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F I S C A L I M P A C T R E P O R T
SPONSOR Grubesic
ORIGINAL DATE
LAST UPDATED
1-25-2008
2-1-2008 HB
SHORT TITLE Property Donations to Cultural Affairs Dept.
SB 242a/SPAC
ANALYST Dearing
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
Attorney General’s Office (AGO)
Cultural Affairs Department (DCA)
SUMMARY
Synopsis of Senate Public Affairs Committee Amendment
SPAC Amendment removed language 1) authorizing the Department of Cultural Affairs (DCA)
to receive donations of real property under terms and conditions it would negotiate; and 2) enter
into lease-purchase agreements by which DCA could sell real property it owns and to accept in-
kind payments as payments under such an agreement. The amendment also added language in
Section 1C authorizing DCA to acquire by purchase, gift, endowment or legacy real or personal
property and hold title to that property in the Department’s name for the purpose of promoting,
encouraging and supporting the performing arts in New Mexico, which property would be under
the control and authority of DCA.
According to the Attorney General’s Office response to the amended version of Senate Bill 242,
the amendment rendered issues raised in the original bill analysis moot.
Synopsis of Original Bill
Senate Bill 242 carries no appropriation. If enacted, Senate Bill 242 would provide the Cultural
Affairs department the authority to accept donations of, own and hold title to real property, under
terms it negotiates; in order to promote, encourage, and support the performing arts in the state.
pg_0002
Senate Bill 242a/SPAC – Page
2
Additionally, it authorizes the secretary, on behalf of the department, to enter into lease-purchase
agreements through which the department could sell property it owns to another, perhaps private,
entity, and authorizes some or all of the consideration for such sales to be satisfied by in-kind
performing arts programs throughout the state.
FISCAL IMPLICATIONS
Senate Bill 242 does not carry an appropriation.
SIGNIFICANT ISSUES
According to the Attorney General’s response; to the extent this bill allows the department to
accept the donation of real property and enter into a lease-purchase agreement for the express
purpose of constructing a building that is to be immediately leased and sold over time to a
private entity, it may run afoul of Article IV, § 26 of our state constitution, which bars the
legislature from granting any corporation or person any exclusive right, franchise, or privilege.
This provision has been interpreted to prevent unequal and partial legislation that favors certain
groups or individuals. See AG Op. No. 70-53.
Allowing the department to finance a construction project for a private entity may also violate a
fundamental principle of government that public funds (like for constructing a building) are to be
used only for public purposes. Here, there may be no public purpose, if the land is being
donated so that the department will build a building, funded by the state, specifically designed
for the use of the private landowner who donates the land, and immediately agrees to sell it back
over time to the former owner.
CONFLICT, DUPLICATION, COMPANIONSHIP, RELATIONSHIP
Potential conflict with Article IV, Section 26 of the NM Constitution, see Substantive Issues
above.
TECHNICAL ISSUES
According to the Attorney General’s response; sale of real property by a state agency, when the
value is over $100,000, must be ratified and approved by the legislature prior to the sale,
pursuant to NMSA 1978, § 13-6-3. It is unclear if Section 1(D) is an attempt to grant such
ratification and approval.
ALTERNATIVES
According to the Attorney General’s response; under the Statewide Economic Development Act,
NMSA 1978, §§ 6-25-1 et seq, which implements the exception to the anti-donation clause of the
state Constitution (Art. IX, § 14), the NM Finance Authority may provide financing assistance
(revenue bonds, loans, loan participations, or loan guarantees) for projects which achieve
economic development goals, including museums, theaters, arenas and assembly halls, to entities
which qualify under the act upon receipt of adequate consideration. This may be an appropriate
avenue for the activities contemplated by this bill.
PD/mt