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F I S C A L I M P A C T R E P O R T
SPONSOR Jennings
ORIGINAL DATE
LAST UPDATED
2/12/08
HB
SHORT TITLE Create Legislative Health Committee
SB 430 & 503/SFLS
ANALYST Haug
APPROPRIATION (dollars in thousands)
Appropriation
Recurring
or Non-Rec
Fund
Affected
FY08
FY09
$0.1
Recurring
General Fund
(Parenthesis ( ) Indicate Expenditure Decreases)
SOURCES OF INFORMATION
LFC Files
Responses Received From
SUMMARY
Synopsis of Bill
Senate Floor Substitute for Senate Bill 430 and Senate Bill 503 would create a permanent joint
interim committee of the legislature called the Legislative Health Committee. The committee
would consist of fourteen members, seven from the house and seven from the senate; the bill
mandates certain representation and mandates appointment for terms of two years or less.
SFLS/S430 & S503 further speaks to how members will be appointed; how vacancies will be
filled; what officers will be named; when action can be taken; how the committee will be staffed;
and the committee’s duties – which include: 1) conducting a study of all health care in NM to
include programs, agencies, policies, costs and needs; 2) continuing a review of statutes,
regulations, constitutional provisions and other legal materials related to health; 3) study existing
and prospective public and private health care system financing, cost-containment initiatives and
benefit issues; barriers to health care access; health disparities; appropriate enrollment strategies;
delivery systems for prevention and management of chronic disease; strategies for provider
recruitment and retention; the impact of federal initiatives to expand health coverage, as well as
federal legal and administrative requirements for improving the access of uninsured New
Mexicans to affordable health care; and Native American health care access needs and the
federal government's participation in addressing those needs; 4) study post-secondary student
health care and factors incident to providing that health care, including numbers of uncovered
students, sources of health care coverage, the current role of student health care services and
possible expanded student health care services and possible funding mechanisms for student
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Senate Bill 430 and Senate Bill 503/SFLS – Page
2
health care coverage; 5) recommend changes in laws relating to health and health care, if any are
deemed desirable, and draft and present to the legislature any legislation deemed necessary; 6)
prepare and publish by December 1 of each year for the upcoming legislative session an annual
report of its findings and recommendations relating to the adoption of legislation and rules, if any
are found to be necessary, and make additional reports as it deems necessary; and 5)
recommending in report form by November 30, 2009, changes necessary or desirable regarding
the creation of a state health care authority, and whether or how to consolidate any actuarial
pools and whether to allow private employers to purchase coverage through any state programs
or pools.
SFLS/S430 & S503 would authorize the Legislative Health Committee to appoint expert
advisory councils to provide the committee with expert analysis on the areas listed above and
other areas as determined by the committee. Expert advisory council members would receive
mileage and per diem in accord with the Per Diem and Mileage Act.
SFLS/S430 & S503 would also create a Health Care Unit of the Legislative Council Service to
be staffed by knowledgeable persons in the areas of health and health care. The unit would staff
the Legislative Health Committee and develop policy options for health care coverage and
access, supply and quality of health care.
SFLS/S430 & S503 would also re-name the existing Welfare Reform Oversight Committee to
the Human Services Oversight Committee. SFLS/S430 & S503 would also update gender
specific language in the existing 2-17-3 and add duties to this committee’s responsibility
regarding the study of programs, agencies, and laws with regard to human services and programs
and services available in NM for children, families and the aging population.
SFLS/S430 & S503 would also amend current statute at 9-7-11.2, which would direct the New
Mexico Health Policy Commission to mandate that reports of that commission be due by
October 1 of each year. Additionally, it would direct that the Health Policy Commission
coordinate with and provide its reports directly to the (SFLS/S430 & S503 created) Legislative
Health Committee.
Finally, SFLS/S430 & S503 would repeal section 2-13-1 through 2-13-5 and section 2-17-5 of
current law which creates the current Legislative Health and Human Services Committee and
specifies reporting obligations.
FISCAL IMPLICATIONS
The bill contains no appropriation but fiscal impact would be substantial in the creation and
staffing of the Legislative Council Services Health Care Unit and to some extent in the payment
of mileage and per diem to members of expert advisory councils authorized in the bill.
SIGNIFICANT ISSUES
The establishment of a health care unit of the Legislative Council Service would provide the
legislature with additional staff expertise in a policy area with billions of dollars of spending, a
high level of legislator and public interest, and often complicated legislation. SFLS/S430 & S503
increases the official number of legislators on the health committee from 8 to 14 members and
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Senate Bill 430 and Senate Bill 503/SFLS – Page
3
changes appointment power from the legislative council to the Speaker of the House and
Senate’s Committees’ Committee.
CONFLICT & RELATIONSHIP
Other pending legislation (HB 147 and its companion SB 225, and HB 62) would repeal current
law at 9-7-11.2, which SFLS/S430 & S503 proposes to amend.
GH/mt