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F I S C A L I M P A C T R E P O R T
SPONSOR Papen
ORIGINAL DATE
LAST UPDATED
01/29/08
HB
SHORT TITLE Study Increased Access to Fresh Foods
SB 440
ANALYST Escudero
APPROPRIATION (dollars in thousands)
Appropriation
Recurring
or Non-Rec
Fund
Affected
FY08
FY09
$25.0 Non-Recurring
General Fund
(Parenthesis ( ) Indicate Expenditure Decreases)
Duplicates/Conflicts with/Companion to/Relates to: HB86
This bill is a companion bill to HB180 “Manny Herrera Access to Healthy Foods Act."
SOURCES OF INFORMATION
LFC Files
Responses Received From
New Mexico State University (NMSU)
Higher Education Department (HED)
SUMMARY
Synopsis of Bill
Senate Bill 440 appropriates $25,000 to the Board of Regents at New Mexico State University
for expenditure in FY09 to conduct a study to develop alternative strategies through which state
funds may be used to increase means of access of New Mexicans to sources of fresh foods.
FISCAL IMPLICATIONS
The appropriation of $25.0 contained in this bill is a non-recurring expense to the general fund.
Any unexpended or unencumbered balance remaining at the end of 2009 shall revert to the
general fund.
This request was not submitted by NMSU to the New Mexico Higher Education Department for
review and is not included in the Departments funding recommendation for FY09.
According to NMSU, this initiative is requesting a non-recurring amount of $25,000 to study
social, economic and environmentally sustainable way to increase New Mexicans access to fresh
pg_0002
Senate Bill 440 – Page
2
food. Funding will provide partial support for graduate student, data enumeration and analysis,
and technical and lay report and documentation. The study will involve review of the literature
and best practices, sensitive to custom and cultural differences unique to New Mexico.
SIGNIFICANT ISSUES
According to the New Mexico Food & Agriculture Policy Council, SB440 would fund research
in support of the Manny Herrera Access to Health Foods Act and food access challenges in New
Mexico. SB440 would build on initial research done to assess challenges and barriers and would
help to provide substantive options to help guide the Healthy Food Initiative Board proposed
within HB180.
As stated by NMSU, like other Americans, New Mexicans are facing a growing crisis from
obesity and diabetes that if not reversed, threatens to make this generation of young people the
first in our history to have a lower life expectancy than their parents. One cause of this problem
is not having convenient access to healthy and affordable food outlets. Research has shown that,
in general, the greater distance that one must travel to reach a high quality food store, such as a
supermarket, the fewer servings of fresh fruits and vegetables they will eat. And the further that
people must travel to purchase their food, the further their dollars will travel from their
community. The more that local money can be reinvested in local goods and services, the
stronger local economies will become.
In addition, the lack of healthy food in sparsely settled rural areas and lower income urban
communities cannot be solved by the private market alone. In order to ensure that every New
Mexican has adequate access to healthy and affordable food, the public sector must invest
responsibly in well-run food businesses. The proposed study will investigate alternative public-
private partnership that will strategically expand and create businesses, promote local prosperity,
and make healthy food available to all.
TECHNICAL ISSUES
As stated by NMSU, we know that:
Most people do not eat the recommended five servings a day of fresh fruits and
vegetables, and that the actual cost of produce has risen as much as 40% over 15 years
Obesity and diabetes are costing New Mexico an astounding $324 million per year
NM does not currently have a full-line grocery wholesaler for independent food stores
which increases the cost of food and distance it must travel
According to the Rural Sociological Society, NM has 12 non-metro counties with low-
food access (50% of residents must go more than 10 miles to a food store) and 6 counties
that are considered “food deserts" (100% of the residents more than 10 miles).
A New Mexico 2006 market basket comparison found that food in smaller rural stores is
as much as 70% more expensive than the same food purchased in large, metro-area
supermarkets, and that the availability of fresh produce is considerably less
To increase the consumption of healthy food, the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation has
recommended that governments create economic stimulus programs and public-private
partnerships to promote the creation and expansion of retail grocery operations
pg_0003
Senate Bill 440 – Page
3
Since the creation of the Fresh Food Financing Initiative in Pennsylvania in 2005, state
funds, which have leveraged as much in private funds, have produced one million square
feet of new retail food space and 2,500 new jobs in both urban and rural communities
Modest investments of private and public funds have developed a new supermarket on
the Jicarilla Apache Nation in Dulce and a co-op food store in Dixon.
NMSU College of Agriculture and Economic has the technical capacity to complete this much
needed study. The $25,000 investment in this study will provide knowledge and information that
will save thousand, if not millions in “economic development trials and errors," and more
importantly in health care cost long-term.
CONFLICT, DUPLICATION, COMPANIONSHIP OR RELATIONSHIP
SB440 is a companion to HB86 and related to HB156, HB164, HB403, and HB83.
PME/mt