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F I S C A L I M P A C T R E P O R T
SPONSOR Beffort
ORIGINAL DATE
LAST UPDATED
2/21/07
HB
SHORT TITLE Law Enforcement Locating Missing Children
SB 857
ANALYST Lucero
APPROPRIATION (dollars in thousands)
Appropriation
Recurring
or Non-Rec
Fund
Affected
FY07
FY08
$1,200.0
Recurring
General Fund
(Parenthesis ( ) Indicate Expenditure Decreases)
Conflicts with HB449
Relates to Appropriation in the General Appropriation Act
SOURCES OF INFORMATION
LFC Files
Responses Received From
Children, Youth and Families Department (CYFD)
Department of Public Safety (DPS)
Public Defender Department (PDD)
Administrative Office of the Courts (AOC)
Indian Affairs Department (IAO)
SUMMARY
Synopsis of Bill
Senate Bill 857 appropriates $1,250,000 from the general fund to Children, Youth and Families
Department split as follows:
$900.0 to provide counseling services to runaway children and their families. Any
unexpended or unencumbered balance remaining at the end of fiscal year 2008 shall
revert to the general fund.
$350.0 for staffing and operating a segregated safe area in statewide juvenile detention
centers and juvenile receiving homes. Any unexpended or unencumbered balance
remaining at the end of fiscal year 2008 shall revert to the general fund.
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Senate Bill 857 – Page
2
The bill amends sections of Chapter 32A of the Children’s Code (NMSA 1978) and adds two new
sections.
Section 1: Amends Section 32A-1-4 (1993) to add a newly defined facility for detaining runaway
children.
“juvenile receiving home" means an emergency residential care facility for non-delinquent
juveniles
Section 2: Amends Section 32A-3B-4 (1993) by striking the authority of CYFD to determine placement
in an appropriate detention location or return to the parent or guardian, if child safety can be assured,
when contacted by law enforcement about a child taken into protective custody. The bill would also
insert a new provision requiring law enforcement to transport a child taken into protective custody to
certain types of facilities to include either a juvenile receiving home, police station, sheriff’s office or
juvenile justice detention center. A center may be utilized only if the facility has an area for children in
protective custody that is segregated from indicted or adjudicated delinquent children. The child must
be held until:
protective custody has expired and no petition to extend custody is filed;
the child is placed by CYFD into foster care; or
the child is returned to the parent or guardian, if child safety can be assured.
In addition, the bill strikes the provision allowing children in protective custody not to be held
involuntarily for more than 2 days, unless a petition to extend custody has been filed.
Section 3: Amends the Children’s Code to add a new provision relating to locating runaway children.
When a law enforcement agency receives a report from a parent/guardian that their child, without
permission, has left the home and run away, law enforcement may help the parent/guardian locate the
child and take the child into protective custody for up to 72 hours.
Section 4: Amends the Children’s Code to add a new provision to create new penalties on children for
repetitively running away.
Penalties:
second time – referred to counseling
third time – taken to court on misdemeanor charges
FISCAL IMPLICATIONS
The appropriation of $1,250,000 contained in this bill is a recurring expense to the general fund.
Any unexpended or unencumbered balance remaining at the end of fiscal year 2008 shall revert
to the general fund.
The appropriation is not part of Children Youth and Families Department’s request and is not
included in the Executive recommendation for the Children Youth and Families Department.
The third runaway offense would subject the child to a delinquency petition and probable Public
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Senate Bill 857 – Page
3
Defender representation. This would increase the Public Defender caseload and would likely
require additional funding for the Department.
SIGNIFICANT ISSUES
The seventy-two hour protective custody provision in this bill conflicts with the time frames for
protective custody in Article 4, The Child Abuse and Neglect Act and Article 3B, The Family in
Need of Court-Ordered Services Act. The latter Acts provide for protective custody for two
business days.
This bill creates a new delinquency status that was eliminated in New Mexico many years ago
and criminalizes the act of running away and the status of being a runaway. The bill requires that
runaway children in protective custody not be housed with indicted or adjudicated delinquent
children. The bill also creates a new residential placement option called “juvenile receiving
home". The bill does not designate how these types of facilities will be licensed or regulated nor
does it designate what agency has the authority to license and/or regulate these types of facilities
PERFORMANCE IMPLICATIONS
The courts are participating in performance-based budgeting. This bill may have an impact on
the measures of the district courts in the following areas:
Cases disposed of as a percent of cases filed
Percent change in case filings by case type
ADMINISTRATIVE IMPLICATIONS
If passed, the bill will have an administrative impact on children, youth and families department
that the bill does not address.
There will be a minimal administrative cost for statewide update, distribution and documentation
of statutory changes. Any additional fiscal impact on the judiciary would be proportional to the
enforcement of this law and commenced prosecutions. New laws, amendments to existing laws
and new hearings have the potential to increase caseloads in the courts, thus requiring additional
resources to handle the increase. Third-time offenders would be taken to Juvenile Court for a
hearing and determination on the misdemeanor penalty.
CONFLICT, DUPLICATION, COMPANIONSHIP, RELATIONSHIP
Conflicts with HB449
TECHNICAL ISSUES
OTHER SUBSTANTIVE ISSUES
Detention is a fairly common punishment in runaway cases. The National Council of Family and
Juvenile Court Judges reported that between 1985 and 2002, formally processed runaway cases
were more likely to involve detention than were other status offense cases. In addition, youth
age 15 and younger accounted for more than two-thirds of runaway cases involving detention.
Moreover, females accounted for 58% of runaway cases involving detention. Ultimately,
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Senate Bill 857 – Page
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petitioned runaway cases were least likely to result in the youth being adjudicated a status
offender.
Some states also have penalties for aiding, providing shelter or otherwise harboring a runaway
child.
Detaining a child for running away can add new trauma to whatever may have motivated the
runaway behavior. While running away carries with it certain risks for youth, it does not, in and
of itself warrant the creation of a criminal status. It could also force youth intent upon running
not to surface for services or interventions because they would face detention.
ALTERNATIVES
Fund school districts in the state to educate children on the risks inherent in runaway behavior.
Conducting this educational campaign at an early age and continuing to emphasize it as part of a
child’s education will go much further than trying to address the problem and its associated risks
after it has already occurred.
WHAT WILL BE THE CONSEQUENCES OF NOT ENACTING THIS BILL
Status Quo
DL/mt