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F I S C A L I M P A C T R E P O R T
SPONSOR Komadina
ORIGINAL DATE
LAST UPDATED
3/14/07
HB
SHORT TITLE
Change Children, Youth and Families Department
Name
SB 157
ANALYST Lucero
ESTIMATED ADDITIONAL OPERATING BUDGET IMPACT (dollars in thousands)
FY07
FY08
FY09 3 Year
Total Cost
Recurring
or Non-Rec
Fund
Affected
Total
Indeterminate*
Non-
Recurring General
Fund
(Parenthesis ( ) Indicate Expenditure Decreases)
*See Narrative
SOURCES OF INFORMATION
LFC Files
Responses Received From
Children, Youth and Families Department (CYFD)
Aging and Long Term Services Department (ALTSD)
SUMMARY
Synopsis of Bill
Senate Bill 157 proposes to change the name of the Children, Youth and Families Department
(CYFD) to the Infants, Children, Youth and Families Department. The bill also transfers all
personnel, property, contracts and references in law.
The bill also amends the CYFD enacting legislation to identify the Infants, Children, Youth and
Families Department as the responsible agency for the administration of the Adult Protective
Services Act.
FISCAL IMPLICATIONS
The bill does not appropriate funds for costs associated with changing the name of the
Department such as: advertising and promotional item changes, publication changes, signage at
statewide locations, stationary, business forms and cards etc. These costs are unknown at this
time and are not funded.
Additionally, considerable costs would be incurred as all official CYFD policies would have to
be revised and those revisions promulgated, requiring publication of notice, public hearings, and
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Senate Bill 157 – Page
2
inclusion in the State Register.
Due to what appears to be a technical issue (see below), proposed amendments to the Adult
Protective Services Act included in this bill do not reflect previously enacted legislation moving
that responsibility to the Aging and Long Term Services Department and, if enacted, this bill
appears to supersede that legislation thereby returning the responsibility to CYFD without
transferring the resources and funding.
SIGNIFICANT ISSUES
Currently, by definition of law, any person under the age of 18 is considered a child and
therefore infants are already included.
In addition to the fiscal concerns noted above, all references to CYFD in the New Mexico
Children’s Code (Chapter 32A) would have to be amended.
PERFORMANCE IMPLICATIONS
None identified
ADMINISTRATIVE IMPLICATIONS
Considerable administrative efforts would be required to make the required name change and
inform CYFD’s clients, customers, partner agencies and organizations, and contractors of the
name change. Additionally, federal agreements, grants, and contracts could be affected and need
modification.
CONFLICT, DUPLICATION, COMPANIONSHIP, RELATIONSHIP
None identified
TECHNICAL ISSUES
Sections 21-22, pages 22 (line 21) – 28 (line 12) reference the Adult Protective Services Act as
still begin the responsibility of CYFD contrary to legislation enacted in a prior session
transferring that responsibility to the Aging and Long Term Services Department.
Section 20 makes reference to the Adult Protective Services Act and changes the name of the
Department in charge of Adult Protective Services from the Children, Youth and Families
Department to the Infants, Children, Youth and Families Department. This directly conflicts with
the enabling legislation of the Aging and Long-Term Services Department, NMSA 9-23-1 to 9-
23-12 enacted in a prior session. The Aging and Long-Term Services Department is now in
charge of the Adult Protective Services Division which is responsible for the administration of
the Adult Protective Services Act. Furthermore, legislation is being introduced this session to
amend the Adult Protective Services Act, which would create further conflicts with this bill if
this section remains.
Section 21 further relates to the Adult Protective Services Act and amends the Long-Term Care
Ombudsman Act to change the name of the agency responsible for that act from the State
Agency on Aging to the Aging and Long-Term Services Department. Al-though the name has
pg_0003
Senate Bill 157 – Page
3
changed from Agency on Aging to the Aging and Long-Term Ser-vices Department, NMSA 9-
23-1 to 9-23-12 already made that change. Since this section is in further reference to the APS
Act, which is being amended this session, additional statutory conflict could occur if this section
remains.
OTHER SUBSTANTIVE ISSUES
CYFD recognizes the importance of infant and parent services and is strongly emphasizing such
program development.
ALTERNATIVES
Sections 20 and 21 should be deleted, as they pertain to the Adult Protective Services, which has
been completely transferred to the Aging and Long Term Services Department.
WHAT WILL BE THE CONSEQUENCES OF NOT ENACTING THIS BILL
Status Quo
DL/nt