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F I S C A L I M P A C T R E P O R T
SPONSOR Maestas
ORIGINAL DATE
LAST UPDATED
01/28/08
01/31/08 HM 22
SHORT TITLE Traffic Offense Decrimilization Task Force
SB
ANALYST Escudero
APPROPRIATION (dollars in thousands)
Appropriation
Recurring
or Non-Rec
Fund
Affected
FY08
FY09
NFI
(Parenthesis ( ) Indicate Expenditure Decreases)
RELATES TO: HM 19 and SM 14
SOURCES OF INFORMATION
LFC Files
Responses Received From
Administrative Office of the Courts (AOC)
Administrative Office of District Attorney (AODA)
No Response Received From
Public Defender Department (PDD)
Attorney General Office (AOG)
Tax and Revenue Department (TRD)
SUMMARY
Synopsis of Bill
House Memorial 22 resolves that the Administrative Office of the Courts be requested to
convene a task force consisting of representatives from the NM Association of Counties, the NM
Municipal League, the Public Defender Department, the NM District Attorneys Association and
the Motor Vehicle Division of the Taxation and Revenue Department to study the feasibility of
and procedure for decriminalizing traffic offenses and recasting traffic violations as civil
infractions.
The memorial further resolves that a representative of the task force report on the study and any
recommendations to the appropriate interim legislative committee no later than November 2008.
pg_0002
House Memorial 22 – Page
2
FISCAL IMPLICATIONS
According to AOC, there will be an indirect fiscal impact upon the judiciary, whose staff must
assist in convening the requested task force.
SIGNIFICANT ISSUES
According to AODA, at its basic level, this would take time away from the various agencies
tasked from other duties to participate in a Task Force where a simpler data collection method
might prove more illuminating. All magistrate courts keep records of offenders and
outcomes. A data search could easily show which “traffic" crimes are showing jail time at
the outset, for contempt, etc.
Looking down the line to the purpose/outcome of the Task force: What is a “traffic
offense". Unclear how this would impact costs, without more information on what is considered
a “traffic offense". If it contemplates only the simplest offenses, such as speeding, changing the
penalties would have a negligible impact on costs as a) judges don’t put violators of these laws in
jail, anyway and b) if it were purely civil (money) liability, judges would still do what they do
now, and which is usually the only reason these violators see jail time: put violators in jail for
failure to pay fines. These costs are then borne by the Counties as the cost of jailing the
offender, and by the state as the loss of collecting fine money; Prosecutors have no time for
handling these simple cases so it would not affect them.
If this bill included all crimes in the motor vehicle code, including the felony of leaving
the scene of an accident with death or injuries, and DUI , homicide by motor vehicle, and
Revoked/Suspended License, it would greatly free up attorney time in the District Attorney
Offices as we handle huge numbers of these cases. However, that is NOT a desired outcome as
it would seriously undercut years of progress on these types of cases.
Would this include no jail time for persons in contempt of court for failing to pay fines.
Would this eliminate the need to give offenders jury trials in traffic courts. Regardless of
recidivism and public safety, are there other reasons habitual offenders should be incarcerated
(e.g. example to others, minor advantage to the public when not having an offender on the street,
etc.). Would it create an unfair disparity between people who reoffend and cannot pay, versus
better off individuals who can buy their way out of trouble.
PERFORMANCE IMPLICATIONS
According to AOC, the courts are participating in performance-based budgeting. It appears that
this legislation may have a minimal, if any, impact on performance measures as they relate to
judicial budgeting.
PME/bb:nt