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SPONSOR: |
Lundstrom |
DATE TYPED: |
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HB |
203/aHENRC |
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SHORT TITLE: |
Amend Water Project Finance Act |
SB |
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ANALYST: |
L. Kehoe |
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APPROPRIATION
Appropriation
Contained |
Estimated
Additional Impact |
Recurring or
Non-Rec |
Fund Affected |
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FY03 |
FY04 |
FY03 |
FY04 |
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NFI |
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(Parenthesis
( ) Indicate Expenditure Decreases)
Legislative Finance Committee Files (LFC)
Office of the State Engineer (OSE)
Energy, Minerals and Natural Resources
Department (EMNRD)
SUMMARY
Synopsis of HENRC Amendment
House Energy and Natural Resources Committee amendments to House Bill 203, Items 1 and 2, make technical corrections; Item 3 expands qualifying water projects to include water conservation.
Synopsis
of Original Bill
House Bill 203 amends
the Water Project Finance Act to create a drought strike team for coordinating
responses to emergency water shortages; requires that water use efficiency be
used as a criterion for financial assistance from the Water Project Fund; and
clarifies that endangered species refers to the Federal Endangered Species Act
of 1973.
Significant
Issues
Enacted in 2001 (Chapter 164), the Water Finance
Act created the Water Trust Board (WTB) for the purpose of making
recommendations to the legislature and governor for financing projects to help
meet New Mexico’s water needs. WTB
members include the state engineer as chairman; the president of the Navajo
Nation; directors of the New Mexico Finance Authority, New Mexico Municipal
League, New Mexico Association of Counties; secretaries of the Energy, Minerals
& Natural Resources Department, Department of Agriculture, Department of
Game and Fish, Department of Environment; and representatives of the Acequia
Water Users, Irrigation or Conservancy Districts (ground water), the
environmental community, and an appointee of the New Mexico Commission on
Indian Affairs.
Current statute requires the WTB to consider
water problems and solutions for storage, conveyance and deliver of water;
implementation of the Endangered Species Act Collaborative Programs; restoration
and management of watersheds; and flood prevention as a criterion for water
projects to be considered for financial assistances from the Water Project
Fund. House Bill 203 requires the WTB to
include water use efficiency as a criterion for qualifying for loans and
grants. However, the bill does not
define “water use efficiency.” The bill
further clarifies that the Endangered Species Act referred to in Chapter 164 is
the “federal” Act.
At the request of the governor and Drought Task
Force, the WTB in 2002 participated in creating a process to identify existing
and potential public water supply emergencies in
House Bill 203 statutorily creates the drought
strike team for the purpose of reviewing and recommending water projects to the
WTB and to ensure that all available technologies and operational design for
water use efficiency is implemented.
However, the bill does not identify the membership or expertise of the
drought strike team, does not identify the state agencies to be represented by
the strike team, and does not address how the expenses of the strike team will
be met.
ADMINISTRATIVE IMPLICATIONS
According to the
OTHER SUBSTANTIVE ISSUES
A strike team would
provide a coordinated effort among those agencies involved in addressing
deficient water supply systems and could minimize the potential water shortage
impact to the public. Lack of a full
time drought strike team creates the potential for delays in addressing deficient
water supply systems, causing the public to haul in water or necessitating the
rationing of water use.
POSSIBLE QUESTIONS