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SPONSOR: |
HGUAC |
DATE TYPED: |
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HB |
568/HGUACS |
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SHORT TITLE: |
Curfew Ordinances |
SB |
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ANALYST: |
Maloy |
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APPROPRIATION
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Additional Impact |
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FY03 |
FY04 |
FY03 |
FY04 |
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See Narrative |
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(Parenthesis
( ) Indicate Expenditure Decreases)
Duplicates SB 179.
Responses
Received From
Children,
Youth and Families Department
Administrative
Offices of the Courts
Administrative
Offices of the District Attorney
Attorney
Generals Office
Public
Defender Department
SUMMARY
Synopsis
of Bill
The House Government
and Urban Affairs Committee Substitute for House Bill 568 seeks to create a
lawful manner whereby children under the age of eighteen years can be removed
from public places and establishments during certain hours of the day, i.e.,
“after curfew”.
The
bill is likely to respond to the New Mexico Supreme Court’s unanimous decision
in ACLU v. CITY OF ALBUQUERQUE
(S.Ct. 1999) 1999-NMSC-044, 128 N.M. 315, 992 P.2d. 866, which struck down the
City of
Specifically, the bill proposes the
following:
1.
The children’s court attorney function
may be delegated for the purpose of enforcing a curfew ordinance.
2.
A child may be taken into protective
custody without a court order when the enforcement officer has reasonable
grounds to believe that the child is in violation of a county or municipal
curfew ordinance.
3.
Enactment of a new section (Section 3) of
the Children’s Code wherein counties and municipalities are granted the
authority to:
a.
Enact curfew ordinances for children
under age eighteen;
b.
Provide for penalties, which may include
community service, suspension of a driver’s license, or monetary fines;
c.
Provide that these penalties may be
imposed on a child, or the child’s parent or guardian;
d.
Enter into joint powers agreements
between the counties and municipalities, including magistrate, municipal or
metropolitan courts in those jurisdictions, for the purpose of allowing
jurisdiction, supervision, counseling and intervention with the child and the
child’s parent or guardian (where such an agreement does not exist, the jurisdiction
shall remain with the children’s court);
e.
Provide that a child under the age of 18
years may be taken into protective custody without a court order when the
enforcement officer has reasonable grounds to believe that the child is in
violation of a county or municipal curfew ordinance.
4.
The bill enacts another new section
(Section 4) of the Children’s Code providing the following protective custody
options for violation of curfew:
a.
Community center, or other building
owned, leased or used by a county or municipality that is not a detention
facility; or
b.
Other non-secured facilities for the
purpose of holding a child in temporary custody.
5. Section 4 also provides that a county or municipality shall provide in its curfew ordinance mechanisms and stated requirements mandating the county or municipality’s requirement to attempt to contact the parent or guardian of the child. This attempted contact must be prompt, and must include a mechanism or process for dealing with a parent or guardian who does not have a phone.
6. Finally, if the child has not been retrieved
from protective custody by his or her parent by
Significant Issues
1.
This bill promotes the protection of
children, and will also likely benefit property owners by curbing access to
commit vandalism, burglary, and other such crimes.
2.
Does the mere amendment to the Children’s
Code result in municipalities having the legal authority to enact curfew
ordinances? If the answer to this
question is yes, do the curfew ordinances meet the constitutionality tests
enunciated by the New Mexico Supreme Court in ACLU v. CITY OF
3.
Will the language characterizing the
“penalties” imposed against both the child or the
child’s parents as “civil” in nature be regarded by the New Mexico Supreme
Court as nevertheless “criminalizing” the prohibited conduct? Will the language characterizing the taking
of a child into “protective custody” be regarded by the New Mexico Supreme
Court as nevertheless “arresting” the child?
(i.e., Will the New Mexico Supreme Court regard the new provisions as
nothing more than a subterfuge for arresting children because the new bill
provides for community service, limitation of use of a motor vehicle license,
and a monetary fine, all of which are traditional criminal penalties? )
Does
the express statement in the bill regarding the types of facilities to which a
child may be taken for “protective custody” (a community center or other non-secure
building) impact/ lessen the “arrest” factor?
It
is noted that this provision does effectively address existing law at 32A-3B-4.1(A)(1)
– (3) which prohibits a child from being held in a detention facility or jail,
and from being held in a police station, sheriff’s office, or state police
office.
4.
Upon the adoption of curfew ordinances by
counties or municipalities, local police departments will have an additional burden
of enforcement. This bill does not address duties for juvenile probation and
parole officers, implying that enforcement is strictly a function of local
government unless a joint powers agreement is developed with a specific role or
function for juvenile probation and parole officers.
5.
There may be possible constitutional
issues relating to freedom of association.
FISCAL IMPLICATIONS
Under this bill,
children taken into protective custody must be held in permissible, non-secure
facilities. This means that appropriate
buildings will have to be found or built, and must be staffed on a
continuous basis. These costs will be the responsibility of the local governing
bodies.
Local governing bodies
will also be required to dedicate the staff and budget resources necessary for
enforcement. However, monetary civil
fines associated with charges of violating a curfew ordinance will go to the
local governing body’s general fund.
Finally, there will
likely be an increase in the workload of the Children’s Courts throughout
New Mexico Supreme Court’s unanimous
decision in ACLU v. CITY OF
ALBUQUERQUE
(S.Ct. 1999) 1999-NMSC-044, 128 N.M. 315,
992 P.2d. 866, which struck down the City of
Analysis, drafting,
and consideration of this bill.
TECHNICAL ISSUES
32A-3B-3(A)(5) adds an
additional reason a child may be taken into protective custody, as follows:
(5) the
child is in violation of a county or municipal curfew ordinance.
In ACLU v. CITY OF ALBUQUERQUE, the
Court stated:
“{22} In order to take children into protective
custody, the Family in Need of Services
article requires, among other circumstances, that the officer has
reasonable grounds to believe that "the child is endangered by his [of
her] surroundings and removal from those surroundings is necessary to ensure
the child's safety." Section 32A-3B-3(A)(4). As Plaintiffs observe, the
police officers who took the children into custody under the STOP program did
not note any particularized finding that these children were in danger. The
City argues that the lateness of the hour is inherently dangerous to children.
We disagree.
{23} We conclude that the City cannot take
children into protective custody without a fact-specific showing that one or
more of the specific statutory conditions within Section 32A-3B-3 are met. We
reject the City's attempt to create a bright-line rule which automatically
defines a child in violation of the Curfew as a child endangered by his or her
surroundings. Such a rule is clearly over-inclusive, penalizes
innocent conduct, and presents too great a danger that the police or
municipalities will use "protective custody" as a subterfuge to avoid
constitutional protections that would otherwise apply to warrantless
arrests. (Emphasis added)
There is a significant technical hurdle to clear since the Supreme
Court may apply the same rule to the legislature’s attempt to add curfew
violation as a reason for protective custody under 32A-3B-3.
SJM/yr/njw