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F I S C A L I M P A C T R E P O R T
SPONSOR HBIC
ORIGINAL DATE
LAST UPDATED
2/13/08
HB 593/HBICS
SHORT TITLE Motor Vehicle Insurance Changes
SB
ANALYST Earnest
REVENUE (dollars in thousands)
Estimated Revenue
Recurring
or Non-Rec
Fund
Affected
FY08
FY09
FY10
none
1,695
1,525 Recurring
MVD
none
$0.1*
$0.1* Recurring General Fund
(Parenthesis ( ) Indicate Revenue Decreases)
*Indeterminate but positive revenue impact due to new $75 penalty assessment fines.
SOURCES OF INFORMATION
LFC Files
Responses Received From
Taxation and Revenue Department (TRD)
Administrative Office of the Courts (AOC)
No Response Received From
Department of Public Safety (DPS)
SUMMARY
Synopsis of Bill
The HBIC substitute for HB 593 imposes an additional reinstatement fee of $75 if the
registration for a vehicle was suspended for failure to comply with the Mandatory Financial
Responsibility Act (MFRA), and appropriates the additional fee to MVD for the purpose of
enforcing the MFRA.
The bill also changes the penalty for uninsured motor vehicles from a misdemeanor with a fine
not to exceed $300 to a penalty assessment misdemeanor with a $75 fine. The fee for replacing a
plate that has been removed or defaced by a law enforcement officer for failure to comply with
the MFRA is increased from $25 to $100. The bill clarifies that temporary operation stickers
issued to drivers that have been cited for a violation of the Mandatory Financial Responsibility
Act shall not create liability on the part of the officer or the Taxation and Revenue Department
for damages arising from the future operation of the vehicle.
pg_0002
House Bill 593/HBICS – Page
2
The bill additionally prohibits law enforcement officers from charging a person with failure to
carry evidence of financial responsibility if the officer can verify the person’s compliance with
MFRA by checking a computer database that is immediately available to the officer.
FISCAL IMPLICATIONS
TRD based the revenue impact for MVD on 22,618 reinstatements in FY07 times the $75
increase in reinstatement fees. Declining amounts in future years reflects assumed increased
compliance. The general fund revenue impact reflects increased penalty assessment fines,
lessened by a decrease in misdemeanor fines, but an overall positive fiscal impact. TRD/MVD
has no information on the number or level of fines imposed under the existing statute, but it is
presumed to be small.
This bill provides for continuing appropriations by appropriating revenue to the Motor Vehicle
Division. The LFC has concerns with including continuing appropriation language in statutory
provisions, as earmarking reduces the ability of the legislature to establish spending priorities.
SIGNIFICANT ISSUES
The increased reinstatement fee may result in increased compliance with the Mandatory
Financial Responsibility Act requirement that drivers must maintain liability insurance. While
some number of fines may be imposed for failure to have insurance, probably many more are
identified through the New Mexico Insurance Identification Database (IIDB), resulting in
suspension of the vehicle registration but without imposition of misdemeanor fines.
TRD reports that the bill is designed to further decrease the uninsured rate. If made law, this bill
may close loopholes, increase compliance and make people more inclined to purchase and
maintain insurance. Since 2002, MVD has been funded to implement the Mandatory Financial
Responsibility Act, which requires that vehicles maintain liability insurance. Since then the
uninsured driver rate has gone from among the worst in the nation at 33% to below the national
average of 14%. The current uninsured rate is 10.28%.
It isn’t clear whether a database is available to law enforcement officers to verify whether a
driver is in compliance with the Mandatory Financial Responsibility Act.
AOC notes that as penalties become more severe, defendants may invoke their right to trial and
their right to trial by jury. Conversely, as penalties become less severe, fewer defendants will be
likely to invoke their right to trial and their right to trial by jury.
ADMINISTRATIVE IMPLICATIONS
TRD indicated that the additional funds appropriated to the department in this bill would be used
to fund programs designed to further reduce the uninsured driver rate in New Mexico, and to
increase compliance with insurance requirements. For example, money could be used to work
with local law enforcement to fund efforts, such as booting a vehicle without required insurance.
pg_0003
House Bill 593/HBICS – Page
3
TECHNICAL ISSUES
TRD notes the following technical issue:
On page 5, lines 21-22, the $100 reinstatement fee is presumably the same reinstatement
fee provided in Section 1 of the bill ($25 plus an additional $75). This should probably
be more clearly specified, either by referencing a “reinstatement fee specified in Section
66-5-33.1 NMSA 1978
", or “in addition to
the reinstatement fee specified in 66-5-33.1
NMSA 1978, an additional reinstatement fee of $100
."
BE/bb