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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
1/27/2008
HB
SHORT TITLE
Weight Distance Tax Violation Penalties
SB 232
ANALYST Moser
APPROPRIATION (dollars in thousands)
Appropriation
Recurring
or Non-Rec
Fund
Affected
FY08
FY09
NFI
NFI
State Road Fund
(Parenthesis ( ) Indicate Expenditure Decreases)
REVENUE (dollars in thousands)
Estimated Revenue
Recurring
or Non-Rec
Fund
Affected
FY08
FY09
FY10
$0.1
(See Fiscal Implications)
State Road Fund
(Parenthesis ( ) Indicate Revenue Decreases)
SOURCES OF INFORMATION
LFC Files
Responses Received From
Taxation and Revenue Department (TRD)
NM Department of Transportation (NMDOT)
Department of Public Safety (DPS)
SUMMARY
Synopsis of Bill
Senate Bill 232 amends Sections 7-15A-3 and 7-15A-12 NMSA 1978 to establish penalties for
failure to pay the Weight Distance Tax (WDT) imposed for the use of motor vehicles weighing
more than 26,000 pounds. The penalty for failure to pay due to negligence or disregard of rules,
but without intent to defraud would equal 100 percent of the tax due. The penalty for failure to
pay with intent to defraud the state would be 100 percent of the tax due plus $25,000. The bill
also provides that TRD “shall" (instead of “may") suspend or decline to renew a weight distance
permit if the vehicle’s owner or operator does not comply with the provisions of the Weight
Distance Tax Act.
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Senate Bill 232– Page
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The WDT is imposed within the Tax Administration Act (TAA), and current penalties amount to
2% per month of the tax due up to a maximum of 20%, when there is no willful intent to evade
or defeat the tax. This penalty would be increased to 100% of the tax due. In the case of willful
intent to evade or defeat the tax, the current penalty of an additional 50% of tax due would be
replaced by an additional $25,000.
FISCAL IMPLICATIONS
TRD indicates that the actual amount of revenue resulting from the bill relates to the number of
companies that are delinquent, those deemed to be intentionally negligent and the impact the bill
has as a deterrent to failure to report and pay the tax.
In considering the fiscal impact, TRD analyzed the results of the recent Motor Transportation
Division (MTD)/ Department of Public Safety weight distance tax enforcement blitzes. MTD
stopped trucks in a multi-day, around the clock operation, to determine if they had outstanding
WDT delinquencies. During the blitz operation, 17,256 trucks were processed by MTD and 108
or 0.625% had an outstanding delinquency. Based on the total amount collected, the average
delinquency was $952.26 per truck. If this percentage (0.625%) is applied to the total number of
trucks with permits in calendar year 2007 (845,254), the resulting extrapolated delinquency
would be 5,282 trucks. If the average delinquency of $952.26 is applied to each of those trucks
the resulting revenue generated by the bill would be $5 million, assuming that each truck
represented one company. $5 million would be equivalent to about 6.0% of this $80+ million
tax program.
TRD additionally points out that the MTD operation at Ports-of-Entry on Interstate highways
represents only the interstate traffic and the operation probably did not sample the many vehicles
operating mostly within the state. There were many reports of trucks parking near the state
borders, apparently waiting out the enforcement effort before entering the state. A note of
caution must be given in that the MTD enforcement efforts may not necessarily be reflective of
what increased penalties might generate.
The current level of overall noncompliance has not been quantified, and it is difficult to forecast
how increased penalties alone, without an extensive audit program, might affect compliance.
SIGNIFICANT ISSUES
New Mexico is one of four states that has what is commonly known as a Weight/Distance tax
(NY, KY, OR are the others). For trucks driving in and across the state, a fee is charged based
on how far they travel and how much they weigh. In the case on New Mexico, the
Weight/Distance tax is offset by the state having the lowest truck registration fees in the country.
The Weight/Distance tax in FY09 will produce $83 million for the state road fund (SRF) and is
the SRF’s third largest source of revenue after fuel taxes.
The HM 35 task force undertook a comprehensive study of current NMDOT revenues and a
number of possible revenue enhancement sources. Weight/Distance tax generated the most
compliance concern – both on-the-road and in the administration of the collection process.
There are approximately 1,000,000 different trucks that use New Mexico’s roads and to
effectively monitor them and their companies is complex at best. In an effort to improve
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Senate Bill 232– Page
3
compliance, the task force focused on three areas: 1) enhanced auditing of returns; 2) increased
road and port-of-entry coverage (HB 298), and increasing penalties. It was estimated by the
HM35 task force that as much as 20% or approximately $19 million additional revenue could be
collected.
There is a widely-held perception, and significant evidence that indicates that WDT compliance
is a significant statewide problem. TRD indicates that while an increase in penalties may be
appropriate there are a number of technical problems issues that would need to be worked out.
These are:
The bill’s proposed penalty provisions are considerably harsher than the currently applicable
penalty provisions under Section 7-1-69 NMSA, but the new penalties would not increase
with increased periods of delinquency. This structure provides no incentive to file and pay,
once the deadline has been missed.
The bill does not specify any exceptional application of this penalty, so the full penalty
would apply to any late payment or late filing, even a day after the tax due date.
The change from “may" to “shall suspend or decline to renew a weight distance tax
identification permit … if the owner or operator … does not comply with the provisions of
the Weight Distance Tax Act" appears to allow no tolerance for minor delinquencies, and
would probably result in inappropriate suspensions of weight distance tax identification
permits. Presumably, anyone subject to any penalty would also be subject to suspension of
their tax identification permit.
An alternative approach to increasing WDT penalties offered by TRD might be a reference
that the penalties imposed by Section 7-1-69 should be imposed at some multiple of the
normal penalty amounts for purposes of the WDT only.
PERFORMANCE IMPLICATIONS
NMDOT indicates that heavy trucks are the most significant impactors of highways – roads are
built to their criteria and replaced more frequently. The department indicates it would take
38,000 passenger vehicles to create as much wear and tear as one 86 thousand pound truck does
in one pass over the same stretch of road. The Weight/Distance tax is a direct user tax.
Accordingly, NMDOT argues that it is important that the full taxes be collected so that these
revenues can be placed back onto the roads from which they are generated.
TECHNICAL ISSUES
TRD offers the following technical considerations:
To assure clarity of definitions, the Section 7-1-69 phrase “evade or defeat the tax"
should be used in place of the word “[defraud]" on page 2, line 7 and in place of the
phrase “[defraud the state]" on page 2, line 10.
The bill is unclear as to whether its penalties are in addition to the penalties imposed by
Section 7-1-69 NMSA 1978 or would be in lieu of those existing penalties. In either case
the bill should specify the intent with something to the effect that “the penalties imposed
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Senate Bill 232– Page
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under Subsection B of this Section are {in lieu of | in addition to} the penalties imposed
pursuant to Section 7-1-69NMSA 1978."
The penalty of 100% of tax due, applying to all situations of delinquency, does not
impose any incentive to file and pay once a taxpayer is only one day late. Taxpayers,
many of whom may be New Mexico-based operators, would undoubtedly view the
penalty as unfair and draconian. An alternative approach might be a reference to the
phased penalties imposed under Section 7-1-69 NMSA 1978, but imposed at some
multiple of those penalties (2% per month up to 20%) for this particular WDT. Such an
alternative approach might amend Section 7-1-69 NMSA 1978, rather than amending
Section 7-15A-3 NMSA 1978 as Section 1 of the bill does.
The Tax Administration Act (Section 7-1-69 (G) (2) NMSA 1978) provides that no
penalties will be applied to “tax due as a result of a managed audit;". This provision
should be included in the bill.
The change from “may" to “shall suspend or decline to renew a weight distance tax
identification permit … if the owner or operator … does not comply with the provisions
of the Weight Distance Tax Act" appears to allow no tolerance for minor delinquencies,
and would probably result in inappropriate suspensions of weight distance tax
identification permits. Presumably, anyone subject to any penalty would also be subject
to suspension of their tax identification permit. The word “may" as is used in current law
should be retained.
GM/bb