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SPONSOR: |
Moore |
DATE TYPED: |
02/05/02 |
HB |
294 |
||
SHORT TITLE: |
Alcohol Treatment Facilities and Services |
SB |
|
||||
|
ANALYST: |
Smith |
|||||
REVENUE
Estimated Revenue |
Subsequent Years
Impact |
Recurring or Non-Rec |
Fund Affected |
|
FY02 |
FY03 |
|
|
|
($331.0) |
($3,650.0) |
|
Recurring |
State General Fund |
|
$608.3 |
|
Recurring |
Curry County |
|
$608.3 |
|
Recurring |
De Baca County |
|
$608.3 |
|
Recurring |
Guadalupe County |
|
$608.3 |
|
Recurring |
Quay County |
|
$608.3 |
|
Recurring |
Roosevelt County |
|
$608.3 |
|
Recurring |
San Miguel County |
|
$331.0 |
|
Nonrecurring |
Shared among All Counties |
(Parenthesis ( ) Indicate Revenue Decreases)
Taxation and Revenue Department (TRD)
SUMMARY
Synopsis
of Bill
This bill increases the percentage of state Liquor Excise
Tax revenue distributed to the Local DWI Grant Fund administered by the Local
Government Division of the Department of Finance and Administration. Currently, 34.57% of net Liquor Excise Tax
revenue is distributed to the Local DWI Grant Fund. This percentage would be changed to 44.52%.
Additional appropriations totaling $3.65 million would be
appropriated from the DWI Grant Fund for distribution to six counties to fund
alcohol detoxification and treatment facilities. Curry, De Baca, Guadalupe, Quay, Roosevelt and San Miguel
counties would each receive annual appropriations of $608,333.
Amounts for other beneficiaries of the fund, the formula
distribution to all counties and the $2 million reserved for grants to local
governments, would be mostly unchanged from current amounts.
FISCAL IMPLICATIONS
The fiscal year 2002 impact results from the July 1
effective date of the bill. The first
revised distribution to the Local DWI Grant Fund would be transferred in
mid-July, 2002, affecting June 2002 state general fund revenue. The fiscal year
2002 amount is slightly more than 1/12th of the full year amount
because summer liquor tax revenues are stronger than other periods of the year.
(1) The precise timing of
the distribution of the additional $331 thousand in FY 2003 “shared among all
counties” has not been determined, and may depend on the timing of
distributions to the particular counties with alcohol detoxification and
treatment facilities. Presumably at
some point the $331 thousand FY 2002 liquor tax revenue would be available for
the formula distribution to all counties under Section 11-6A-6 NMSA 1978
(Section 3 of the bill). This portion
of the fiscal impact would be nonrecurring.
OTHER SUBSTANTIVE ISSUES
The DWI Grant Fund was originally created by Laws 1993,
Chapter 65, Section 3 (Chapter 11, Article 6A NMSA 1978) as part of a major
liquor tax increase and DWI prevention effort.
From 1993 through 1997 the fund was financed by state general fund
appropriation. The 1993 legislation
appropriated $5.5 million for the 1993-94 fiscal year to the newly created
Local DWI Grant Fund for use in grants to local communities to fund innovative
programs and services dealing with DWI, alcoholism and alcohol abuse. Appropriations to the fund for fiscal years
1994 through 1997 were roughly $5 million per year. Also in fiscal year 1993-94, an additional $5.1 million was
appropriated to the newly created DWI Program Fund administered by DFA for use
in new state agency programs meeting the guidelines of the Alcoholism and
Alcohol Abuse Prevention, Screening and Treatment Act. The Community DWI Fund was appropriated $9.2
million, replacing the old earmarked tax to the Community Alcoholism Treatment
and Detoxification Fund.
1997 legislation (Laws 1997, Chapter 182 – 1997
HB-107) directed 27.2% ($9.7 million) of state liquor excise tax revenue from
the State General Fund to the Local DWI Grant Fund, and created a new quarterly
distribution by formula to counties amounting to available money in the fund
less $2 million reserved for local government grants.
2000 legislation (Laws 2000, Chapter 83 – 2000 SWMC
Substitute for SB-96) increased the DWI Grant Fund distribution to 32.7% (an
additional $2.0 million) of liquor excise tax revenue for fiscal year 2002
only, and appropriated the additional amount to Bernalillo County ($1.7
million) and San Juan County ($0.3 million) to fund alcohol detoxification and
treatment facilities.
2001 legislation (Laws 2001, Chapter 112 – HB-103)
permanently directed 34.57% of state liquor excise tax revenue to the Local DWI
Grant Fund, beginning in fiscal year 2002. An additional $0.5 million was
appropriated from the DWI Grant Fund for distribution to Santa Fe County ($0.3
million) and Rio Arriba County ($0.2 million) to fund alcohol detoxification
and treatment facilities.
The one-time distributions to Bernalillo County
($1.7 million) and San Juan County ($0.3 million) formerly specified for fiscal
year 2002 to fund alcohol detoxification and treatment facilities was made
permanent.
SS/njw:ar
[1]Begin typing on the * in replace mode. Do not add or delete spaces.