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F I S C A L I M P A C T R E P O R T
SPONSOR Lundstrom
ORIGINAL DATE
LAST UPDATED
01/12/08
HB 22
SHORT TITLE Uranium-related Health Study
SB
ANALYST Hanika-Ortiz
APPROPRIATION (dollars in thousands)
Appropriation
Recurring
or Non-Rec
Fund
Affected
FY08
FY09
$200.0
Recurring
General Fund
(Parenthesis ( ) Indicate Expenditure Decreases)
Relates to HJM 2
SOURCES OF INFORMATION
LFC Files
Responses Received From
Department of Health (DOH)
SUMMARY
Synopsis of Bill
House Bill 22 appropriates $200 thousand from the General Fund to DOH in FY09 and FY10 to
perform a comprehensive health study of the effects of past uranium mining and milling
practices on the health of residents of McKinley and Cibola counties, including members of the
Navajo Nation.
FISCAL IMPLICATIONS
The appropriation of $200 thousand contained in this bill is a recurring expense to the General
Fund. Any unexpended or unencumbered balance remaining at the end of FY10 shall revert to
the General Fund.
The appropriation requested in the bill is considered recurring because as with any study, costs
will incur to State agencies dependent upon how many Department staff members participate;
how often the group meets; and, the costs incurred from implementing any recommendations
made by the group.
pg_0002
House Bill 22 – Page
2
For members of the study group that receive no other compensation, perquisite or allowance,
they may be entitled to per diem and mileage as provided in the Per Diem and Mileage Act.
The appropriation requested in the bill is not part of DOH’s executive budget request for FY09.
SIGNIFICANT ISSUES
Uranium mining and milling operations were prevalent in New Mexico, especially in McKinley
and Cibola counties and on Navajo lands. The radioactive and hazardous waste piles may affect
the health of residents when drinking contaminated water, breathing contaminated air, or eating
contaminated agricultural crops, produce and livestock.
DOH reports that mining and milling processes remove uranium and other constituents in the ore
from natural deposits and convert them to a fine sand, then sludge, whereby the materials
become more susceptible to erosion and dispersion into the environment. Additionally, various
acid-leaching processes cause a continuous leaching of potentially hazardous substances and
their increased migration into the environment; including groundwater, surface water, soil and
biological organisms.
PERFORMANCE IMPLICATIONS
DOH states that HB 22 relates to the Department’s mission as stated in the FY09 Strategic Plan
“to promote health and prevent disease and disability".
CONFLICT, DUPLICATION, COMPANIONSHIP, RELATIONSHIP
Relates to HJM 2, requesting a study of the feasibility of a state superfund for cleanup of
uranium contaminated sites.
OTHER SUBSTANTIVE ISSUES
Of the 150 Navajo uranium miners who worked at the uranium mine in Shiprock, New Mexico
until 1970, 133 died of lung cancer or various forms of fibrosis by 1980. When mining ceased in
the late 1970's, mining companies walked away from the mines without sealing the tunnel
openings, filling the gaping pits, sometimes hundreds of feet deep, or removing the piles of
radioactive uranium ore and mine waste. Over 1,000 of these unsealed tunnels, unsealed pits and
radioactive waste piles still remain on the Navajo reservation today, with a number of Navajo
families living, and their livestock grazing, within a hundred feet of the mine sites.
WHAT WILL BE THE CONSEQUENCES OF NOT ENACTING THIS BILL
The DOH has determined from previous studies that New Mexicans have more than twice the
amount of uranium in urine as compared to biomonitoring studies from populations in the rest of
the United States. The continuation of these types of comprehensive health studies by DOH to
identify communities at risk will have to be performed within existing Department and Tribal
resources.
pg_0003
House Bill 22 – Page
3
QUESTIONS
HB22 was introduced on behalf of the Indian Affairs Committee. To what degree will DOH be
cooperating with the tribes or other state or federal agencies that have already performed similar
studies or that have similar interests.
AHO/mt