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F I S C A L I M P A C T R E P O R T
SPONSOR Rawson
ORIGINAL DATE
LAST UPDATED
2/1/08
HB
SHORT TITLE Legislator Salaries, Per Diem & Travel, CA
SJR 16
ANALYST Wilson
APPROPRIATION (dollars in thousands)
Appropriation
Recurring
or Non-Rec
Fund
Affected
FY09
FY10
$2,844.2
Recurring
General Fund
(Parenthesis ( ) Indicate Expenditure Decreases)
SJR16 relates to SJR 2
SOURCES OF INFORMATION
LFC Files
SUMMARY
Synopsis of Bill
Senate Joint Resolution 16 proposes an amendment to Article 4, Section 10 of the Constitution of
New Mexico to give an annual salary to legislators that is 15% of the salary for United States
congressional representatives and senators.
The resolution limits compensation of legislators to an annual salary, and restricts per diem and
mileage to ten days per month during the interim and to allow the federal governments rates for
out-of-state travel.
The resolution states that per diem and mileage will be paid at the federal government’s
approved rates for service at in-state meetings required by legislative committees established by
the legislature to meet in the interim between sessions.
For service at out-of-state meetings related to a member's legislative duties, the reimbursement
can be either per diem and mileage at a rate accepted by the federal government or actual
expenses that may be reimbursed for reasonable and necessary travel expenditures pursuant to
law.
For in-state and out-of state only ten per diem and mileage days a month are permitted.
The amendment to the Constitution proposed by this resolution shall be submitted to the people
for their approval or rejection at the next general election.
pg_0002
Senate Joint Resolution 16 – Page
2
FISCAL IMPLICATIONS
The current salary for rank-and-file members of the House and Senate is $169,300 per year.
15% of the above is $25,395 per year.
112 legislators @$25,395 is $2,844,240
New Mexico’s per diems and mileage are currently the same as federally approved rates.
Reimbursement for expenses under this resolution should not increase significantly, if at all.
SIGNIFICANT ISSUES
Legislative compensation was an issue considered by the Governor’s Task Force on Ethics
Reform and was considered by the Legislative Structure and Process Study Task Force.
In the 2006 Governor’s Task Force on Ethics Reform, Report of Recommendations, the task
force recommended $10,000 annually for legislative expense reimbursement accounts. “Funds
from the legislative expense reimbursement accounts should be used by legislators to pay for the
expenses directly related to their legislative duties. Such expenses might include staff, telephone,
travel and other constituent service-related expenses. Legislators should only be paid for
expenses incurred." The recommendation anticipated that some legislators would receive less
than the annual amount of $10,000.
The December 2007 Final Report of The Legislative Structure and Process Study Task Force
contains a recommendation for an amendment to Article 4, Section 10 of the Constitution of
New Mexico to repeal legislative per-diem and mileage and create a “Legislative Compensation
The December 2007 Final Report of The Legislative Structure and Process Study Task Force
contains a recommendation for an amendment to Article 4, Section 10 of the Constitution of
New Mexico to repeal legislative per-diem and mileage and create a “Legislative Compensation
Commission" to set the compensation of members of the legislature every 10 years.
The resolution restricts reimbursement when the legislature is not in session to ten times a
month. The purpose of this restriction appears to be to prevent legislators from working fulltime
as legislators. New Mexico has always had a “citizens" legislature and this restriction may help
to continue the tradition.
ADMINISTRATIVE IMPLICATIONS
Passage of this proposal would result in additional administrative duties to Legislative Council
Service for the processing of the payments. It is not clear if members would receive the entire
payment in one lump sum, a monthly or bi-weekly payment. Also, the effective date when this
would go into effect if approved by the voters is not clear. That is, if approved by the voters
would it be effective the following fiscal year beginning on July 1.
RELATIONSHIP
SJR16 relates to SJR 2 which also proposes to amend Article 4, Section 10 of the New Mexico
Constitution to provide an annual salary for legislators. Unlike SJR 16, SJR 2 proposes to
reimburse legislators for mileage once per week during the legislative session.
pg_0003
Senate Joint Resolution 16 – Page
3
OTHER SUBSTANTIVE ISSUES
Currently, Article 4, Section 10 provides the compensation of legislative members to per diem at
the internal revenue service per diem rate for the city of Santa Fe during legislative sessions and
the internal revenue service standard mileage rate for each mile traveled to and from the seat of
government. As of January 2008, the per diem rate for Santa Fe is $144/day and the mileage rate
is $0.505/mile.
During the interim between sessions, legislative members receive per diem at the same rates
listed above however, it should be noted that the internal revenue service per diem rates increases
slightly during the summer months and the mileage rate during the interim also fluctuates
slightly.
Senate Joint Resolution 16 proposes to amend the constitution to provide salaries for legislators
in addition to the per-diem and mileage currently received by legislators.
DW/bb
Attachment
NCSL Backgrounder: Full- and Part-Time Legislatures
In the Blue states, average lawmakers spend the equivalent of half of a full-time job doing legislative work. The compensation they
receive for this work is quite low and requires them to have other sources of income in order to make a living. The blue states have
relatively small staffs. They are often called traditional or citizen legislatures and they are most often found in the smallest
population, more rural states. Again, NCSL has divided these states into two groups. The legislatures in Blue are the most traditional
or citizen legislatures. The legislatures in Blue Lite are slightly less traditional. States are listed alphabetically within subcategories.
Table 1 shows the breakdown of states by category. Table 2 shows the average scores for the Red, White and Blue states for time
on the job, compensation and staff size. For 2005 legislator compensation figures, go to
http://www.ncsl.org/programs/legismgt/aboutl05salary. htm.
Table 1. Red, White and Blue Legislatures
Red Red Light White Blue Light
Blue
California Alaska
Alabama Missouri Georgia Montana
Michigan Illinois
Arizona Nebraska Idaho
New
New York Florida
Arkansas North
Indiana Hampshire
Pennsylvania Ohio
Colorado Carolina Kansas North
Massachusetts Connecticut Oklahoma Maine
Dakota
New Jersey Delaware Oregon Mississippi South
Wisconsin Hawaii South
Nevada Dakota
Iowa
Carolina New Mexico Utah
Kentucky Tennessee Rhode Island Wyoming
Louisiana Texas
Vermont
Maryland Virginia West Virginia
Minnesota Washington
Source: NCSL 2004
Source: NCSL 2004
pg_0004
Senate Joint Resolution 16 – Page
4
Table 2. Average Job
Time,
Compensation and Staff Size by
Category
of
Legislature
Category
of
Legislature
Time
on the Job
Compensation Staff per Member
(1)
(2)
(3)
Red
80%
$68,599
8.9
White
70%
$35,326
3.1
Blue
54%
$15,984
1.2
Notes:
1. Estimated proportion of a full-time job spent on legislative work including time in
session, constituent service, interim committee work, and election campaigns.
2. Estimated annual compensation of an average legislator including salary, per diem,
and any other unvouchered expense payments.
3. Ratio of total legislative staff to number of legislators.
Source: NCSL, 2004