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F I S C A L I M P A C T R E P O R T
SPONSOR Heaton
ORIGINAL DATE
LAST UPDATED
2/15/2007
3/11/2007 HB 682/aHJC/aSJC
SHORT TITLE Mine Safety Rule Enforcement
SB
ANALYST
McOlash\Baca
APPROPRIATION (dollars in thousands)
Appropriation
Recurring
or Non-Rec
Fund
Affected
FY07
FY08
NFI
(Parenthesis ( ) Indicate Expenditure Decreases)
SOURCES OF INFORMATION
LFC Files
Responses Received From
Energy, Minerals, and Natural Resources Department (EMNRD)
SUMMARY
Synopsis of SJC Amendments
Senate Judiciary amendments stipulate the board shall (instead of may), after a public hearing,
adopt rules for the protection of life and safety of employees; and that the State Mine Inspector
shall (instead of may), issue an order closing all or any portion of the mine to regular operations
deemed unsafe and provide an explanation to the owner for the action and shall (instead of may)
certify, recertify or discipline persons to act as mine foremen and mine examiners.
Synopsis of HJC Amendments
The amendments adopted by the House Judiciary Committee add that membership of the board
shall represent “and balance management and non-management employees at" mining operations
addressed by the bill, and provide that members of the board shall “receive compensation
pursuant to the Mileage and Per Diem Act."
Synopsis of Original Bill
House Bill 682 amends, repeals, and enacts sections of Chapter 69 NMSA to provide for mine
safety and the enforcement of mine safety laws.
pg_0002
House Bill 682/aHJCaSJC – Page
2
FISCAL IMPLICATIONS
NFI
SIGNIFICANT ISSUES
Many mine safety laws date to the 1930s and were partially repealed and rewritten in the 1980s
when the State Mine Inspector’s regulatory authority was superseded by the federal Mine Safety
and Health Administration and the Inspector’s office was transferred to New Mexico Tech.
While the role of the Inspector shifted from a regulatory entity to primarily a training
organization, many laws still included outdated duties of the Inspector. In recent years, these
outdated statutes have been the source of some confusion over the role of the Inspector.
According to EMNRD, this bill includes extensive changes to the State’s mine safety laws in an
effort to bring these laws in line with the current role of the State Mine Inspector and the Mining
Safety Board. The changes fall into the following categories:
1.
Repeal outdated statutes that have been superseded by federal mine safety laws and to
avoid conflict and duplicative regulation between the State Mine Inspector and the
federal Mine Safety and Health Administration.
2.
Rewrite the laws governing the certification of mine personnel. Certain levels of
coalmine officials (e.g., foremen) must be certified by the Inspector. These changes move
most of the qualifications to rules and create a process for disciplining officials and
appealing the Inspector's actions to the Mine Safety Board. The bill provides the mining
industry and workers with a clearer list of the Inspector’s duties.
3.
Clarify the role of the Inspector and the Mining Safety Board with more comprehensible
legislative guidance. The duties of the Inspector are rewritten to reflect the current reality.
The Mining Safety Board is given a clearer role in rulemaking and appeals of Inspector
decisions and limited oversight over the State Mine Inspector.
BM-LB/nt