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F I S C A L I M P A C T R E P O R T
SPONSOR Cote
ORIGINAL DATE
LAST UPDATED
1/30/08
HB 168
SHORT TITLE City of Las Cruces License Plate
SB
ANALYST Earnest
REVENUE (dollars in thousands)
Estimated Revenue
Recurring
or Non-Rec
Fund
Affected
FY08
FY09
FY10
NFI*
NFI*
** Recurring
Motor Vehicle
Division
Operating Fund
NFI*
NFI*
** Recurring
City of Las
Cruces
Recreation Fund
2130
(Parenthesis ( ) Indicate Revenue Decreases)
* TRD reports that any new plates cannot be produced until FY10. See administrative impact
section for more detail.
**TRD did not estimate the number of plates that might be needed.
SOURCES OF INFORMATION
LFC Files
Responses Received From
Taxation and Revenue Department (TRD)
SUMMARY
Synopsis of Bill
House Bill 168 creates a new “City of Las Cruces" special registration plate with a logo
indicating that the vehicle owner is a resident of the city of Las Cruces. The Taxation and
Revenue Department (TRD) must adopt procedures for application for and issuance of the
special plate and the TRD secretary must approve the final logo design for the plate. Owners of
motor vehicles who are residents of Las Cruces would have the option of paying a $35 fee for the
special plate each year the owner wishes to retain the plate. The $35 fee is in addition to the
regular registration fee. Of this amount, $10 of the fee would be retained by the Motor Vehicle
Division (MVD), and $25 of the fee would be “paid to the state treasurer and is appropriated to
the city of Las Cruces recreation fund 2130." Any person who ceased to be a resident of Las
Cruces would be required to remove the plate and return it to TRD in exchange for a regular
plate.
pg_0002
House Bill 168 – Page
2
FISCAL IMPLICATIONS
TRD has no information to indicate the number of these special plates that might be requested.
The cost of each plate would be $35, with $10 retained by MVD and $25 distributed to the City
of Las Cruces recreation fund 2130.
Approximately 25,000 special plates are currently issued for 22 different issues. The most
common are the veterans of various armed services (9,269 total) and collegiate plates (8,957
total), but several of the special plates have been issued in much smaller quantities.
ADMINISTRATIVE IMPLICATIONS
TRD reports that since the implementation of several special registration plates over the past few
years, the revenue accounting system of the MVD has run out of revenue codes to implement
additional special registration plates. All new special registration plates must be assigned a
revenue code so the plate can be programmed into the system and the associated funds
distributed appropriately. Without any revenue codes available, no additional special registration
plates can be implemented into the existing system. In order to accommodate new special
registration plates, a re-write of the revenue accounting system will need to occur. The LFC and
Executive are recommending a new revenue system. If funded, the new system should be
deployed by January 1, 2010. Prior to that date, MVD may not be able to implement this
legislation.
The effect of this bill on TRD-MVD’s operating budget will depend on the number of plates
issued and provided to customers. However, the ten dollars per plate retention by the department
is both appropriate and in keeping with statute for a number of other special plates and should be
sufficient to cover costs, assuming the new revenue system is deployed prior to implementation
of this special plate program.
TECHNICAL ISSUES
TRD indicates that on page 2, lines 21 – 23, the bill states that $25 of the fee would be “paid to
the state treasurer and is appropriated to the city of Las Cruces recreation fund 2130". This
language differs from that associated with other similar special plate revenue programs and
should probably be reviewed. For other special plate programs, the $25 portion of each fee is
distributed to a state agency or special fund associated with the special cause. It is unclear why
this language and process should differ from the standard existing model.
OTHER SUBSTANTIVE ISSUES
According to TRD, implementation of any “City of _________" special license plate could be
expected to be followed by similar requests from a large number of cities. The Department may
need to take that possibility into consideration when approving the final logo design for this
special registration plate.
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