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F I S C A L I M P A C T R E P O R T
SPONSOR Lujan, B
DATE TYPED 02/16/05 HB HJR 9/aHGAC
SHORT TITLE Building Lease Agreements for State, CA
SB
ANALYST Ford
APPROPRIATION
Appropriation Contained Estimated Additional Impact Recurring
or Non-Rec
Fund
Affected
FY05
FY06
FY05
FY06
See Narrative
(Parenthesis ( ) Indicate Expenditure Decreases)
Relates to SJR 7
SOURCES OF INFORMATION
LFC Files
Responses Received From
Administrative Office of the Courts (AOC)
Attorney General (AGO)
Corrections Department (CD)
Energy, Minerals and Natural Resources Department (EMNRD)
General Services Department (GSD)
New Mexico Finance Authority (NMFA)
Public Education Department (PED)
FOR THE CAPITOL BUILDINGS PLANNING COMMISSION
SUMMARY
Synopsis of HGUAC Amendment
The House Government and Urban Affairs Committee Amendment specifically provides that a
lease purchase agreement that results in the build-up of equity is allowable. It authorizes a fi-
nancing agreement entered into by the state for the leasing of a building or other real property
with an option to purchase for a price that is reduced according to the payments made by the
state pursuant to the financing agreement.
pg_0002
House Joint Resolution 9/aHGUAC -- Page 2
Synopsis of Original Bill
House Joint Resolution 9 proposes to amend the New Mexico constitution to allow the state to
enter into lease-purchase agreements as long as there is no legal obligation for the state to con-
tinue the lease or purchase the property and the lease agreement provides that the lease shall be
terminated if sufficient appropriations are not made. The proposed amendment is subject to
voter approval.
Significant Issues
When the state enters into a lease-purchase agreement, it can create debt not only by incurring a
legal obligation to purchase the property, but also by creating an equitable obligation to purchase
the property. As the state makes lease payments, it is building equity which it would lose in the
event that the lease-purchase agreement was terminated.
The Supreme Court addressed this issue in Montano v Gabaldon, 108 N.M. 94, 766 P.2d 1328
(1989) which dealt with county debt. The court wrote, “we are of the opinion that once the
County accepted this lease, it would be obligated to continue making rental payments in order to
protect a growing equitable interest in the facility, as well as to protect the County’s interest in
the title to County land. This is the type of future economic commitment that requires the ar-
rangement be approved by the voters.”
It is unclear whether the resolution actually addresses the issue of an equitable obligation created
by lease-purchase agreements. (See “Technical Issues” below).
GSD, NMFA, EMNRD and PED all note that allowing the state to enter into lease-purchase
agreements could result in cost savings. According to GSD, as of February 2005, the state
spends $42.5 million annually on 430 leases. The state could cut operating costs by moving
from leased to state-owned buildings.
PED notes that charter schools in particular stand to benefit from the proposed change. Charter
schools incur an estimated $5.2 million in lease expenses to secure classroom facilities. The pas-
sage of the resolution may allow charter schools to enter into lease-purchase agreements for
these facilities. However, the department also notes that the resolution does not require lease-
purchase agreements for public schools to be approved by the PED or the Public Schools Financ-
ing Authority. The department feels that all leases should be approved prior to occupancy to en-
sure that facilities meet the statewide standards.
NMFA notes that this change would allow it to purchase or construct buildings and then lease
them back to the state for the amount necessary to cover costs and debt service. This would save
the state money because NMFA would not include a profit factor in its lease as would a private
owner. NMFA also notes that it can issue bonds based on the lease payments from those build-
ings and can grant mortgages on such buildings.
FISCAL IMPLICATIONS
If approved by the voters, the resolution could result in indeterminate cost savings to the state
through reduced operating costs. However, it could also result in the creation of financial obliga-
tions to the state, which would reduce the flexibility of future legislatures to establish spending
pg_0003
House Joint Resolution 9/aHGUAC -- Page 3
priorities.
CONFLICT, DUPLICATION, COMPANIONSHIP, RELATIONSHIP
Senate Joint Resolution 7 proposes to amend the New Mexico constitution to allow the qualified
electors of a school district to approve lease-purchase agreements for charter school facilities and
excepting those agreements from the debt limitation of the school district.
TECHNICAL ISSUES
NMFA suggests that the following amendment would better meet the goals of the legislation by
specifically allowing lease-purchase agreements that result in the build up of equity.
On page 2, lines 12-22, rewrite subsection B to read:
B. For the purposes of this section and Article 4, Section 29 of the constitution of New
Mexico, a financing agreement entered into by the state for the leasing of a building or
other real property with an option to purchase for a price that is reduced according to the
payments made by the state pursuant to the financing agreement is not a debt if there is
no legal obligation for the state to continue the agreement from year to year or to pur-
chase the building or real property.
NMFA’s suggested amendment removes the language regarding sufficient appropriations be-
cause, it argues, this is existing law.
EF/lg