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F I S C A L I M P A C T R E P O R T
SPONSOR Martinez, W.K.
ORIGINAL DATE
LAST UPDATED
HB 97
SHORT TITLE NMSU Grant Nursing Clinical Lab
SB
ANALYST Escudero
APPROPRIATION (dollars in thousands)
Appropriation
Recurring
or Non-Rec
Fund
Affected
FY08
FY09
$50.0
Recurring
General Fund
(Parenthesis ( ) Indicate Expenditure Decreases)
SOURCES OF INFORMATION
LFC Files
Responses Received From
Higher Education Department (HED)
New Mexico State University – Grants (NMSU-Grants)
SUMMARY
Synopsis of Bill
House Bill 97 appropriates $50.0 from the general fund to the Board of Regents of New Mexico
State University for a Nursing Clinical Laboratory at the Grants campus.
FISCAL IMPLICATIONS
The appropriation of $50.0 contained in this bill is a recurring expense to the general fund. Any
unexpended or unencumbered balance remaining at the end of fiscal year 2009 shall revert to the
general fund.
This request supports a submittal by NMSU-Grants to the New Mexico Higher Education
Department for review through the Rural Health Care Allied Health program, but is not included
in the Departments funding recommendation for FY09.
The HED’s evaluation table of FY09 Research and Public Service Projects provided to the LFC
classifies this project as a “breach" of the Higher Education Formula. Reasons for this
pg_0002
House Bill 97 – Page
2
classification decision are not provided. (LFC Report 07-20, Higher Education Department
Review of Selected Research and Public Service Projects, January 12, 2008, Table 4, p74.)
SIGNIFICANT ISSUES
As stated by HED, the NMSU-Grants nursing program began its inaugural year during
the academic year 07-08 with 5 students. The nursing program is in its early stages of
development as evidenced by NMSU-Grants investing in a building renovation to
house the future nursing clinical laboratory. The nursing clinical laboratory will be a
major component of the nursing program. Within the nursing lab there will be a SIM lab
which is a state of the art lab that allows students to develop their skills on mannequins
prior to being exposed to a hospital setting.
NMSU-Grants has developed an industry partnership with the local Cibola General
Hospital who committed five-years of funding support to hire a Masters of Science in
Nursing Clinical Director to supervise a cohort of Bachelor Science Nursing
(BSN) students on the Grants campus. Instruction for the BSN program will emanate
from the NMSU Las Cruces campus, utilizing existing resources and technology to
provide expanded access for nursing instruction in north-west New Mexico via distance
education.
One of the primary goals of this initiative is to strive to increase the number of under-
represented minorities entering health professional programs (2000). With a majority-
minority student population, 37% Native American and 33% Hispanic, NMSU-Grants
will help to build the supply of Allied Health professionals.
The American Hospital Association estimates vacancy rates of 18% for radiological
technologists and 12% for laboratory technologists through the year 2010 (Palmer, 2003).
Students who graduate from Allied Health Programs with an Associates of Science
degree will have access to employment both locally, regionally and nationally. Rural
areas are challenged with finding adequately trained Allied Health technologists yet
provide excellent employment options and excellent salaries for Allied Health workers.
According to NMSU-Grants, expanding opportunities in rural health care through the Allied
Health Professions in Cibola County encompasses the development, implementation and
eventual planned for institutionalization of the first Allied Health Program at NMSU-Grants.
Completion of an Allied Health program would culminate in the awarding of an Associate of
Science in one of two potential Allied Health fields, i.e. Emergency Medical
Technology/Paramedic, or Medical Technology. The completion of the AS in Allied Health
degree at NMSU-Grants will prepare students for one of two tracks:
1.
Careers as technologists in health care organizations in the region or articulation into
baccalaureate degree programs at New Mexico 4-year institutions.
2.
Rural health care systems throughout New Mexico provide excellent employment
opportunities in Allied Health areas for students.
PME/jp