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F I S C A L I M P A C T R E P O R T
SPONSOR Griego
ORIGINAL DATE
LAST UPDATED
1/28/07
3/17/07 HB
SHORT TITLE Add Continuing Education Requirements
SB 297/aSJC/aSFl/aHBIC /HFl#1
ANALYST Wilson/Baca
ESTIMATED ADDITIONAL OPERATING BUDGET IMPACT (dollars in thousands)
FY07
FY08
FY09 3 Year
Total Cost
Recurring
or Non-Rec
Fund
Affected
Total
$0.1
Recurring General
Fund
(Parenthesis ( ) Indicate Expenditure Decreases)
SOURCES OF INFORMATION
LFC Files
Responses Received From
Regulations and Licensing Department (RLD)
SUMMARY
Synopsis of HFl #1
House Floor amendment #1 strikes House Business and Industry amendments. The bill is
restored to its original version.
Synopsis of HBIC Amendment
The House Business and Industry Committee amendment revises Subsection D of Section 1 to
read:
Licensees and journeyman certificate holders may be required to complete and submit
proof of continuing education as a prerequisite for renewal of a license. When required by rule
adopted by the division, an applicant for a license renewal must submit with the application for
license renewal proof of eight hours of instruction in code change and eight hours of instruction
in other industry-related and division-approved subject such as workplace safety and general
business operations. All continuing education curricula and instructors must be preapproved by
the commission based on recommendations by the division. The criteria for approval shall
include affiliation with professional associations or organizations representing the construction
trades. The sixteen hours of continuing education must have been completed within the three
years prior to the date of the license renewal application.
The amendment adds a new Section to make the effective date July1, 2008.
pg_0002
Senate Bill 297/aSJC/aSFl/a HBIC /aHFl#1– Page
2
Synopsis of SFl Amendment
The Senate Floor amendment to SB 297/aSJC removes the SJC amendment in its entirety.
Synopsis of SJC Amendment
The Senate Judiciary Committee amendment to SB 297 makes it mandatory for licensees and
journeyman certificate holders to complete and submit proof of continuing education as a
prerequisite for renewal of a license.
Synopsis of Original Bill
Senate Bill 297 amends NMSA 1978 Section 60-13-18 to state licensees and journeyman
certificate holders may be required to complete and submit proof of continuing education as a
prerequisite for renewal of a license.
When required by rule adopted by the Construction Industries Division (CID), an applicant for a
license renewal must submit with the application for license renewal proof of eight hours of
instruction in code change and eight hours of instruction in other industry-related and division-
approved subjects. The sixteen hours of continuing education must have been completed within
the three years prior to the date of the license renewal application.
FISCAL IMPLICATIONS
The continuing education courses that will satisfy this requirement will be primarily provided
through sources outside state government, such as Central New Mexico Community College
(formerly TVI) and numerous private seminars, all approved by CID pursuant to the model
currently in place for the electrical journeyman CE program. Therefore, there will be no
necessity for CID to bear the cost of providing any of these courses
SIGNIFICANT ISSUES
RLD states New Mexico will not be able to maximize its ability to respond to the construction
explosion occurring and expected in the foreseeable future, and its journeyman certification
program will fall further and further behind when measured against the national norms for
professionalism in the construction industry.
CID already conducts or facilitates numerous trainings for journeymen on an ongoing basis, and
they are well attended. If continuing education requirements are established, these trainings will
be recognized as one method of satisfying the requirement, and the journeymen who are already
participating in them will have some if not all of the requirement satisfied without doing
anything more than they are currently doing. Those who are not regularly attending will be
motivated to ensure that both their technical knowledge and skills are well maintained..
CID is authorized, by statute, to enter into licensing reciprocity agreements with other states.
Reciprocity is especially important when construction escalates and there is a shortage of
journeymen. These shortages can be acute and sudden. Reciprocity enables journeymen validly
certified in other states to become certified in New Mexico and go to work virtually instantly.
pg_0003
Senate Bill 297/aSJC/aSFl/a HBIC /aHFl#1– Page
3
This benefit to economic development is obvious and is already available in New Mexico for
journeyman electrician work. This legislation will expand the benefit to all the construction
trades. With the advent of such vast construction projects as the Space Port and the structures
that will be necessary to house and manage project support, journeymen will be in greater
demand than ever. Reciprocity can make a significant difference in the State’s ability to sustain
this unprecedented growth.
Reciprocity, however, largely depends on parity in states’ certification requirements. Many
states have a continuing education requirement for renewal of a journeyman certification and
view New Mexico’s requirements as less stringent because continuing education is not required.
This limits the possibility of reciprocity with those states. This legislation will enable the
changes needed to bring New Mexico’s renewal requirements in closer alignment with those of
other states so that reciprocity is possible.
ADMINISTRATIVE IMPLICATIONS
CID has already implemented a continuing education program for EE-98J journeymen
electricians. The administrative processes developed for that program will be a model for
expansion into other classification. Expansion will be phased, so the impact of implementation
will be minimized.
DW/mt