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F I S C A L I M P A C T R E P O R T
SPONSOR Campos
ORIGINAL DATE
LAST UPDATED
2/12/07
3/09/07 HB
SHORT TITLE Jail Operation Contract Duration
SB 823/aSJC/aHHGAC
ANALYST Peery-Galon
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
New Mexico Corrections Department (NMCD)
Department of Finance Administration (DFA)
New Mexico Sentencing Commission (NMSC)
SUMMARY
Synopsis HHGAC Amendment
The House Health and Government Affairs Committee amendment to Senate Bill 823 allows for
additional one-year or two-year extensions not to exceed a total of five extensions regarding the
contracting for the operation or management of jails.
Synopsis SJC Amendment
The Senate Judicial Committee amendment to Senate Bill 823 calls for the removal of brackets
and lining through the wording “up to" on page 1, line 21. It appears that there is a technical
error, in that the line number is 22. The amendment allows contract agreements between county
or municipal jails and private contractors for the operation or management of jails to be up to
five years.
Synopsis of Original Bill
Senate Bill 823 amends Section 33-3-27 NMSA 1978 to allow contract agreements between
county or municipal jails and private contractors for the operation or management of jails to be
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Senate Bill 823/aSJC/aHHGAC – Page
2
for 5 years and allow for additional consecutive two-year extensions not to exceed a total of five
extensions.
SIGNIFICANT ISSUES
NMCD notes under current law the duration of a jail contract to privatize operation and
management is for five years and allows for one-year extensions not to exceed a total of five
extensions.
NMCD states the proposed legislation indirectly affects the department. NMCD reports the
department has contracts with several county and municipal jails to house state inmates, and
some of the jails enter into separate contracts with private vendors to operate their jails. NMCD
notes that the county or municipal jail’s private operator will handle and oversee inmates for up
to 15 years total instead of up to 10 years total under current law. NMCD reports the contracts
between jails and private contractors typically contain provisions that allow the parties to not
review the contract or not enter into any extension for both “no cause’ and “for cause."
Therefore, if the county or municipal jail is not satisfied with the private contractor’s services,
including how it oversees and handles NMCD inmates, it can essentially terminate the contract
by not entering into any extension.
OTHER SUBSTANTIVE ISSUES
DFA notes that New Mexico leads the nation in using private prison to house inmates according
to the U.S. Justice Department statistics on prisons in 2005. DFA reports the New Mexico
Corrections Department plans to add 240 more beds at the Guadalupe County Correctional
Facility in Santa Rosa and 600 beds at a private prison in Clayton scheduled to open in June
2008.
The New Mexico Corrections Department’s budget request for fiscal year 2008 asked for a $37.2
million increase over the department’s fiscal year 2007 operating budget. For fiscal year 2008,
the department requested an increase of $16.3 million to fund inmate beds in private prisons.
The NMCD budget for private prison beds has grown by 57.4 percent from fiscal year 2003
actual numbers to the department’s fiscal year 2008 budget request.
RPG/mt