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F I S C A L I M P A C T R E P O R T
SPONSOR Leavell
ORIGINAL DATE
LAST UPDATED
01/29/07
02/13/07 HB
SHORT TITLE Adoption of Municipality Codes By Reference
SB 66/aSCORC
ANALYST Hanika Ortiz
ESTIMATED ADDITIONAL OPERATING BUDGET IMPACT (dollars in thousands)
FY07
FY08
FY09 3 Year
Total Cost
Recurring
or Non-Rec
Fund
Affected
Total
$.01
see narrative
Recurring Various
(Parenthesis ( ) Indicate Expenditure Decreases)
SOURCES OF INFORMATION
LFC Files
Responses Received From
Regulation and Licensing Department/Construction Industries Division (RLD/CID)
SUMMARY
Synopsis of SCORC Amendment
The Senate Corporations and Transportation Committee Amendment removes specific reference
to electrical, housing and plumbing codes because those codes are already reflected within the
building code provisions on pg 1 A, (3). The Amendment clarifies any building code provisions
adopted to include plan review, permitting and inspections for general, electrical, mechanical and
plumbing construction. The Amendment removes pg 2, lines 13 through 16, as intent of the
language already exists on pg 2, within lines 11 and 12. The Amendment also adds an effective
date of July 1, 2008.
Synopsis of Original Bill
Senate Bill 66 amends Section 3-17-6 A. NMSA 1978 and requires municipalities that choose to
adopt a building code, be required to adopt a building code that includes provisions for general,
electrical, mechanical and plumbing construction, not just general construction, and; that any
national codes adopted, amended and enforced by the RLD/CID, represent the minimum
standards of any building code adopted by a local building program.
FISCAL IMPLICATIONS
Local building programs within municipalities that do not use the universal building code are
pg_0002
Senate Bill 66/aSCORC – Page
2
receiving fees from the issuance of building permits which fund inspections. Many of these
programs only have one inspector because the program covers only one building discipline. If
these programs do not have an inspector in place due to normal attrition in the work force, then
the state is statutorily obligated to assume the responsibility for inspections. The permit fees have
already been remitted to the local programs, so the State does not receive revenue to inspect
work in progress. More stable, full-service local programs which employ multiple inspectors
with adequate funding and management do not have this problem. It can be months before a new
inspector is hired, but in the intervening time, the local building program continues to issue
permits for new projects. RLD believes this unexpected demand on State resources adversely
impacts the budget, staffing, and management of State inspections operations.
SIGNIFICANT ISSUES
CID Licensing Act is firmly grounded in the concept of uniformity in building codes. RLD/CID
reports that a number of municipalities have interpreted Section 3-17-6 A (3) to mean that they
can adopt a different building code than the building code adopted by the State. RLD/CID
believes this practice is destroying statewide code uniformity, undermines the uniformity
required for statewide licensing and has made code enforcement inconsistent.
PERFORMANCE IMPLICATIONS
RLD/CID states the amendment will restore the State’s ability to oversee code enforcement and
contractor compliance. At the present time, residents of municipalities that have adopted codes
other than those adopted by the State do not have recourse to the State’s administrative discipline
services. If the contractors in their jurisdictions commit code violation, it is against the local
code, not the State code. The State has authority to require only that a contractor enforce State
code so the State cannot take disciplinary action based on violations of a code it has not adopted.
Further, a local government has no authority to discipline a contractor, so the violations of its
code may continue with no consequence to the contractor’s license.
ADMINISTRATIVE IMPLICATIONS
The amendment proposed within SB 66 will significantly reduce the State’s inspection of locally
permitted building projects and will also ensure that the building codes adopted by a local
building program are as stringent as the State’s codes. SB 66 will also ensure that individuals
licensed by the State demonstrate a technical knowledge of building standards that are in effect
throughout the State.
CONFLICT, DUPLICATION, COMPANIONSHIP, RELATIONSHIP
Duplicates HB 219
OTHER SUBSTANTIVE ISSUES
RLD/CID believes building code uniformity has a positive impact on state economic
development because it has less complexity and confusion. Without it, the safety of construction
is compromised by a patchwork of standards that make consistency in code enforcement
virtually impossible. In addition, new businesses may be overwhelmed by unpredictable costs
and complicated, inconsistent regulatory requirements.
pg_0003
Senate Bill 66/aSCORC – Page
3
WHAT WILL BE THE CONSEQUENCES OF NOT ENACTING THIS BILL
Local jurisdictions will be permitted to continue using 3-17-6 A (3) NMSA 1978 as a revenue-
generating tool without due regard for the safe construction protections afforded the community
within the Construction Industries Licensing Act.
AHO/mt