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F I S C A L I M P A C T R E P O R T
SPONSOR Griego
ORIGINAL DATE
LAST UPDATED
1/24/08
2/4/08 HB
SHORT TITLE
Real Estate Broker Insurance Premiums
SB 229/aSCORC
ANALYST C. Sanchez
APPROPRIATION (dollars in thousands)
Appropriation
Recurring
or Non-Rec
Fund
Affected
FY08
FY09
NFI
(Parenthesis ( ) Indicate Expenditure Decreases)
SOURCES OF INFORMATION
LFC Files
Responses Received From
Regulation and Licensing Department (RLD)
SUMMARY
Synopsis of SCORC Amendment
The Senate Corporations and Transportation Committee amendment for SB 229 reduces the
annual premium that the Real Estate Commission’s contract liability insurance provider can
charge New Mexico real estate brokers for errors and omissions insurance from $400 to $300.
The amendment on page 2, lines 12 and 13, strikes “four hundred dollars ($400)" and inserts in
lieu thereof “three hundred dollars ($300)".
Synopsis of Original Bill
Senate Bill 229 will increase the maximum annual premium that the Real Estate Commission’s
contract liability insurance provider can charge New Mexico real estate brokers for errors and
omissions insurance from $200 to $400.
Section 61-29-4.2, NMSA, authorizes the Real Estate Commission to provide mandatory group
professional liability (errors and omissions) insurance to New Mexico-licensed real estate
brokers. The statute provides brokers with an affordable alternative to purchasing errors and
omissions insurance on the open market, and provides consumers with an avenue for recovering
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Senate Bill 229/aSCORC – Page
2
financial losses incurred by inadvertent errors and omissions that occur in the course of
residential real estate transactions.
Section 61-29-4.2 (C) caps annual errors and omissions insurance premiums at $200. The
premium for the group program in 2008 is $195. Paid claims of more than $1 million in two of
the last three policy years threaten to drive premiums above the cap no later than the 2009 policy
year. Therefore, the premium cap must be amended in the 2008 legislative session.
Section 61-29-4.2 (D) provides that errors and omissions insurance will cease to be mandatory if
a contract insurance provider cannot offer insurance within the statutory cap described in Section
61-29-4.2 (C).
According to RLD, the implementation by the Real Estate Commission of mandatory errors and
omissions insurance with statutory coverage and premium caps was done in response to the
rising costs of errors and omissions insurance to real estate brokers on the open market.
Cessation of the mandatory errors and omissions insurance program could result in real estate
brokers having to pay open market rates for insurance coverage.
FISCAL IMPLICATIONS
The insurance contractor bills and collects annual insurance premiums directly from the real
estate broker. Therefore, there are no fiscal implications for the Real Estate Commission fund.
SIGNIFICANT ISSUES
The most significant issue is that cessation of the mandatory errors and omissions insurance
program could result in increased costs of doing business for real estate brokers, and perhaps the
loss to New Mexico consumers of a significant mechanism for recouping financial losses
incurred as a result of errors and omissions committed by real estate brokers during the course of
real estate transactions.
PERFORMANCE IMPLICATIONS
The mandatory errors and omissions insurance program assists the Real Estate Commission in its
mission of protecting the public.
ADMINISTRATIVE IMPLICATIONS
Because the insurance provider bills and collects insurance premiums directly from real estate
brokers and processes all claims, there are no administrative implications to the Real Estate
Commission, other than answering general broker questions about the insurance requirement.
WHAT WILL BE THE CONSEQUENCES OF NOT ENACTING THIS BILL
Status quo.
POSSIBLE QUESTIONS
Does this legislation strengthen consumer protection.
CS/nt:bb