessity to deliver materials to a location other than the
construction site. This provision elevates suppliers as equal to contractors in determining the
means and methods of completing the work by allowing them to make deliveries to locations
other than the work site at their discretion, and could subvert contractual relationships on a
public works project.
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Senate Bill 683/aSCORC – Page
4
The PCD construction contract requires:
Approval to store off site in advance and in writing, by the owner prior to payment for off
site materials
Payment is conditioned on a bill of sale or proof of title to the owner for the materials
Applicable insurance for the materials. Acceptable insurance is a standard insurance
certificate or a surety bond in an amount equal to the invoice value of the materials.
It is up to the contractor to assure the owner that his interest in the paid materials is
protected.
AMENDMENTS
EMNRD recommend the following amendments:
Recommend adding language to the bill stating that the Owner shall not be responsible for any
freight or shipping costs for moving the material from the off site storage location to the job site.
Additionally, it is recommended that the bill state that any fees associated with storing the
material at an off site location shall be the responsibility of the contractor, subcontractor, or
materialman unless agreed upon under the original procurement.
Additionally, this agency suggests language be added saying that the contractor shall remain
responsible for any damage to the equipment while stored and shall provide adequate insurance
to cover any liability for storing the equipment.
Finally, some provision for the inspection of the quantity and quality of goods by the owner at
the off-site location should be made.
GM/nt:csd