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F I S C A L I M P A C T R E P O R T
SPONSOR King
ORIGINAL DATE
LAST UPDATED
1/24/08
HB 277
SHORT TITLE Protect Children From Methamphetamine
SB
ANALYST Ortiz
APPROPRIATION (dollars in thousands)
Appropriation
Recurring
or Non-Rec
Fund
Affected
FY08
FY09
$500.0
Recurring
(Parenthesis ( ) Indicate Expenditure Decreases)
SOURCES OF INFORMATION
LFC Files
Responses Received From
Attorney General’s Office (AGO)
Administrative Office of the Courts (AOC)
New Mexico Sentencing Commission (NMSC)
Public Defender Department (PDD)
Department of Health (DOH)
Administrative Office of the District Attorneys (AODA)
SUMMARY
Synopsis of Bill
House Bill 277 appropriates $500 thousand from the GENERAL FUND to the Office of the
Attorney General for the purpose of a statewide project that protects children against
methamphetamine by raising awareness about the negative consequences and risks associated
with the use of methamphetamine.
FISCAL IMPLICATIONS
The appropriation of $500 thousand 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.
The Attorney General’s Office provides the proposed budget to accomplish the goals of the
program.
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2
Media Campaign: $175,000 (Radio and Billboards)
Brochure Packet: $ 75,000 (Design and Production).
Travel and Training: $ 75,000 (Statewide in-person presentations)
Funding Requests: $175,000
(i.e. Boys and Girls Clubs of New Mexico)
Total: $500,000
The budget items are based on estimated costs and are subject to adjustment to ensure successful
efforts to reach communities in need, including Native American communities and areas hardest
hit by underage methamphetamine use.
The Department of Health’s FY08 operating budget includes $6,539.8 million in contractual
services for substance abuse prevention. Of this, $15 thousand is from state general funds for a
youth program in Las Vegas. The remainder is from federal funds is focused primarily on
tobacco and alcohol compliance and prevention issues.
Administrative Office of the District Attorneys suggests looking into coordinating with other
programs in existence such as MethWatch which is administered through the Department of
Public Safety.
SIGNIFICANT ISSUES
The Attorney General’s Office presented information from the National Drug Intelligence Center
of the U. S. Department of Justice, which identified Methamphetamine as "the greatest drug
threat to the Southwest Region, accounting for 66 percent of the drug use in the southwest."
New Mexico is rated fifth among the Department of Justice’s High Intensity Drug Traffic Areas
(HIDTA) in the southwest. In our region, Amphetamine (including Methamphetamine)
treatment admissions have risen from 46,540 in 2001 to 82,319 in 2005 (DOJ's most recent
information). Other statistics from the Drug Enforcement Agency and the U.S. and New Mexico
Departments of Health and Human Services found that "The drug is used by all ages, races, and
genders, increasingly gaining popularity among New Mexico’s most vulnerable—teens and
young adults. In 2005, Meth use exceeded 10 percent among high school students in 33percent
of the counties across the state. In some counties teen use was as high as 15.7 percent. New
Mexico reported one of the highest percentage increases in Meth related arrests in the country,
with an increase of 100 percent between 2002 and 2005. In 2005, routine drug screens
completed at a county hospital emergency room showed that 25 percent of the patients tested
positive for Meth."
It also adds that similar educational programs have been instituted in other states, such as
Arizona, Idaho, Illinois, Hawaii, and Montana. A statewide survey of teens in Idaho revealed a
significant lack of understanding on the part of teenagers about the dangers associated with
methamphetamine. A pilot project in Montana designed to educate the public about the dangers
of methamphetamine showed a 45 percent decrease in teen use of methamphetamine and a 53
percent decrease in methamphetamine-related crime.
Department of Health offers a local perspective and adds that among high school aged children,
there is a higher prevalence of methamphetamine use in New Mexico than in the rest of the
country. In 2005, 6.2 percent of US high school students reported having used
methamphetamine, while 7.5 percent of NM high school students reported having used
methamphetamine within the previous 12 months. There was no statistically significant
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House Bill 277 – Page
3
difference in the prevalence of methamphetamine use among NM high school students by region
or by rural/urban residence (NM Youth Risk and Resiliency Survey (YRRS)).
PERFORMANCE IMPLICATIONS
There are over 68,000 middle school children and 95,000 high school students in New Mexico.
The bill targets these students in an effort to prevent and reduce methamphetamine use by minors
in New Mexico.
The outreach staff of the Office of the Attorney General will administer surveys to the
participants at the conclusion of each presentation. The data will be compiled, analyzed and
presented in report form to the legislature at Fiscal Year End 2009 to document the results of the
program.
The Department of Health suggests that the success of the program be measured using the Youth
Risk and Resiliency Survey (YRRS), which is already in place and measures the use of
methamphetamine by high school students. This effort could be expanded to include a larger
sample of New Mexico youth, with more participation from ethnic minorities and a wider age
group (middle school students). Data from a survey such as the YRRS will be vital to evaluating
the success of this project.
DOH adds that the funding in HB277 would help support the 2006 New Mexico Comprehensive
Strategic Health Plan
Chapter 7 Behavioral Health goals: GOAL 1: Improve access, quality, and
value of mental health and substance abuse services through an Interagency Collaborative
Model; GOAL 2: Improve Services to High-Risk and High-Need Individuals; and GOAL 3:
Increase rural, frontier, and border access to behavioral health services.
CONFLICT, DUPLICATION, COMPANIONSHIP, RELATIONSHIP
Relates to HB240, which would appropriate $150 thousand from the General Fund to the Local
Government Division of the Department of Finance and Administration for expenditure in FY09
for drug abuse education and prevention in Lea County.
OTHER SUBSTANTIVE ISSUES
The Department of Health explains that Hispanics have the highest rates of drug related deaths in
New Mexico. (Racial and Ethnic Health Disparities Report Card, New Mexico Department of
Health, 2007). While the highest use of methamphetamine has been among white young adults,
New Mexico Hispanics are the largest minority group of users with amphetamines, heroin, and
cocaine as their drug of choice.
ALTERNATIVES
Department of Health suggests the following clarifications to HB277:
1.
Clarify the location of the proposed services and the strategies to be used to raise
awareness of the negative consequences and risks related to methamphetamine.
2.
Clarify who or what entity is to be involved in the prevention and education of the risks
of methamphetamine. The Office of Substance Abuse Prevention (OSAP) in the
Department of Health (DOH) oversees statewide drug abuse prevention services.
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3.
Specify whether the targeted audience for the drug abuse education and prevention is
school based, incarcerated/adjudicated, or other youth groups.
POSSIBLE QUESTIONS
Describe the successes that similar education campaigns have had in decreasing drug use.
How will agencies with funds for similar purposes be coordinated with this effort by the AGO.
EO/mt