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F I S C A L I M P A C T R E P O R T
SPONSOR Carraro
ORIGINAL DATE
LAST UPDATED
02/15/07
HB
SHORT TITLE
Elimination of School Portable Buildings
SB 935
ANALYST Hanika Ortiz
APPROPRIATION (dollars in thousands)
Appropriation
Recurring
or Non-Rec
Fund
Affected
FY07
FY08
$160,000.0
non-recurring
Public School Capital
Outlay Fund
(Parenthesis ( ) Indicate Expenditure Decreases)
Relates to Appropriation in the General Appropriation Act
SOURCES OF INFORMATION
LFC Files
Responses Received From
Public Education Department (PED)
SUMMARY
Synopsis of Bill
Senate Bill 935 appropriates $160 million from the general fund to the Public School Capital
Outlay Fund and adds a new section to the Public School Code to phase out the use of portable
buildings for classrooms by public schools:
1)
kindergarten through third shall be phased out by August 8, 2009;
2)
fourth through sixth shall be phased out by August 8, 2010;
3)
seventh through ninth shall be phased out by August 8, 2011;
4)
Tenth through 12th shall be phased out by August 8, 2012.
This section also requires the PED to oversee the elimination of the portable buildings used as
classrooms; and, may approve the temporary use of portable buildings not to exceed two years
from the date first used as a classroom.
FISCAL IMPLICATIONS
Senate Bill 935 appropriates $160 million from the general fund to the Public School Capital
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Senate Bill 935 – Page
2
Outlay Fund (PSCOF) for expenditures in FY08 and subsequent years for the first year of phased
elimination of the portable buildings. Any expended balance at the end of any fiscal year shall
not revert to the general fund.
According to the Public School Facilities Authority (PSFA) there are approximately 2,948
portable buildings totaling 3,698,615 square feet being used by school districts throughout the
state. PED estimates that using a conservative average of $170 per square foot to build a bricks-
and-mortar classroom to replace the existing portable classrooms will cost approximately
$628,764.5.
The Eleventh Judicial Court ordered the state to establish and implement a uniform funding
system for capital improvements of New Mexico school districts as a result of the Zuni
lawsuit that found the state in violation of its constitutional "uniformity clause" in the way
it funded facilities. In response to the judges’ order many changes were made to the PSCOA.
One of the changes was the implementation of the state and local share formula that is
based upon a district’s local tax efforts, wealth and membership. This bill addresses the
replacement of portable buildings and allows for allocations without a local match. The
majority of school districts that own portable buildings are high-growth districts. PED
believes that earmarking funds to these schools may pose an equity issue and jeopardize
the uniform system developed by the Public School Capital Outlay Oversight Committee
in response to the Zuni lawsuit.
Currently, all capital outlay grant awards made by the PSCOC are being reduced by a percentage
of direct appropriations for capital outlay projects received by that school district. The amount
of the reduction will be determined by the state-local match formula, and will equal the direct
legislative appropriation percentage amount for the school district multiplied by the amount of
the direct appropriations for individual school projects. This offset was implemented as a direct
result of the Zuni lawsuit to mitigate the disequalization effect of direct legislative appropriations
to individual schools. PED asks if the funds allocated within this bill are subject to this offset. It
may be a suggestion to add language to exempt them from this statutory provision.
SIGNIFICANT ISSUES
The PED reports in the current standards-based system, school districts are ranked in a database
and the state goes down the list and funds as many needs as available revenues will allow. There
are currently nine categories used to rank a school building and each category is weighted
differently. Currently, space or growth is the second-highest weighted category. In essence,
high growth and overcrowding will be reflected in the ranking of this database. The current
ranking system is addressing the growth problem and as is reflected by the schools that are rising
to the top.
The PED further reports that portable buildings that meet code also meet the statewide adequacy
standards. The only point in time that they do not meet the adequacy standards is when there are
immediate life, health and safety issues within the portable or when the portable building
exceeds its useful life of 15 years.
TECHNICAL ISSUES
PED notes that Section 1, B, line 6 of page 2 states that the PED shall oversee the elimination of
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Senate Bill 935 – Page
3
portable buildings used as classrooms. However, pursuant to 22-24-9 NMSA 1978, the Public
School Facilities Authority serves as staff to the Public School Capital Outlay Council (PSCOC),
which provides assistance and oversight functions of the PSCOC Act. The appropriation in this
bill is to the PSCOF; therefore, the word “Department" should be changed to either “PSFA" or
“PSCOC".
OTHER SUBSTANTIVE ISSUES
No one can predict with absolute certainty how many children will attend New Mexico public
schools 10 years from now or what facilities the state will need. And population swings in
individual communities are even more dramatic and less predictable than in the state as a whole.
That uncertainty alone makes portable classrooms an important part of the mix for school facility
planners. In addition, portables offer other equally important advantages. Generally speaking,
they can be put into place faster than permanent buildings, allowing school districts to respond
more easily to rapidly changing or unexpected needs. They are also usually less expensive to put
into place, sometimes considerably so.
ALTERNATIVES
A state-sponsored task force studying the cost and safety differences between permanent
construction as opposed to portable buildings for school classroom use before this bill is
considered.
WHAT WILL BE THE CONSEQUENCES OF NOT ENACTING THIS BILL
The state will continue to address growth issues and old portable buildings through the current
standards-based system, which identifies growth within the ranking system.
AHO/mt