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F I S C A L I M P A C T R E P O R T
SPONSOR Snyder
ORIGINAL DATE
LAST UPDATED
1/16/08
2/5/08 HB
SHORT TITLE Law Enforcement Protection Fund Distributions
SB 20
ANALYST Wilson
REVENUE
Estimated Revenue
Recurring
Fund
FY08
FY09
FY10
or Non-Rec
Affected
-6,361.7 -6,486.0
-6,604.7 Recurring General Fund
6,361.7
6,486.0
6,604.7 Recurring Law Enforcement Protection
Fund, thence to local law
enforcement agencies.
(Parenthesis ( ) Indicate Revenue Decreases)
SOURCES OF INFORMATION
LFC Files
Responses Received From
Department of Finance & Administration (DFA)
Department of Public Safety (DPS)
Higher Education Department (HED)
New Mexico Municipal League (NMML)
Indian Affairs Department (IAD)
State Treasurer’s Office (STO)
Taxation & Revenue Department (TRD)
SUMMARY
Synopsis of Bill
Senate Bill 20 clarifies that distributions from the Law Enforcement Protection Fund (Protection
Fund) will be made to the Peace Officers’ Survivors Fund (Pease Fund). Additionally, SB 20
amends the Law Enforcement Protection Fund Act (NMSA 29-13-1, et seq.) to increase amounts
distributed from the Protection Fund to municipal, university and tribal police and county sheriff
departments.
SB 20 reconciles multiple amendments to the same section in Laws 2002 by adding a formula for
calculating the Protection Fund’s total amount for distribution and requires the Local
Government Division (LGD) of Department of Finance and Administration (DFA) to use this
proposed formula and the current method of calculation. DFA will then choose the higher
amount resulting from these two calculations as the Protection Fund’s total distribution amount.
pg_0002
Senate Bill 20 – Page
2
This will ensure that law enforcement departments receive the highest possible amount of
funding from the Protection Fund.
FISCAL IMPLICATIONS
The proposed increased distributions will reduce the amount remaining in the Law Enforcement
Protection Fund, which will reduce reversions from the Fund to the General Fund because the
distribution calculation in the proposed legislation generates an increased total distribution for
each department in proportion to the increase in the total distribution.
The bill increases amounts distributed from the Protection Fund to municipal, university and
tribal police and county sheriff departments as follows:
County or sheriffs department having a population of 0 to 20,000 people shall receive a
distribution of $40,000 instead of the current $20,000.
County or sheriffs department having a population of 20,000 to 160,000 people shall
receive a distribution of $60,000 instead of the current $30,000.
County or sheriffs department having a population of 160,000 to 1,280,000 people shall
receive a distribution of $80,000 instead of the current $40,000.
University police departments shall be entitled to a rate of distribution of $34,000 instead
of the current $17,000
Tribal police departments shall be entitled, unless allocations are adjusted pursuant to the
provisions of later sections of this bill, to $1,000 for each commissioned peace officer in
the tribe in-stead of the current $600.
Municipal and university police and county sheriff's departments shall be entitled, unless
allocations are adjusted pursuant to the provisions of later sections of this bill, to $1,000
for each police officer or sheriff's deputy employed full time instead of the current $600.
DFA provided the following:
The bill is designed to distribute 100% of the revenues accruing to the fund from
insurance premiums. The General Fund fiscal impact derives from the fact that, under
current statute, revenues in excess of formula-based distributions revert to the General
Fund. This amount is estimated at about $6.5 million annually. This reversion will be
eliminated pursuant to the bill.
A recent Local Government Division report indicates that revenues are sufficient to
support 100% of the increased distributions proposed in this bill. The growth in the law
enforcement protection fund can cover the proposed increased distributions and some
amount of excess over the formula amounts. This excess amount will also be distributed
pursuant to the new Section E
pg_0003
Senate Bill 20 – Page
3
SIGNIFICANT ISSUES
The IAD states that the Protection Fund was created to promote efficient and effective law
enforcement by providing equitable funding to municipal, university, and tribal police and
county sheriff’s departments (NMSA 29-13-2). The Protection Fund also provides for the Peace
Fund which supports families of peace officers killed in the line of duty. A NM tribal police
department is entitled to distributions from the Protection Fund, provided that the Nation, Tribe,
or Pueblo’s law enforcement officers are also commissioned by the Chief of NM State Police to
enforce state laws as a New Mexico Peace Officer (NMSA 29-1-11A).
IAD supports the bill as a much needed funding source for NM tribal law enforcement agencies
by supplying increased support for peace officer operations. The National Congress of American
Indians notes that a typical tribal police department has to cope with an increased workload
driven by rises in gang violence and methamphetamine use despite limited resources. Tribal law
enforcement advocates state that current funding for Tribal law enforcement (mainly federal)
lags well behind that for non-tribal law enforcement and first responders.
SB 20 adds a formula for calculating the Protection Fund’s total amount for distribution and
requires DFA to use this proposed formula and the current method of calculation. DFA will then
choose the higher amount resulting from these two calculations as the Protection Fund’s total
distribution amount. This will ensure that law enforcement departments receive the highest
possible amount of funding from the Protection Fund.
The New Mexico Municipal League notes the distribution amounts to law enforcement agencies
has not been adjusted since calendar year 2000. Since that time the amount of the distribution to
Law Enforcement Agencies has been eroded by inflation. Increasing the amount of the
distribution will allow Law Enforcement Agencies to continue to equip officers with advanced
law enforcement equipment and to train officers.
ADMINISTRATIVE IMPLICATIONS
DFA is currently distributing these funds so there will be a minimal impact on them when they
change the appropriate formulas to conform to this bill.
OTHER SUBSTANTIVE ISSUES
Local law enforcement agencies seek funding from many sources as needs for equipment and
advanced training increase. Reduction in Federal Law Enforcement grants have placed additional
strains on many communities resulting in decreased revenues. The Fund is an essential element
of all current public safety operating budgets and the amendments proposed in the bill will
provide an infusion of needed revenue into the fund.
DW/mt:bb