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F I S C A L I M P A C T R E P O R T
SPONSOR Martinez
ORIGINAL DATE
LAST UPDATED
2/13/2007
2/24/2007 HB
SHORT TITLE Protection for Small Businesses
SB 698/a SFC
ANALYST Schuss
REVENUE (dollars in thousands)
Estimated Revenue
Recurring
or Non-Rec
Fund
Affected
FY07
FY08
FY09
$0.1
$0.1 Recurring General Fund
(Parenthesis ( ) Indicate Revenue Decreases)
ESTIMATED ADDITIONAL OPERATING BUDGET IMPACT (dollars in thousands)
FY07
FY08
FY09 3 Year
Total Cost
Recurring
or Non-Rec
Fund
Affected
Total
$0.1
$0.1
$0.1 Recurring General
Fund
(Parenthesis ( ) Indicate Expenditure Decreases)
SOURCES OF INFORMATION
LFC Files
Responses Received From
Department of Finance and Administration (DFA)
New Mexico Department of Transportation (NMDOT)
Energy, Mineral and Natural Resources Department (EMNRD)
Economic Development Department (EDD)
Attorney General’s Office (AGO)
SUMMARY
Synopsis of SFC Amendment
The amendment proposed by the Senate Finance Committee reinstates all language pertaining to
New Mexico resident businesses or a New York State business enterprise and removes Section 2
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Senate Bill 698/a SFC – Page
2
in its entirety which amended Section 13-1-21.2 NMSA 1978 – Equal Procurement Access for
New York Businesses.
The amendment also enacts a new section of the Procurement Code to provide for separate
pricing of certain components in certain circumstances. The new section reads:
SPECIFICATION OF CERTAIN COMPONENTS--SEPARATE PRICING REQUIRED.--
Prior to submitting a bid or proposal for a state public works project or a local public works
project, if the state purchasing agent, the central purchasing office or a responsible bidder or
responsible offeror determines that there is only one source for a specific service, construction
or item of tangible personal property that is required in the specifications, the state purchasing
agent, central purchasing office, responsible bidder or responsible offeror may require any bid
or offer submitted by a subcontractor or supplier to separately price the specific service,
construction or item of tangible personal property.
In a recently received analysis from AGO on the original bill, the following issues have been
listed:
This bill appears intended to address the perception of disparity in the award of certain
government contracts considering business size and ownership by women, members of
minorities, and veterans. However, the bill must be considered in light of the United States
Supreme Court holding in City of Richmond v. J.A. Croson Co. 488 U.S. 469 (1989). In that
case, The City of Richmond adopted a plan requiring prime contractors awarded city
construction contracts to subcontract at least 30% of the dollar amount of each contract to one or
more "Minority Business Enterprises". Although the plan declared that it was "remedial" in
nature, it was adopted after a public hearing at which no direct evidence was presented that the
city had discriminated on the basis of race in letting contracts or that its prime contractors had
discriminated against minority subcontractors. After the plaintiff construction company was
denied a waiver and lost its contract, it brought suit under 42 U.S.C. 1983, alleging that the Plan
was unconstitutional under the Fourteenth Amendment's Equal Protection Clause. The Court
struck down the plan, holding “none of the evidence presented by the city points to any identified
discrimination in the Richmond construction industry. We, therefore, hold that the city has failed
to demonstrate a compelling interest in apportioning public contracting opportunities on the
basis of race. To accept Richmond's claim that past societal discrimination alone can serve as
the basis for rigid racial preferences would be to open the door to competing claims for
"remedial relief" for every disadvantaged group.
Therefore, any preferences must be narrowly tailored to remedy identified discrimination,
which must also be supported by evidence that the groups given the preferences have been
systematically excluded from government contracting.
Furthermore, Article II Section 18 of the New Mexico Constitution provides in part
“Equality of rights under law shall not be denied on account of the sex of any person." This bill
would grant preferential treatment to prospective contractors based upon the gender of their
owners, and might therefore violate that provision.
Synopsis of Original Bill
Senate Bill 698 proposes changes in the Procurement Code (NMSA Section 13-1-21 et. seq.) in
order to afford more opportunities for resident, small, and disadvantaged small business and
resident manufacturers to get contracts with state and local government entities. The existing 5%
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Senate Bill 698/a SFC – Page
3
price preference for resident businesses and manufacturers is expanded in two ways: first, the bill
creates a 10% price preference for resident small businesses and second, a 15% price preference
for resident disadvantaged small businesses.
A disadvantage small business is one majority-owned by a woman, member of a recognized
minority group (including African American, Hispanic, American Indian or Alaska native).
The bill also cleans up language regarding New York businesses and manufacturers, eliminating
redundancies and simply placing New York businesses and manufacturers on an equal plain with
New Mexico resident business and manufacturers.
FISCAL IMPLICATIONS
According to DFA, SB 698 is very likely to have major fiscal implications for all agencies. In
bid situations, agencies may be awarding contracts to bidders whose bids are anywhere from 1%-
15% higher than the low bid received. This clearly increases the cost of doing business for
agencies across the board. (“Bid situations", by regulation of the State Purchasing Department of
the General Services Division, occur when the expected price for tangible personal property or
non-professional services required will exceed $20,000. Therefore, to begin with, these are
higher priced procurements by definition.)
The fiscal effect in situations requiring proposals (generally, a Request for Proposals is used
where the expected price will exceed $30,000 for professional services) is somewhat muted in
that, in most cases, price is only one weighted factor in the RFP evaluation process. Where price
is the only or most heavily weighted factor in the evaluation, obviously this legislation would
have a greater impact since, again, agencies could be spending between 1%-15% more than the
lowest offered price.
SB 698 could generate some positive revenue for the general fund if an increase in tax revenue is
associated with an additional cost.
SIGNIFICANT ISSUES
DFA has listed the following issues in their analysis:
SB-698 protections involve discounting offered prices in bids and proposals for
qualifying small business entities. The discounts vary in degree from 5% to 15% and would be
applied in comparison to a low bid by an offeror not included among the bill's protected classes.
Previously, construction and construction-related services and materials were eligible for the 5%
resident preference. However, in this bill, construction and construction-related services and
materials are explicitly excluded from all the discounts offered pursuant to this legislation.
The cost of doing business for state agencies would likely increase since in many higher
dollar cases where bids and proposals are employed to choose goods or services, agencies will be
required to accept bids or proposals which are anywhere from 1%-15% higher than the lowest
price submitted by offerors in response to the Invitation to Bid or Request for Proposals.
A small business is defined as one with fewer than 20 employees. Assuming that typical
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Senate Bill 698/a SFC – Page
4
billings per employee are $200,000 to $250,000, then a small business could compete for
procurements worth up to $15 million, assuming that the contract would extend over three years.
There is very little procurement in the state that exceeds this ceiling, so all procurements
for all agencies would potentially be affected by this proposal.
On the other hand, this legislation would benefit local small businesses (defined in the
legislation as those New Mexico businesses with less than 20 employees) and disadvantaged
small businesses (defined in the legislation as those resident businesses with a minimum of 51%
ownership by a woman, veteran or other minority person) by allowing them a better chance to
compete with bigger business offerors for State business. Such local businesses could bid prices
from 1%-15% higher than non-resident offerors and still be awarded the contracts. By assisting
local businesses in this manner, the State is presumably aided in terms of economic development
through the employment of local workers and the payment of local taxes. However, every dollar
that flows to a small business or disadvantaged small business is a dollar not flowing to a
medium-sized business. However, a few more local small businesses or small disadvantaged
businesses would receive contracts from the State and fewer State dollars would flow to out-of-
state businesses.
TECHNICAL ISSUES
According to NMDOT, this bill addresses bids and proposals within the same paragraph (Section
12-1-21 Q). Also, Section 13-1-21, Application of Preference, Section A(3) refers to “proposal"
however, the cite referenced, Section 13-1-102 NMSA 1978, does not address proposals, only
bids. Section 13-1-21 M clarifies the statute by excluding construction, dealt with elsewhere in
Chapter 13. Section 13-1-21 P will require NMDOT to change its evaluation process to include
resident business points.
OTHER SUBSTANTIVE ISSUES
DFA reports that the definition of a resident business still includes businesses resident in New
York and New York small or disadvantaged businesses would qualify for the same preferences
as a small or disadvantaged New Mexico business.
ALTERNATIVES
DFA suggests the following alternatives:
removing the New York State nondiscrimination features of this legislation. These
features are no longer needed.
removing the New Mexico resident preference, since it might be held to be impermissible
interference with Interstate commerce.
decreasing the preference amounts. Perhaps a 3% preference for small businesses and a
6% preference for disadvantaged small businesses might be more appropriate than the
5%, 10%, 15% structure proposed in this bill.
BS/mt