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





SPONSOR: Rainaldi DATE TYPED: 02/13/01 HB
SHORT TITLE: Capping Impact Aid Revenue SB 451
ANALYST: Segura




Duplicates HB563 Relates to HB365 and SB517



REVENUE



Estimated Revenue
Subsequent

Years Impact

Recurring

or Non-Rec

Fund

Affected

FY01 FY02
$ (45,900.0) See Narrative Recurring General Fund
$ 70,000.0 Recurring Impact Aid

Districts



(Parenthesis ( ) Indicate Revenue Decreases)



SOURCES OF INFORMATION



Duplicates HB563 Relates to HB365 and SB517



State Department of Education (SDE)

LFC Files



SUMMARY



Synopsis of Bill



Senate Bill 451 amends the Public School Finance Act ( Section 22-8-25 NMSA 1978) to cap the Impact Aid revenue considered as federal revenue for purposes of the State Equalization Guarantee (SEG) distribution at the FY 2001 level. Any increases in Impact Aid above the amount received in FY 2001 by a school district shall be retained by the school district and shall not be considered to be federal revenue for SEG purposes.



Significant Issues



Under statutory provisions of the New Mexico public school funding formula, New Mexico has qualified under federal Impact Aid requirements as an equalized state and has been allowed to consider eligible Impact Aid receipts in determining the amount of state aid to public school districts.



According to the State Department of Education, SB 451 will increase the funds available for operational expenditures within those districts who qualify for Impact Aid as a result of the cap on impact aid credits at the FY 2001 level. The effect of capping the amount considered as federal revenue for SEG purposes will be to decrease the percentage of Impact Aid revenue that the state takes credit for, well below the 75% as set forth in Section 22-8-25 NMSA 1978.



The SDE indicates that if SB 451 were enacted, substantial disequalization within the state would occur with regard to funds available to school districts for operational expenditures. The resulting disparity would, at some future point, disqualify the State of New Mexico from meeting federal criteria that allow the state to qualify as an equalized state, removing the State's ability to take credit for any impact aid receipts.



As a result, New Mexico could no longer mandate or legislate utilization of the Impact Aid receipts by local school districts. In addition, the state requirement that 20% of Impact Aid funds be designated for capital outlay would not be applicable.



Currently, the state takes 75 % credit of all local and federal revenues as required in the Public School Finance Act ( Section 22-8-25 NMSA 1978). The state takes credit for only the basic support portion of the Impact Aid funds, which translates to 58.5% of total Impact Aid payments. Therefore, 41.5% of total Impact Aid payments received by school districts are not applied under the state equalization funding formula and represent additional revenues to the recipient districts in addition to the operational revenues guaranteed by the state equalization guarantee formula.



FISCAL IMPLICATIONS



The enactment of SB 451 could have a projected general fund impact of $45,900.0 as the result of the loss in Impact Aid credits. The general fund revenue would to needed to maintain the current unit value. The SDE has provided an attachment which provides a breakdown of the projected loss to individual districts based on 1999-2000 actual distributions.



OTHER SUBSTANTIVE ISSUES



According to SDE, if New Mexico were unable to take credit for Impact Aid receipts, the State Equalization Guarantee would be reduced by an estimated $45,900.0 for the school year 2002-2003. Impact Aid districts would retain over $70,000.0 to use at their discretion. This change could have a significant effect on the State Equalization Funding Formula as it is now constituted.



RMS/njw

Attachment