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F I S C A L I M P A C T R E P O R T
SPONSOR Feldman
ORIGINAL DATE
LAST UPDATED
1/31/08
2/11/08 HB
SHORT TITLE Study Off-Road Motorized Vehicle Use
SJM 40/aSRC/aSCONC
ANALYST Woods
APPROPRIATION (dollars in thousands)
Appropriation
Recurring
or Non-Rec
Fund
Affected
FY08
FY09
NFI
NFI
(Parenthesis ( ) Indicate Expenditure Decreases)
Relates to SJM 13
SOURCES OF INFORMATION
LFC Files
Original Responses Received From
Energy, Minerals and Natural resources Department (EMNRD)
Department of Game and Fish (DGF)
SUMMARY
Synopsis of SCONC Amendment
Senate Conservation Committee Amendment to Senate Joint Memorial 40, as amended, clarifies
language. Specifically, it strikes Senate Rules Committee Amendments 1, 3 and 4. The amended
language now reads:
[Page 1] “A JOINT MEMORIAL REQUESTING THE ENERGY, MINERALS
AND NATURAL RESOURCES DEPARTMENT, THE TOURISM
DEPARTMENT, THE NEW MEXICO DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE,
NEW MEXICO STATE UNIVERSITY'S RANGE IMPROVEMENT TASK
FORCE AND THE DEPARTMENT OF GAME AND FISH TO COOPERATE IN
CONDUCTING A STUDY ON OFF-ROAD MOTORIZED VEHICLE USE.
[Page 1] “WHEREAS, there is not a New Mexico centralized, organized database
on which to assess and compare the economic, social, historic, cultural,
archaeological and environmental contributions and impacts of non-motorized
outdoor recreation, including hunting, fishing, camping, hiking, snowshoeing,
pg_0002
Senate Joint Memorial 40/aSRC/aSCONC – Page
2
cross-country skiing, horseback riding, bird watching, mountain biking,
archaeological exploration, natural resources education, agriculture and ranching
with motorized recreation; and"
[Page 2] “NOW, THEREFORE, BE IT RESOLVED BY THE LEGISLATURE OF
THE STATE OF NEW MEXICO that the energy, minerals and natural resources
department, the tourism department, the New Mexico department of agriculture,
New Mexico state university's range improvement task force and the department of
game and fish be requested to cooperate with other state agencies to conduct a
study and recommend actions to resolve user conflicts, prevent…"
[Page 3] BE IT FURTHER RESOLVED that copies of this memorial be
transmitted to the secretary of energy, minerals and natural resources, the secretary
of tourism, the director of the New Mexico department of agriculture, the chair of
New Mexico state university's range improvement task force and the director of the
department of game and fish.
The amendment adds no appropriation to the legislation.
Synopsis of SRC Amendment
EMNRD indicates that Senate Rules Committee amendment to Senate Joint Memorial 40
requests that the Tourism Department and New Mexico Department of Agriculture, in addition to
the Energy, Minerals and Natural Resources Department and the Department of Game and Fish
cooperate with other state agencies to conduct a study on off-road motorized vehicle use. The
amendment also adds the activities of snowshoeing and cross country skiing to the list of
activities mentioned in a “whereas" clause in the SJM, as activities which could be impacted by
off-road motorized vehicle use.
The amendment adds no appropriation to the legislation.
Synopsis of Original Bill
Senate Joint Memorial 40 requests the Energy, Minerals and Natural Resources Department and
the Department of Game and Fish to cooperate with other state agencies to conduct a study and
recommend actions to resolve user conflicts, prevent future resource damage, and provide greater
safety protections for motorized recreation users.
There is no appropriation attached to this legislation.
SIGNIFICANT ISSUES
EMNRD indicates that off-road motorized vehicle use is a popular and growing activity in New
Mexico on both public and private lands. In 2005, the Legislature enacted a new statute that set
certain minimum safety standards for OHV use, established new registration and use fees for
OHVs, and established the Off-Highway Vehicle Safety Board to implement the Off-Highway
Motor Vehicle Act. The Board is attached to the Tourism Department. The EMNRD Secretary
and the Director of the State Parks Division both have permanent seats on the Off-Highway
Vehicle (OHV) Safety Board as does the Director of DGF. The memorial states that there is no
pg_0003
Senate Joint Memorial 40/aSRC/aSCONC – Page
3
New Mexico centralized, organized database on which to assess and compare the economic,
social, historic, cultural, archaeological and environmental contributions and impacts of non-
motorized outdoor recreation (including hunting, fishing, camping, hiking, horseback riding, bird
watching, mountain biking, archaeological exploration, natural resources education, agriculture
and ranching) with the contributions and impacts of motorized recreation. The memorial
enumerates the information and policy issues implicit in escalating problems with resource
impacts and user conflicts between motorized and non motorized recreation. As a member of the
OHV Safety Board, EMNRD is familiar with and has seen evidence of some of these problems,
including:
For example, enforcement of existing OHV laws and regulations is a cornerstone
problem issue. Not all law enforcement agencies in New Mexico are fully aware of
the requirements of the 2005 law and may not be enforcing it consistently. Federal
land management agencies also are experiencing enforcement problems. With only
two enforcement officers for all the National forests in New Mexico, the Forest
Service is presently assuming reliance on DGF personnel to provide enforcement.
The study would identify the scope of the enforcement problem as well as make
recommendations of actions needed to bring enforcement capabilities in line with
needs.
Destruction of resources and damage to private property, particularly in the
agricultural sector, needs to be analyzed. Assessment of adequacy of safety
protections for motorized recreation is appropriate and timely. Further information
about the relative contributions and impacts of motorized versus non-motorized
recreation would be helpful. In addition to helping inform policy and action by the
State of New Mexico, the study could bear on the outcome of the U.S. Forest
Service “Travel Management Plan" process, which is shaping how OHV use will
occur in national forests in New Mexico.
DGF states that the Department of Tourism and Motor Vehicle Division have certain authorities
and administrative responsibilities under the Off-highway Motor Vehicle Act. The Off-highway
Motor Vehicle Safety Board, created by the Act, is comprised of a myriad of State, private and
Federal representatives and has overlapping authority with study components contemplated by
this memorial. Presently, fees are collected from the registration of off-highway vehicles that are
used on public lands and deposited in the “Trail Safety Fund" established by statute (66-3-
1001.1C, 66-3-1004.1, 66-3-1019 NMSA 1978). EDG concludes that some work has been done
compiling scientific literature reviews of
(1) the potential impacts of roads and associated motorized vehicle traffic on
wildlife and habitats; and
(2) the importance of U.S. Forest Service Inventoried Roadless Areas for wildlife
and wildlife habitat conservation and quality wildlife-related recreational
experiences. Both reviews are currently available on the Department’s website.
ADMINISTRATIVE IMPLICATIONS
DGF indicates that it fully recognizes that significant conflicts exist between off-highway vehicle
use, wildlife associated recreation and resource conservation. To produce the study Department
staff will necessarily refocus time toward research, analysis and presentation of study results.
pg_0004
Senate Joint Memorial 40/aSRC/aSCONC – Page
4
CONFLICT, DUPLICATION, COMPANIONSHIP, RELATIONSHIP
DGF notes that the memorial relates to SJM 13, which resolves to protect watersheds, natural
resources, archaeological sites, rangelands by establishing a mandatory filter in evaluating any
potential designated routes and provide safe access for OHV’s (SJM 13, page 5, lines 12-25).
OTHER SUBSTANTIVE ISSUES
DGF advises that the U.S. Forest Service is presently conducting an assessment of their Forest
Travel Management Plans within the respective national forests. Local and regional interests
have expressed substantial interest in this planning effort and prospective implementation.
Consideration may appropriately be given to the implications, respectively, of the proposed study
and the federal planning effort.
WHAT WILL BE THE CONSEQUENCES OF NOT ENACTING THIS BILL
EMNRD suggests that “without the benefit of the conclusions and recommendations of a study,
state and local governments will continue to address the motorized, non-motorized problems and
conflicts in the present manner."
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