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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
2/07/07
3/12/07 HB
SHORT TITLE Manufactured Housing Division Powers & Duties SB 497/aHJC
ANALYST Wilson
REVENUE (dollars in thousands)
Estimated Revenue
Recurring
or Non-Rec
Fund
Affected
FY07
FY08
FY09
$100.0
$100.0+ Recurring General Fund
(Parenthesis ( ) Indicate Revenue Decreases)
ESTIMATED ADDITIONAL OPERATING BUDGET IMPACT (dollars in thousands)
FY07 FY08 FY09 3 Year
Total Cost
Recurring
or Non-Rec
Fund
Affected
Total
NFI
$0.1
$0.1 Recurring
General Fund
(Parenthesis ( ) Indicate Expenditure Decreases)
SOURCES OF INFORMATION
LFC Files
Responses Received From
Regulation & Licensing (RLD)
SUMMARY
Synopsis of HJC Amendment
The House Judiciary Committee amendment states that a consumer complaint can only be filed
against an applicant and not against the Manufactured Housing Division.
The amendment also clarifies if any unlicensed person who has performed unlicensed work
settles the claims against that unlicensed person without becoming licensed, the claims are
considered to be administrative.
Synopsis of Original Bill
Senate Bill 497 amends Section 60-14-4 NMSA 1978 pertaining to the Manufacturing Housing
Act (MHA), to allow the Superintendent of RLD to employ personnel necessary to investigate
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Senate Bill 497/aHJC– Page
2
and institute legal action against licensees and individuals who are unlicensed manufactured
housing contractors and are violating the act.
Currently, the MHA requires administrative actions shall be instituted by the Office of the
Attorney Genera against manufactured housing licensees who may be dealers, brokers,
salespersons, repairmen, installers, and manufacturers.
SB 497 also amends the MHA to provide an internal process through which an unlicensed
manufactured housing contractor may administratively resolve criminal misdemeanor charges
against him or her and become licensed—therefore allowing a person to avoid a criminal action
in a court of competent jurisdiction.
Before being allowed to pursue such an administrative settlement of unlicensed charges and
licensure, the following must be achieved:
The Director of the Manufactured Housing Division (MHD) must be satisfied no incident
of unlicensed work caused monetary damage to a consumer, or otherwise resulted in an
unresolved consumer complaint filed with the Manufactured Housing Division, and
The unlicensed contractor must pay an administrative penalty as follows:
In an amount up to 10% of the contract price or the value of the unlicensed work (as
determined appropriate according to the discretion of the Manufactured Housing
Committee). Or
In an amount between 1% and 5% of the total bid amount- if the work was bid for by
the unlicensed contractor, but not awarded to and performed by the unlicensed
contractor.
SB 497 states that an unlicensed contractor may, on a first offense only, resolve criminal
misdemeanor charges for unlicensed work without becoming licensed. However, to do this, the
administrative penalty outlined above must be paid before the issuance of a license.
Finally, this bill provides for the assessment of an additional administrative fee in the amount of
10%, to address compliance activity costs incurred by the MHD staff.
FISCAL IMPLICATIONS
RLD is currently planning to absorb the additional staff and resource costs associated with
implementing this new MHD administrative process will be handled by RLD’s existing staff and
budget resources.
It is expected that the administrative penalties collected through this new MHD process will
result in income to the general fund. It is difficult to predict the amount of income to the general
fund because it is likely that increased compliance enforcement efforts on the part of RLD will
increase over the course of the next several years. For the first year RLD expects at least
$100,000 in revenue.
As cases are pursued and resolved, an increase over the next several years, it is expected that the
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Senate Bill 497/aHJC– Page
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MHD will require additional staff and budget resources. RLD may be capable of absorbing the
initial phases of implementation of this administrative process in its existing staff and budget
resources. However, if the program continues to grow with successful enforcements, additional
resources will be necessary.
SIGNIFICANT ISSUES
This bill is modeled after the administrative process available to the Construction Industries
Division (CID) of the RLD. The process has proven to be an effective and expeditious manner
of resolution of unlicensed contracting matters for the CID.
The Office of the Attorney General, the local District Attorneys, and the courts do not make
unlicensed contracting a criminal misdemeanor charge a priority for prosecution. This means
many actions fall through the cracks. This process will allow the MHD to address these matters
without having to go through these other judicial agencies, all of which already experience
stressed staff and lack of resources.
Consumer’s benefit from provisions in this bill because the MHD can negotiate restitution to the
consumer as part of the resolution of the complaint.
ADMINISTRATIVE IMPLICATIONS
RLD will absorb the costs for the first year, but expects to come back to the legislature for an
appropriation to expand this program.
DW/mt