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F I S C A L I M P A C T R E P O R T
SPONSOR Lujan, B
ORIGINAL DATE
LAST UPDATED
1/22/08
2/6/08 HB CS 199/aHFL
SHORT TITLE
Construction Industry Proof of Responsibility
SB
ANALYST C. Sanchez
APPROPRIATION (dollars in thousands)
Appropriation
Recurring
or Non-Rec
Fund
Affected
FY08
FY09
NFI
(Parenthesis ( ) Indicate Expenditure Decreases)
SOURCES OF INFORMATION
LFC Files
Responses Received From
Regulation and Licensing Department (RLD)
SUMMARY
Synopsis of HFL Amendment
The House Floor amendments to the House Judiciary Committee Substitute for House Bill 199
provide that payments from the bond shall only be used to cure code violations caused by a
licensee, certified by the Division and not corrected by the licensee.
The amendments also provide that claims against the bond shall be made within two years
following final inspection by the governmental entity having jurisdiction over code enforcement
or within two years of issuance of a certificate of occupancy for the construction project,
whichever is earlier.
The amendments remove language requiring the Division to suspend a contractor’s license for up
to thirty days if the bond is canceled, expires or otherwise becomes ineffective during the period
of a license, and provides that the Division shall notify the licensee that a new bond is required.
The amendments alter the substitute bill to provide for license revocation if the licensee has not
provided proof of a new bond before the fortieth day after the date of that notice.
pg_0002
CS House Bill 199/aHFL – Page
2
Synopsis of Original Bill
The House Judiciary Committee Substitute for House Bill 199 would amend the Construction
Industries Licensing Act, Section 60-13-49, NMSA 1978, to provide that a code bond of $10,000
would satisfy the requirement that an applicant provide proof of responsibility before being
eligible to be licensed as a contractor. Payments from the code bond would be used to cure
building code violations. The amendment would also remove the existing methods of proving
responsibility: a financial statement, a certificate of deposit, or a bond – each of which is for the
sole purpose of securing payment of fines and penalties assessed by the Construction Industries
Division.
Impact on the Agency
. There is very little fiscal implication for the Division if this amendment is
made. Currently, the Division seeks payment of fines directly from the contractor, rather than the
bonding company, so that the cause and effect relationship between the contractor’s mistake and
the fine is reinforced. This legislation would not change this practice; therefore, the Division
does not expect a significant impact on its ability to collect fines if the bond requirement in the
current statute is repealed.
Impact on the Contractor
. The majority of contractors currently satisfy the professional
responsibility requirement with a bond. Assuming that the cost of the new bond would not be
significantly different from the bond currently required, the contractor would not be adversely
affected by the change in bond type.
Impact on the Public
. Under the current professional responsibility statute, the consumer of
services provided by a licensed contractor has no assurance of the contractor’s professional
responsibility because none of the three options for demonstrating professional responsibility
gives the consumer restitution for damages if the contractor fails to perform professionally or
responsibly. This legislation would give the consumer recourse for code violation damage
proven to be caused by a licensed contractor.
FISCAL IMPLICATIONS
NFI
SIGNIFICANT ISSUES
According to RLD, the existing professional responsibility requirement does not demonstrate or
prove professional responsibility of CID licensees. It merely ensures that CID has a source for
the payment of fines imposed by the Division, if the licensee does not pay them, and then only if
the licensee elects the bond or cash collateral option. If a financial statement is selected, neither
the division nor the public have any assurance of the contractor’s performance.
The existing requirement creates a discrepancy in the discipline of licensees. Licensees whose
bond or cash collateral becomes ineffective during the term of the license are subject to license
suspension and revocation. Licensees who submit a financial statement are not subject to
suspension or revocation, regardless of the financial condition of the licensee.
pg_0003
CS House Bill 199/aHFL – Page
3
The existing statute does not ensure that a contractor will be responsible in performing the work
undertaken. The statute limits the contractor’s ability to permit individual projects based on the
amount of the bond or cash collateral. For example, a bond in the amount of $500 will authorize
the licensee to permit work the value of which is not greater than $25,000 per project or permit.
However, there is no restriction on the number of $25,000 projects that the licensee may permit
at one time; therefore, contractors can, and do, over-extend regardless of the permit limitation
imposed by the professional responsibility limit. Further, there is no value–per-project restriction
at all on a licensee who uses a financial statement to satisfy the requirement.
PERFORMANCE IMPLICATIONS
Liquefied Petroleum Gas licensees are required to carry insurance and Manufactured Housing
licensees are required to carry a bond. Requiring the same kind of proof of professional
responsibility of CID licensees would treat these similarly situated licensees consistently and
would ensure that CID’s licensees would meaningfully demonstrate proof of professional
responsibility.
ADMINISTRATIVE IMPLICATIONS
This legislation would not adversely affect CID’s administration of the professional
responsibility requirements. In fact, because there would be only one type of proof of
professional responsibility, current procedures could be streamlined. In addition, because the bill
simplifies the consequences and procedures when a bond becomes ineffective, it may be easier to
explain to licensees the requirements and consequences of failing to comply. Bond attachment is
expected to be processed by the bonding company in direct communication with the claimant, so
little administrative impact is expected. If the bond attachment process does require
administration by the Division, additional staff may be required.
ALTERNATIVES
Require liability insurance as an alternative form of proof of responsibility.
WHAT WILL BE THE CONSEQUENCES OF NOT ENACTING THIS BILL
The inequities of the current professional responsibility requirements will continue to result in
disparate treatment of CID licensees, and CID licensees will continue to be licensed without
being required to demonstrate meaningful professional responsibility to the citizens of New
Mexico.
CS/mt