46th legislature - STATE OF NEW MEXICO - first session, 2003
RELATING TO ALCOHOL; PROVIDING THAT MONEY IN THE LOCAL DWI GRANT FUND MAY BE USED FOR PROGRAMS TO REDUCE OR PREVENT THE INCIDENCE OF DOMESTIC ABUSE RELATED TO ALCOHOLISM OR ALCOHOL ABUSE; AMENDING SECTIONS OF THE LOCAL DWI GRANT PROGRAM ACT.
BE IT ENACTED BY THE LEGISLATURE OF THE STATE OF NEW MEXICO:
Section 1. Section 11-6A-3 NMSA 1978 (being Laws 1993, Chapter 65, Section 3, as amended) is amended to read:
"11-6A-3. LOCAL DWI GRANT PROGRAM--FUND.--
A. The division shall establish a local DWI grant program to make grants to municipalities or counties for:
(1) new, innovative or model programs, services or activities to prevent or reduce the incidence of DWI, alcoholism and alcohol abuse; and
(2) programs, services or activities to prevent or reduce the incidence of domestic abuse related to alcoholism or alcohol abuse.
B. Grants shall be awarded by the council pursuant to the advice and recommendations of the division.
[B.] C. The "local DWI grant fund" is created in
the state treasury and shall be administered by the division.
Two million dollars ($2,000,000) of liquor excise tax revenues
distributed to the fund and all other money in the fund, other
than money appropriated for distribution pursuant to Subsection
[C] D of this section and money appropriated for DWI program
distributions, are appropriated to the division to make grants
to municipalities and counties upon council approval in
accordance with the program established under the Local DWI
Grant Program Act. An amount equal to the liquor excise tax
revenues distributed annually to the fund less four million
eight hundred thousand dollars ($4,800,000) is appropriated to
the division to make DWI program distributions to counties upon
council approval of programs in accordance with the provisions
of the Local DWI Grant Program Act. No more than one hundred
thousand dollars ($100,000) of liquor excise tax revenues
distributed to the fund in any fiscal year shall be expended
for administration of the grant program. Balances in the fund
at the end of any fiscal year shall not revert to the general
fund.
[C.] D. Two million eight hundred thousand dollars
($2,800,000) of the liquor excise tax revenues distributed to
the local DWI grant fund is appropriated to the division for
distribution to the following counties in the following amounts
for funding of alcohol detoxification and treatment facilities:
(1) one million seven hundred thousand dollars ($1,700,000) to class A counties with a population of over three hundred thousand persons according to the 1990 federal decennial census;
(2) three hundred thousand dollars ($300,000)
each to counties [classified in 2000 as class B counties]
reclassified in 2002 as class A counties with a population of
more than ninety thousand but less than one hundred thousand
persons according to the 1990 federal decennial census;
(3) two hundred thousand dollars ($200,000) to class B counties with a population of more than thirty thousand but less than forty thousand persons according to the 1990 federal decennial census;
(4) one hundred fifty thousand dollars ($150,000) to class B counties with a population of more than sixty-two thousand but less than sixty-five thousand persons according to the 1990 federal decennial census; and
(5) one hundred fifty thousand dollars ($150,000) to class B counties with a population of more than thirteen thousand but less than fifteen thousand persons according to the 1990 federal decennial census.
[D.] E. In awarding DWI grants to local
communities, the council:
(1) may fund new or existing innovative or model programs, services or activities of any kind designed to prevent or reduce the incidence of DWI, alcoholism or alcohol abuse;
(2) may fund existing community-based programs, services or facilities for prevention, screening and treatment of alcoholism and alcohol abuse;
(3) may fund new or existing innovative or model programs, services or activities of any kind designed to prevent or reduce the incidence of domestic abuse related to alcoholism or alcohol abuse;
(4) may fund existing community-based programs, services or facilities for prevention and treatment of domestic abuse related to alcoholism or alcohol abuse;
[(3)] (5) shall give consideration to a broad
range of approaches to prevention, education, screening,
treatment or alternative sentencing, including programs that
combine incarceration, treatment and aftercare, to address the
problem of DWI, alcoholism or alcohol abuse; and
[(4)] (6) shall make grants only to counties
or municipalities in counties that have established a DWI
planning council and adopted a county DWI plan or are parties
to a multicounty DWI plan that has been approved pursuant to
Chapter 43, Article 3 NMSA 1978 and only for programs, services
or activities consistent with that plan.
[E.] F. The council shall use the criteria in
Subsection [D] E of this section to approve DWI programs,
services or activities for funding through the county DWI
program distribution."
Section 2. Section 11-6A-6 NMSA 1978 (being Laws 1997, Chapter 182, Section 2, as amended) is amended to read:
"11-6A-6. DISTRIBUTION OF CERTAIN DWI GRANT PROGRAM FUNDS--APPROVAL OF PROGRAMS.--
A. An amount equal to the liquor excise tax
revenues distributed to the local DWI grant fund for the fiscal
year less four million eight hundred thousand dollars
($4,800,000) shall be available for distribution in accordance
with the formula in Subsection B of this section to each county
for council-approved DWI programs, services or activities;
provided that each county shall receive a minimum distribution
of at least one-half [of one] percent of the money available
for distribution.
B. Each county shall be eligible for a DWI program distribution in an amount derived by multiplying the total amount of money available for distribution by a percentage that is the average of the following two percentages:
(1) a percentage equal to a fraction, the numerator of which is the retail trade gross receipts in the county and the denominator of which is the total retail trade gross receipts in the state; and
(2) a percentage equal to a fraction, the numerator of which is the number of alcohol-related injury crashes in the county and the denominator of which is the total alcohol-related injury crashes in the state.
C. A county shall be eligible to receive the distribution determined pursuant to Subsection B of this section if the board of county commissioners has submitted to the council a request to use the distribution for the operation of one or more DWI programs, services or activities in the county and the request has been approved by the council.
D. No later than August 1 each year, each board of
county commissioners seeking approval for the DWI program
distribution pursuant to this section shall make application to
the division for review and approval by the council for one or
more local DWI programs, services or activities in the county.
Application shall be made on a form and in a manner determined
by the division. The council shall approve the programs
eligible for a distribution no later than September 1 of each
year. The division shall make the annual distribution to each
county in quarterly installments on or before each October 10,
January 10, April 10 and July 10, beginning in October 1997.
The amount available for distribution quarterly to each county
shall be the amount determined by applying the formula in
Subsection B of this section to the amount of liquor excise tax
revenues in the local DWI grant fund at the end of the month
prior to the quarterly installment due date and after five
hundred thousand dollars ($500,000) has been set aside for the
DWI grant program and after the appropriation and distribution
pursuant to Subsection [C] D of Section 11-6A-3 NMSA 1978.
E. If a county has no council-approved DWI program, service or activity or does not need the full amount of the available distribution, the unused money shall revert to the local DWI grant fund and may be used by the council for the local DWI grant program.
F. As used in this section:
(1) "alcohol-related injury crashes" means the average annual number of alcohol-related injury crashes during the period from January 1, 1993 through December 31, 1995, as determined by the traffic safety bureau of the state highway and transportation department; and
(2) "retail trade gross receipts" means the total reported gross receipts attributable to taxpayers reporting under the retail trade industry sector of the state for the most recent fiscal year as determined by the taxation and revenue department."
Section 3. EFFECTIVE DATE.--The effective date of the provisions of this act is July 1, 2003.