Fiscal impact
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standing finance committees of the NM Legislature. The LFC does not assume
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in
SPONSOR |
|
DATE TYPED |
|
HB |
HJR 10 |
||
SHORT
TITLE |
Provision of PRC Powers & Duties By Law |
SB |
|
||||
|
ANALYST |
Garcia; Valenzuela |
|||||
APPROPRIATION
Appropriation
Contained |
Estimated
Additional Impact |
Recurring or
Non-Rec |
Fund Affected |
||
FY04 |
FY05 |
FY04 |
FY05 |
||
|
|
|
$32.0 |
Non-recurring |
General
Fund |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
(Parenthesis
( ) Indicate Expenditure Decreases)
-
Report of the Legislative Finance
Committee to the Forty-sixth Legislature, First Session,
January 2003 for Fiscal Year 2003 – 2004, pp. 390 – 401.
-
Report to the Legislative Council from
the Public Regulation Commission Subcommittee, in response
to SENATE MEMORIAL 41, (2001 Legislative Session) December 2002.
This Fiscal Impact Report excerpts directly from
the above mentioned reports.
Responses
Received From
Public
Regulation Commission
SUMMARY
Synopsis
of Bill
House Joint Resolution
10 would amend the New Mexico Constitution by giving the
Legislature the express authority to provide in law the powers and duties of
the Public Regulation Commission. Amendments to the Constitution require voter
approval.
Significant
Issues
The Public Regulation Commission (PRC) has a complex mix
of policy-making, regulatory, judicial and administrative responsibilities for
diverse industries essential to the economic health and future of
The
Public Regulation Commission (PRC) was created through a merger of the elected
State Corporation Commission and the appointed Public Utility Commission.
Despite this significant change, the public policy and regulatory issues
involved in such a merger were never fully debated by the Legislature or the
public. A specific recommendation of this subcommittee was to
define the scope of the PRC authority “as provided by law”, and thus allow the
Legislature to be responsive to the need for changes in the future without
requiring an amendment to New Mexico’s Constitution. (emphasis
added)
According to the PRC Subcommittee, these joint resolutions will allow the Legislature to be responsive to the need for changes in the future without always requiring a constitutional amendment and to focus the PRC authority on utility and telecommunications regulation, which is another specific recommendation in the report.
This recommendation is also consistent with the
1995 Report of the Constitutional Revision Commission that discussed
utilities and telecommunications regulation and stated:
“The existing separate constitutional article dealing in great detail with the organization and operation of the Corporation Commission is largely historical-typical of turn-of-the-century concerns... The primary function of the Corporation Commission today involves regulation of public utilities in the communications field. Because that field is so rapidly changing, the entity charged with regulating must be capable of change and adaptation as well, leading to the recommendation that the organization and structure of the regulatory authority be left to law, rather than fixed in the constitution... Furthermore, it is recommended that utility regulation be combined in one single entity”...and “that its non-utility functions be transferred to other departments.” (emphasis added)
A 1997 Report of the Regulation Commission
Reorganization Committee also recommended a constitutional amendment “to
define the functions of the commission to be those concerned with utility
regulation, including telecommunications”. The minutes of the committee
meetings included discussions on removing the non-regulatory functions of
the commission from the Constitution to allow the Legislature to leave such
duties with the commission, or to move them to other departments of state
government. (emphasis
added)
FISCAL IMPLICATIONS
The bill does not
contain an appropriation. Enactment,
however, would cost the Secretary of State $32.0, a non-recurring cost, for
advertising and printing to place an item on the ballot. This cost would be
incurred in the FY05 budget.
OTHER SUBSTANTIVE ISSUES
Background to the PRC Merger. In 1996,
Constitutional Amendment 6 passed and amended Article 11 of New Mexico’s
Constitution. The State Corporation Commission and, by reference, the Public
Utility Commission were abolished. The Public Regulation Commission (PRC) was
created as a single regulatory agency for corporations, public utilities,
transportation companies, transmission and pipeline companies, insurance
companies and other public services as provided by law. The effective date for
establishing the PRC was
In 1997, the Legislature passed the Public
Regulation Commission Apportionment Act in preparation for the 1998 general
election. The law apportioned the state
into five public regulation commission districts. The elected commissioners
serve staggered terms and are limited to two consecutive four-year terms.
Article 11 of the Constitution specifies the regulatory
functions of the new commission. The Legislature, however, has the
responsibility to provide by law how the regulation is addressed. Therefore, in
May 1997, the Legislative Council created the Regulation Commission Reorganization
Committee to study and make recommendations on the merger of the State
Corporation and Public Utility commissions into the Public Regulation
Commission. The committee held seven meetings during the 1997 interim and
prepared a December 1997 report that included a number of recommendations for
legislative action.
The 1998 Legislature passed the Public Regulation Commission
Act, now codified as Section
During the 2001 legislative session, five bills were
introduced to review the responsibilities of the PRC. Senate Joint Memorial 41
passed and requested that the Legislative Council designate an interim
committee to examine the organization, financing and performance of the PRC.
The memorial addressed the PRC oversight and regulation of the following
industries: insurance, transportation and utilities including
telecommunications.