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F I S C A L I M P A C T R E P O R T
SPONSOR Strickler
ORIGINAL DATE
LAST UPDATED
2/27/07
2/28/07 HB 1149/aHBIC
SHORT TITLE Public Utility Water & Sale Gross Receipts
SB
ANALYST Schardin
REVENUE (dollars in thousands)
Estimated Revenue
Recurring
or Non-Rec
Fund
Affected
FY07
FY08
FY09
($79,200.0)
Recurring General Fund
($52,800.0)
Recurring
Local
Government
(Parenthesis ( ) Indicate Revenue Decreases)
SOURCES OF INFORMATION
LFC Files
Responses Received From
New Mexico Finance Authority (NMFA)
Youth Conservation Corps (YCC)
Taxation and Revenue Department (TRD)
SUMMARY
Synopsis of HBIC Amendment
The House Business and Industry Committee amendment to House Bill 1149 strikes Section 1 of
the original bill, which would have removed water and wastewater receipts from the
governmental gross receipts tax base. Removing those receipts from the governmental gross
receipts tax would have violated the non-impairment clause of bonds issued by NMFA and DCA
secured by governmental gross receipts tax revenue (Section 7-1-6.38 NMSA).
Synopsis of Original Bill
Section 1 of the original bill deletes language in Section 7-9-3.2 so that receipts from the sale of
water by a utility owned or operated by a county, municipality or other state political subdivision
will no longer be subject to the governmental gross receipts tax.
Section 2 of the original bill creates a new gross receipts tax deduction from receipts from the
sale of electricity, natural gas or water by a public utility. A public utility eligible for the
deduction is defined as a person that owns, operates, leases or controls a plant, property or
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House Bill 1149/aHBIC – Page
2
facility 1) for the generation, transmission or distribution, sale or furnishing of electricity to the
public; 2) for the manufacture, storage, distribution or furnishing to the public of natural,
manufactured or liquefied petroleum gas; 3) for the supplying, storage, distribution or furnishing
of public water for manufacturing, municipal or domestic uses (not including irrigation systems).
The effective date of these provisions will be July 1, 2007.
FISCAL IMPLICATIONS
TRD estimates that the tax base eligible for the proposed gross receipts tax deduction, while
volatile, will be about $2 billion per year. Taxed at a statewide rate of 6.6 percent, the proposed
deduction would decrease gross receipts tax collections by about $132 million per year. About
60 percent of that loss would accrue to the general fund and the remaining 40 percent to local
governments.
SIGNIFICANT ISSUES
LFC cautions against gross receipts tax deductions that significantly narrow the tax base.
Narrowing the gross receipts tax base increases revenue volatility and requires a higher tax rate
to generate the same amount of revenue.
The bill will significantly reduce local government gross receipts tax collections. Many of New
Mexico’s local governments are highly dependent on gross receipts tax revenue.
ADMINISTRATIVE IMPLICATIONS
There will be no major administrative impacts on TRD.
SS/nt