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F I S C A L I M P A C T R E P O R T
SPONSOR Varela
ORIGINAL DATE
LAST UPDATED
2/4/08
HB 617
SHORT TITLE Property Tax On Communications System Land
SB
ANALYST Wilson
REVENUE (dollars in thousands)
Estimated Revenue
Recurring
or Non-Rec
Fund
Affected
FY08
FY09
FY10
$0.1
$0.1
$0.1 Recurring Property Tax
Recipients*
(Parenthesis ( ) Indicate Revenue Decreases)
* Counties, school districts, municipalities and other entities that receive revenues from property tax levies.
SOURCES OF INFORMATION
LFC Files
Responses Received From
Department of Finance & Administration (DFA)
Taxation & Revenue (TRD)
SUMMARY
Synopsis of Bill
House Bill 617 amends Section 7-36-2 NMSA 1978 of the Property Tax Code. The bill specifies
the types of property that are subject to assessment for property tax purposes by the Taxation and
Revenue Department’s Property Tax Division (PTD). Property assessed by PTD and listed in 7-
36-2 is commonly called “centrally assessed" or “state-assessed" property. It typically extends
across county boundaries and is subject to “special assessment methods" of valuation via
appraisal methods that differ from traditional appraisal procedures due to unusual characteristics
of the property that is centrally assessed.
Property listed in Section 7-36-2 and thus subject to central assessment includes property of
railroads, communications systems (as defined in Section 7-36-30), public utilities and airlines.
The PTD has not assessed cable systems in the past, in part because the statute is unclear
regarding the issue of whether this type of property is indeed subject to central assessment. The
proposed legislation is designed to clarify the statute. It would amend the definition of
“communication system" in Section 7-36-30 to include a system that provides for transmission
or reception of information for use by another person for consideration. The definition of the
term “plant" is also amended to mean all tangible property in New Mexico used for the
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House Bill 617– Page
2
transmission or reception of information rather than for the provision of communication service,
as is the current law.
This bill has an emergency clause.
FISCAL IMPLICATIONS
The net taxable value for cable companies currently totals approximately $30 million statewide
and generates a total of approximately $800,000 in property tax revenues. If the TRD were to
determine that communication company property is under-assessed, provisions of the proposed
measure would generate increases in assessed value of cable communication property which
would generally be offset by rate reductions through the state’s yield-control mechanism. Debt
service rates would also presumably adjust. Hence, fiscal impacts on property tax recipients are
likely to be minimal. Cable companies, however, would likely experience property tax increases.
SIGNIFICANT ISSUES
DFA notes this bill
will allow local taxing entities to collect taxes on communication systems
that under the previous language are excluded. This bill catches up the property tax collection
system to new and development technologies, such as cable television. Previously, cable
television was considered "reception of information" only, which exempted it from property
taxation. This bill remedies this situation by defining communications systems as "transmission
or reception" or both.
TRD provided the following:
This bill is necessary to clarify that cable television systems are subject to central
assessment even if not providing broadband or other two-way communication services.
An emergency clause could, however, place undue burdens on taxpayers who, if the bill
is signed before February 29, 2008, will have to file the annual reports required by
Section 7-38-8 by February 29, 2008.
As communication systems evolved, the language of the special method applicable to the
firms did not keep pace by anticipating the changes in digital media such as Voice Over
Internet Protocol, streaming video, or digital gaming and bundling of technologies for
multiple uses through single providers. Language of the proposed statute broadens the
definitions of eligible technologies to incorporate large cross-county concerns such as
cable-based providers of communication services. The principal benefit of this change is
that cable companies and similar technology vendors will report to the Property Tax
Division’s State Assessed Properties Bureau for property tax assessment purposes.
The benefits of this change are:
single reporting point for communications companies;
the option of electing a depreciated cost or unitary valuation method, which is not
currently employed by New Mexico’s 33 County Assessors;
uniformity of assessment between communication companies that provide similar
services, and
uniformity of reporting requirements for communication companies.
DW/bb