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F I S C A L I M P A C T R E P O R T
SPONSOR Gutierrez
ORIGINAL DATE
LAST UPDATED
02/18/07
HB 835
SHORT TITLE Mental Health Treatment Programs
SB
ANALYST Hanika Ortiz
APPROPRIATION (dollars in thousands)
Appropriation
Recurring
or Non-Rec
Fund
Affected
FY07
FY08
$5,000.0
Recurring
General fund
(Parenthesis ( ) Indicate Expenditure Decreases)
Companion to HB 609
Relates to Appropriation in the General Appropriation Act
SOURCES OF INFORMATION
LFC Files
Responses Received From
Department of Health (DOH)
Human Services Department (HSD)
SUMMARY
Synopsis of Bill
House Bill 835 appropriates $5 million from the general fund to the HSD for implementation and
operation expenses for mandated community treatment and operating expenses for other
outpatient mental health treatment programs for FY08.
FISCAL IMPLICATIONS
The appropriation of $5 million contained in this bill is directed to HSD for operation expenses
of outpatient mental health services; and, the implementation and operation expenses associated
with the Mandated Community Treatment Act (Act) proposed by HB 609. Any unexpended or
unencumbered balance remaining at the end of FY08 shall revert to the general fund. The Act
will allow under certain circumstances specific types of individuals to petition the court for
placement of an individual with mental illness into a program of mandated outpatient behavioral
health services without regard for the respondent’s ability to pay for those services.
pg_0002
House Bill 835 – Page
2
The fiscal implications across New Mexico state departments, courts, or community programs
regarding the service provision under the Act proposed by HB 609 are dependent on the number
of petitions; the number of persons ultimately found subject to this Act; and the types, proximity,
and intensity of services to which these persons are mandated. These numbers have been
estimated differently by opponents and proponents of this bill and actuals are unknown at this
time.
HSD reports that some individuals who will receive direct services with this proposed
appropriation will likely be Medicaid-eligible recipients and the direct mental health services
they receive might be a covered service through Medicaid. If this is the case, any monies used
for this purpose will be eligible for federal match.
HSD further reports this bill is related to the Executive budget proposal of $1 million for
medications for persons who are not Medicaid eligible; and, the approximately $8 million in
General Fund (about $29 million total) for additional mental health and substance abuse services
for persons who will be Medicaid eligible once the eligibility for adults is raised to 100% of the
federal poverty level.
Neither the Executive nor the LFC budget proposals for FY08 include dollars for mandated
community treatment.
SIGNIFICANT ISSUES
If made available, $5 million could provide training on psychiatric advance directives, for short-
term mobile crisis intervention services, intensive outpatient services, assertive community
treatment, medications and other community-based services that will help to prevent
hospitalization or incarceration of persons with mental illness and/or addictions, thus preventing
the need for a costly court-ordered service system.
PERFORMANCE IMPLICATIONS
The Behavioral Health Purchasing Collaborative noted the need for such funding in its
November 2, 2007 motion. The Collaborative has also spent considerable time over the last
several months identifying service needs for persons who might be subject to mandated
community treatment and for other persons with behavioral health issues. These service needs
were provided to the legislative interim committees and helped form the basis for the Executive
and LFC proposals for additional behavioral health services for FY08.
ADMINISTRATIVE IMPLICATIONS
Any administrative impact on HSD is expected to be absorbed with available resources.
CONFLICT, DUPLICATION, COMPANIONSHIP, RELATIONSHIP
Companion to HB 609, Mandated Community Treatment Act
ALTERNATIVES
The alternative is to rely on existing dollars and new Medicaid expansions for such service
pg_0003
House Bill 835 – Page
3
needs, although some who need such services will not be Medicaid eligible and some needed
services will not be Medicaid reimbursable.
WHAT WILL BE THE CONSEQUENCES OF NOT ENACTING THIS BILL
Individuals who may represent a threat to self or others due to mental illness and who refuse to
accept treatment may still not be treated until they become an imminent threat to others or until
they are subject to other civil commitment or treatment guardian laws.
Individuals who are not Medicaid eligible may have a difficult time obtaining access to services
they need or to which they are mandated
.
AHO/nt