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F I S C A L I M P A C T R E P O R T
SPONSOR Gardner
ORIGINAL DATE
LAST UPDATED
1/24/08
HB 267
SHORT TITLE State Budget Provisions & Increases
SB
ANALYST Wilson
APPROPRIATION (dollars in thousands)
Appropriation
Recurring
or Non-Rec
Fund
Affected
FY08
FY09
$0.1
Recurring
General Fund and
other funds
(Parenthesis ( ) Indicate Expenditure Decreases)
ESTIMATED ADDITIONAL OPERATING BUDGET IMPACT (dollars in thousands)
FY08
FY09
FY10 3 Year
Total Cost
Recurring
or Non-Rec
Fund
Affected
Total
$0.1
$0.1
$0.1
$0.1 Recurring General
Funds and
others
(Parenthesis ( ) Indicate Expenditure Decreases)
SOURCES OF INFORMATION
LFC Files
Responses Received From
Attorney General’s Office (AGO)
Board of Architects (BA)
Department of Finance & Administration (DFA)
Environment Department (ED)
SUMMARY
Synopsis of Bill
House Bill 267 will prohibit any state agency from requesting budget increases to expend
money collected from penalty assessments in a fiscal year if the money is derived from penalties
assessed during the same fiscal year.
Furthermore, this bill will prohibit any state agency from requesting budget increases to expend
money collected from penalty assessments in a fiscal year if the money is derived from penalties
assessed during the same fiscal year.
pg_0002
House Bill 267– Page
2
FISCAL IMPLICATIONS
The bill contains no appropriation but will affect future funding for state agencies authorized to
assess and budget penalty assessment revenue.
The AGO states that it is conceivable that they will submit a budget or budget adjustment request
asking for the appropriation and expenditure of any civil “penalties" collected as a result of
litigation or other official efforts. It is unclear as to the possible impact of this bill on such
requests.
The New Mexico Environment Department administers two special revenue funds that derive
revenue from penalties -- the Solid Waste Facility Grant Fund (SWFGF) and the Hazardous
Waste Emergency Fund (HWEF). HB 267 in its current form will have no fiscal impact on
programs and grants administered from the SWFGF. Expenditures from the HWEF in
emergency situations as occurred during the State’s response to the Cerro Grande Fire in 2000
could be statutorily limited.
SIGNIFICANT ISSUES
The AGO provided the following:
Annual state agency budget requests are generally governed by NMSA Section 6-3-7
(1978 comp.). The bill appears to prohibit state agencies from submitting budget requests
containing provisions authorizing those agencies to spend money derived from
“penalties" during the same fiscal year in which those penalties are collected. It also
appears to prohibit state agencies from requesting budget increases if the agency intends
to use money derived from penalties assessed in the same fiscal year. However, the bill
does not provide for the diversion of penalties from the funds into which they are
deposited, but prohibits their expenditure in the same fiscal year in which they are
collected. The bill appears to allow the submission of budgets or budget adjustment
requests proposing to spend penalties collected in prior fiscal years.
The bill does not define “penalties". Under many state law provisions, the term includes
“fines" and is generally applied to criminal violations. Fines collected as a result of
criminal penalties are deposited into the Current School Fund established in Article XII,
Section 4 of the New Mexico Constitution. However, the term “penalties" could also
include civil assessments, fees, or other punitive collections. For example, state law
provides penalties for dishonored checks given to state agencies and civil penalties for
tax law violations. See NMSA Sections 7-1-70; 65-1-36.1; 7-1-69.
The bill could conflict with other state laws allowing the expenditure of revenue collected
from penalties and other sources. For example, NMSA Section 7-1-6 of the Tax
Administration Act establishes several funds consisting of revenue (including penalties)
collected by the Taxation and Revenue Department. That section authorizes disbursement
of those funds for specified departmental expenses and refunds.
Certain professional licensing boards are authorized to collect “penalties" which are then
deposited into non-reverting funds and normally appropriated to the boards for
expenditure in carrying out the provisions of their licensing acts. For example, the Board
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House Bill 267– Page
3
of Medical Examiners is entitled to receive a civil “penalty" from a health care facility
failing to report a malpractice case settlement as provided in NMSA Section 61-6-16
(1978). Those penalties, and others collected by the Board, are deposited into a non-
reverting “New Mexico Medical Board fund" which presumably is included in the annual
budget request. It is unclear as to the impact of this bill on those budgeting and
expenditure procedures.
DFA provided the following:
The bill could significantly impact the budgets of state agencies that use revenue derived from
penalty assessments to fund operations. If an agency has statutory authority to keep these funds,
the bill just delays the agencies ability to use the funds until a subsequent fiscal year and will
require some kind of supplemental funding in the initial year of implementation. If the agency
does not have authority to keep these funds for subsequent year expenditure, the agency might
require recurring funding from other sources, potentially from the general fund in order to
maintain the same level of operations. The general fund will benefit from additional reversions
to the fund. In addition, in some cases penalties are assessed by one agency and are designated
by statute to be used to fund specific programs within other agencies. This bill could not only
affect the assessing agency, but affect programs funded by specific assessments.
The bill could affect the agencies ability to meet its statutory requirements if alternative
funding is not available to supplement the loss of penalty revenues it uses for operations.
ED notes the sole source of revenue for the HWEF is penalties assessed under the State
Hazardous Waste Act. Uses of the HWEF are defined in 74-4-8 NMSA 1978, and include
“cleanup of hazardous substance incidents", which are in turn defined at 74-4-3.J NMSA 1978.
While most hazardous substance incidents involve little more than fuel spills from transportation
accidents or clandestine drug laboratories, larger incidents can compel the State to engage in a
huge cleanup effort necessary to protect human health and the environment. The most recent
such incident was the Cerro Grande Fire in 2000, in which a wildfire overcame portions of the
Town of Los Alamos and Los Alamos National Laboratory (LANL). The ED deployed
personnel and contractors with HWEF monies to remove hazardous materials from destroyed
buildings before reoccupation, conduct sampling at removal sites, monitor emissions and runoff
from LANL, conduct air monitoring and soil sampling, and develop risk assessments for future
uses of affected properties. This work – conducted mostly on an emergency basis while the fire
was still burning – cost approximately $1 million. BAR authority was sought on an emergency
basis, and its approval allowed the State to respond in a timely fashion protective of human
health, property, and the environment. Restrictions on budget authority such as those envisioned
in HB 267 could severely compromise the State’s ability to effectively respond to disasters such
as that which occurred in Los Alamos in 2000.
ADMINISTRATIVE IMPLICATIONS
DFA notes
t
he bill limits the ability of an agency, the State Budget Division and the Legislative
Finance Committee from using revenues available in a fiscal year from penalty assessments to
fund agency expenditures. In years of declining revenues, the State Budget Division and
Legislative Finance Committee should have the ability to recommend the use of all available
resources as needed.
pg_0004
House Bill 267– Page
4
The Board of Architects notes that this bill will add an
additional layer of accounting for their
agency revenues and will require
separate accounting for penalty money obtained during a fiscal
year.
DW/nt