NOTE:  As provided in LFC policy, this report is intended only for use by the standing finance committees of the legislature.  The Legislative Finance Committee does not assume responsibility for the accuracy of the information in this report when used for other purposes.

 

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F I S C A L   I M P A C T   R E P O R T

 

 

 

SPONSOR:

Larranaga

 

DATE TYPED:

2/26/03

 

HB

250/aHJC

 

SHORT TITLE:

Commercial Driver’s License Changes

 

SB

 

 

 

ANALYST:

Wilson

 

APPROPRIATION

 

Appropriation Contained

Estimated Additional Impact

Recurring

or Non-Rec

Fund

Affected

FY03

FY04

FY03

FY04

 

 

 

 

 

See Narrative

 

 

 

REVENUE

 

Estimated Revenue

Subsequent

Years Impact

Recurring

or Non-Rec

Fund

Affected

FY03

FY04

 

 

 

 

 

Significant

Recurring

Federal

 

 

 

 

 

(Parenthesis ( ) Indicate Revenue Decreases

 

Duplicates SB 242 & SB 262.

Relates to other bills amending the same section of the law.

 

SOURCES OF INFORMATION

 

Responses Received From

State Highway and Transportation Department (SHTD)

Taxation and Revenue Department (TRD)

Department of Public Safety (DPS)

Administrative Office of the District Attorneys (ADA)

 

SUMMARY

 

    Synopsis of HJC Amendment

 

The House Judiciary Committee amendment removes all references dealing with the creation of a presumption that a person under twenty-one years of age is intoxicated with a blood or breath alcohol concentration of .02.  Also, the HJC amendment removes the newly added requirement that a breath test machine certified by the scientific laboratory of DOH is presumed to measure the breath sample based of the grams of alcohol in two hundred ten litters of breath.

 

The HJC amendment also removes the discretion given to TRD to hold hearings on the telephone.

 

In addition, the HJC amendment removes language describing a train’s warning signal. The  removed wording explained that the train’s warning signal indicated how close the train was although it was not in sight.

 

     Synopsis of Original Bill

 

House Bill 250 provides sanctions for drivers of commercial motor vehicles who have been convicted of railroad highway grade crossing violations and adds additional requirements for railroad highway crossings. Additionally, HB 250 increases the penalties for violating out-of-service orders.  HB 250 also establishes “per se” DWI violations for individuals driving a commercial motor vehicle at point 0.04 and for individuals less then twenty-one years of age at .02.

 

     Significant Issues

 

HB 250 brings New Mexico into compliance with federal law.

 

The intent of HB 250 is to reduce all motor vehicle related crashes, injuries, and deaths by requiring higher standards for drivers with commercial drivers licenses.

 

The only portion of HB 250 not required by federal law is the section allowing TRD to conduct administrative license revocation hearings telephonically. 

 

FISCAL IMPLICATIONS

 

If HB 250 is not enacted, the state will face the loss of $8.4 million of Federal Highway funds this year. There will be a subsequent loss of $16.8 million for each succeeding year of non-compliance.

 

In addition, there is the potential loss of approximately $5.6 million from the Motor Carrier Safety Assistance Program as well as additional sanctions.

 

ADMINISTRATIVE IMPLICATIONS

 

The loss of funds and sanctions imposed would have a very negative impact on SHTD, DPS and the Motor Vehicle Division of TRD.

 

DUPLICATION/RELATIONSHIP

 

HB 250 duplicates SB 242 & SB 262.

HB 250 amends the same section of law, 66-8-102, as HB 40, HB 117, HB 139, HB 189, HB 249, HB 327, HB 335, HB 405, SB 16, SB 93, SB 99, SB 248, SB 261, SB 245, SB 266, and SB 341. All of these bills relate to DWI, but do not have conflicting language with HB 250. 

 

TECHNICAL ISSUES

 

DPS notes the language in Section 10, page 8, paragraph C, paragraphs 1 thru 3 attempts to establish “per se” blood alcohol concentration violations.  Unfortunately, in Section 12 of the amendment to NMSA Section 66-8-110, the drafter reinserted language removed previously with respect to presumptions.  When a “per se” limit is established, any language in the statute with respect to presumptions must be removed because presumptions destroy the effect of the “per se” language in the statute.  Presumptions can be rebutted.  “Per se” limits are by definition are not supposed to be able to be rebutted.  “Per se” language and presumptive language are incompatible. 

 

DW/njw:yr