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





SPONSOR: King DATE TYPED: 02/28/01 HB 803
SHORT TITLE: Additional Torrance County Magistrate Judge SB
ANALYST: Hayes


APPROPRIATION



Appropriation Contained
Estimated Additional Impact
Recurring

or Non-Rec

Fund

Affected

FY01 FY02 FY01 FY02
$ 94.4 Recurring General Fund



(Parenthesis ( ) Indicate Expenditure Decreases)



Relates to HB215.



SOURCES OF INFORMATION



Administrative Office of the Courts (AOC)

Judiciary Unified Budget document

LFC files



SUMMARY



Synopsis of Bill



HB803 amends Section 35-1-33 NMSA 1978 to create a division 2 in the Torrance magistrate district. In addition, this bill appropriates $94.4 from the general fund to the Administrative Office of the Courts for the purpose of funding an additional judgeship and "staff" for the Torrance County magistrate district division 2. The magistrate will operate as a single court in Moriarity, with both judges rotating to the circuit court in Estancia.



The new magistrate judge will be filled by appointment by the Governor and serve until a successor has been elected.



Effective date of the provisions in this act is July 1, 2001.



Significant Issues



In 1998, AOC completed an updated and expanded study to provide the Legislature with a methodology for determining the needs for additional judgeships, the Weighted Caseload Study. The study assigns a weight for each type of case heard in a court. The weight, expressed in minutes, represents the average amount of judge's time necessary to process a case of that type. Each weight is multiplied by the number of new cases filed per category.

For FY02, the Chief Judges Council reviewed all district, metropolitan and magistrate judgeship requests statewide. The Weighted Caseload Study showed a need in Torrance magistrate court for a total .89 judge (less than one). See the table below. The Council did not consider the Torrance magistrate court judgeship request since the weighted caseload did not support the need, and therefore, is not supported in the Judiciary Unified Budget.



Type of Case Number Weight Value
Torrance Civil: Landlord/Tenant 39 55.49 2,164.11
Torrance Civil: Other 149 30.37 4,525.13
Torrance Domestic Violence 56 38.10 2,133.60
Torrance DWI 99 76.78 7,601.22
Torrance Felony 131 55.39 7,256.09
Torrance Misdemeanor 148 32.09 4,749.32
Torrance Traffic 2,819 17.06 48,092.14
Totals: 3,441 76,521.61
Judge's Average Yearly Value 86,000 Torrance = 76,522
Number of Judges Needed (Total Weighted Minutes/ Judge Year Value) 0.89
Number of Existing Judges 1
Difference +/- - 0.11



Latest data from the Torrance magistrate courts indicated a caseload of approximately 3,500 cases per year. While this is more than the average of 2,500 cases per magistrate judge per year, one can see from the table that 2,819 of those cases are traffic-related, and therefore, assessed with a low weight value. Hence the .89 number of judges needed in that county.



FISCAL IMPLICATIONS



Of the $94.4 appropriation contained in this bill, $83.0 is a recurring expense to the general fund and $11.4 is non-recurring for acquisition of furniture and equipment. Any unexpended or unencumbered balance remaining at the end of fiscal year 2002 shall revert to the general fund.



RELATIONSHIP



HB215, referred to as the "judgeship bill," is referenced here to note that no judgeship or staff were requested for Torrance county in the bill since the weighted caseload analysis does not support the need.



TECHNICAL ISSUES



The appropriation in this bill includes "staff." Given the total appropriation, the assumption is one court clerk. May need to clarify how many FTE.



POSSIBLE QUESTIONS



1. Why is an additional judgeship being requested for Torrance magistrate district when the weighted caseload analysis indicates that another position is not needed?



CMH/prr