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committees of the NM Legislature. The LFC does not assume responsibility for the accuracy of these reports
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F I S C A L I M P A C T R E P O R T
SPONSOR Foley
ORIGINAL DATE
LAST UPDATED
02/01/08
HB 614
SHORT TITLE Study & Legislative Approval of Rules
SB
ANALYST Escudero
APPROPRIATION (dollars in thousands)
Appropriation
Recurring
or Non-Rec
Fund
Affected
FY08
FY09
$150.0 Non-Recurring
General Fund
(Parenthesis ( ) Indicate Expenditure Decreases)
SOURCES OF INFORMATION
LFC Files
Responses Received From
Higher Education Department (HED)
Energy, Minerals & Natural
Resources Department (EMNRD)
Public Education Department (PED)
SUMMARY
Synopsis of Bill
House Bill 614 would appropriate $150.0 from the general fund to the Board of Regents of the
University of New Mexico (UNM) Bureau of Business and Economic Research (BBER) for
FY09 to conduct economic impact studies of proposed agency rules and would also impose
rulemaking prerequisites. It further specifies review of proposed rules by the Legislative Finance
Committee and presiding officers of the House of Representatives and Senate
FISCAL IMPLICATIONS
The appropriation of $$150.0 contained in this bill is a non-recurring expense to the general
fund. Any unexpended or unencumbered balance remaining at the end of FY09 shall revert to the
general fund.
This request was not submitted to the New Mexico Higher Education Department for review and
is not included in the Departments legislative recommendation for FY09.
pg_0002
House Bill 614 – Page
2
According to EMNRD, House Bill 614 will have fiscal implications in addition to the
appropriation provided, because agencies that have no expertise in economic analysis will be
required to conduct economic studies. In order to comply with the requirement, affected
agencies would need to have additional FTEs who could provide the required expertise, or they
would have to employ consultants by contract. No estimate of agency compliance costs can be
made at this time because the bill's requirements are unclear, and it is unknown what rules will
be proposed in future years that will require study
SIGNIFICANT ISSUES
The New Mexico Higher Education Departments analysis of this bill focuses on the higher
education implications of the proposed legislation. Additional insight may be obtained from
other departments analyses.
According to HED, House Bill 614 would require that, prior to a state agency adopting or
amending administrative rules, a study would be conducted which would include the following:
the need for the rule,
who would be impacted by the rule,
the cost to comply with the rule,
the benefits derived from the rule,
comments and complaints from the public about the rule,
the complexity of the rule,
any overlap, duplication or conflict with other federal, state or local government rules.
The operational definition of agency within HB614 includes every department, agency, board,
commission, committee or institution of the executive branch of state government. However,
rules relating to educational institutions are not included in this proposed change in rule process.
The $150,000 appropriation contained in this act would fund staff from the UNM/BBER to
conduct economic impact studies in cooperation with agencies proposing rule changes or
amendments. UNM/BBER would be consulted to provide objective economic evaluations and
analyses. According to a spokesperson at the bureau, this type of work can be complex and time
consuming. The studies would require working with each agency to understand what specifically
would need to be evaluated and moreover would be dependent on the quality of information
provided by the agencies. In addition, the volume of regulations requiring analysis and the work
expectations of BBER are not made clear in this bill. Therefore it is difficult to determine if the
appropriation is a suitable amount.
PERFORMANCE IMPLICATIONS
According to HED, House Bill 614 would require agencies to conduct and review studies of the
economic impact of a proposed rule. If the impact to the general fund is $20 million or more,
either in revenue or expenditures, further review by the Legislative Finance Committee and the
House and Senate leaders are also required. Referral to standing committees of the legislature is
the final step in the proposed review process. The review process must be completed ninety days
before filing of the rule.
pg_0003
House Bill 614 – Page
3
According to PED, the bill adds additional bureaucracy to the already lengthy rulemaking
process, resulting in an even lengthier and more cumbersome process. Requiring such an
extensive analysis (see synopsis above) of every rulemaking action would be extremely
burdensome and render state agencies unable to engage in any rulemaking action in an
expeditious manner. Also, it is not clear in the Act who will actually conduct the analyses. The
bill states that the agencies shall conduct and review, yet the appropriation goes to the University
of New Mexico to perform this function.
This Act is also inconsistent with the Executive Reorganization Act, which authorizes cabinet
secretaries to “…make and adopt such reasonable and procedural rules and regulations as may be
necessary to carry out the duties of the department and its divisions." Moreover, the Act
implicates Article III, Section 1 of the New Mexico Constitution relative to the separation of
powers between the executive, judicial and legislative branches of government. Essentially, the
proposed amendment would permit the Legislature to “micromanage" a portion of the
rulemaking authority of the state’s executive agencies. Rules that have an annual negative fiscal
impact of $20,000.0 or more could not be adopted without prior legislative review. Such a
scheme is inefficient.
See e.g. I.N.S. v. Chadha, 462 U.S. 919, 954 (1983)(providing that executive action under
legislatively delegated authority that might resemble “legislative" action in some respects is not
subject to the approval of the Houses of Congress and the President).
This bill also implicates Article IV, Section 16 of the New Mexico Constitution requiring clarity
in bill titles, in that the title simply says “Making an Appropriation," and the substance and
object of that appropriation is not indicated in the title and the object of the appropriation (the
University of New Mexico) is nowhere mentioned in the text of the bill.
ADMINISTRATIVE IMPLICATIONS
According to HED, UNM would be responsible for the administering these funds.
The rule process would be lengthened by at least ninety days, increasing the burden on agency
staff to comply with requirements for additional study.
CONFLICT, DUPLICATION, COMPANIONSHIP, RELATIONSHIP
According to NMNRD, House Bill 14 conflicts with HB 310 which requires agencies proposing
rule amendments to prepare a "regulatory impact statement" in a particular format. It is also
related in subject matter to SB 505, which provides for legislative oversight of the Oil
Conservation Division, including legislative review of rules that division proposes.
TECHNICAL ISSUES
According to HED, HB614 definition of “rules" does not include:
Rules made relating to the management of any particular educational institution
Rules relating to admissions, discipline, supervision, expulsion or graduation of
studentsfrom educational institutions
pg_0004
House Bill 614 – Page
4
HB614 does not specify the conditions that would require or call for an external study to be
conducted by UNM/BBER.
OTHER SUBSTANTIVE ISSUES
According to EMNRD, the requirements of HB 614 are unclear in at least the following respects:
The bill does not state what effect the failure to conduct the required study, or alleged
deficiencies in the study, will have on the validity of any rule the agency adopts. Since
the bill does not otherwise provide, it would seem that this issue could be raised in a
judicial challenge to a rule. The agency would have to make a record of its compliance
with the bill's requirements, so that there would be a basis for judicial review. The
procedures and assumptions employed by the agency in conducting the required study,
and the agency's conclusions, would likely be challenged in any appeal from a rule
adoption or amendment. The bill provides no standards by which a court could measure
sufficiency of the agency's compliance.
There is no provision in the bill regarding who will determine whether a proposed rule
will, or will not, have a $20,000,000 impact on the general fund, thereby triggering the
requirement of legislative committee review, or how that determination will be made.
Without such provisions, it would seem that the validity of a rule could be attacked on
appeal, if legislative review were not done, on the ground that it would, in fact, have a
$20,000,000 impact. Likely the legislative finance committee and the legislature will
receive numerous requests to conduct legislative review from agencies wishing to
preclude a challenge on this basis.
The nature of the review of a proposed rule by the legislative finance committee is
wholly unclear. Subsection 1.B provides that a proposed rule that has a $20,000,000
impact must be reviewed "by the legislative finance committee, and then by the
legislature pursuant to Subsection C." Apparently the review by the legislative finance
committee is something different from, and preliminary to, the review by a designated
legislative standing committee under Subsection C. Since "pursuant to Subsection C"
qualifies only "review by the legislature," and not review by the "legislative finance
committee," this sentence leaves blanks as to the nature of the review to be conducted by
the legislative finance committee, and the effect of that review on the rulemaking
process. It may have been intended that the legislative finance committee's review is
only for the purpose of determining whether the rule meets the $20,000,000 fiscal impact
requirement, but that is not clear from the bill's language.
The intent of Subsection 1.C would seem to be that legislative review is merely an
opportunity, for ninety days, for the designated legislative committee to make an
admonitory statement of support or opposition, as described in that Subsection. The
implication would seem to be that the legislative committee does not have any power to
veto, change or delay implementation of the rule (other than for the ninety-day period
provided for its review). That, however is not clearly stated, leaving opportunities for
rules to be challenged on the basis of adverse legislative committee action or inaction.
The bill requires agencies to conduct economic studies that many rulemaking agencies, including
Energy, Minerals and Natural Resources Department (EMNRD), do not have the necessary
pg_0005
House Bill 614 – Page
5
resources to conduct. Economic analyses require the expertise of economists, and most agencies
do not have economists of staff nor funding to engage them as consultants.
The requirement to conduct an economic study applies to all rule changes, including technical
amendments and changes that are not the subject of any controversy or changes mandated by
federal programs.
According to PED, this bill conflicts with SJR 5, SJR 7 and HJR 12, which would submit to the
public a proposed amendment to Article IV of the New Mexico Constitution which if approved,
would allow the Legislature to prohibit rules proposed by an agency or officer of the executive
branch from taking effect until the proposed rules were reviewed and approved by the
appropriate interim or standing committees of the legislature.
It also relates to/conflicts with HB 310, which would amend the State Rules Act by adding a
requirement that agencies prepare a regulatory impact statement if a proposed rule has an
economic impact of more than $25.0.
According to a UNM/BBER official, HB614 significant issues include:
Specification of fiscal as well as economic impact studies;
Challenges in the estimate of duration and cost of these studies; and
The need to review other states regulations regarding impact studies of proposed rule
changes.
PME/nt