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F I S C A L I M P A C T R E P O R T
SPONSOR Madalena
ORIGINAL DATE
LAST UPDATED
01/25/08
HB 283
SHORT TITLE American Indian Law & Policy Training
SB
ANALYST Weber
APPROPRIATION (dollars in thousands)
Appropriation
Recurring
or Non-Rec
Fund
Affected
FY08
FY09
$50.0
Recurring
General Fund
(Parenthesis ( ) Indicate Expenditure Decreases)
SOURCES OF INFORMATION
LFC Files
Responses Received From
Indian Affairs Department
SUMMARY
Synopsis of Bill
House Bill 283 appropriates $50 thousand from the general fund to the Indian Affairs
Department to contract with an organization with over thirty years of Indian law and policy
experience to assist tribes to promote Indian law and policy development and training and tribal
court systems development.
FISCAL IMPLICATIONS
The appropriation of $50 thousand contained in this bill is a recurring expense to the general
fund. Any unexpended or unencumbered balance remaining at the end of FY09 shall revert to
the general fund.
SIGNIFICANT ISSUES
The Indian Affairs Department reports:
There are a number of for-profit and non-profit organizations that currently offer Indian law
training and educational resources. However, the bill specifies that the Department contract with
an organization “with over thirty years" of experience.
pg_0002
House Bill 283 – Page
2
In New Mexico, the American Indian Law Center, Inc. (“AILC") offers such resources. AILC
“is the oldest existing Indian-controlled and operated legal and public policy organization in the
country, providing preparatory legal education to individuals, training and technical assistance to
tribes and their courts, and policy analysis." The AILC was established in 1967. According to
AILC, it has “worked with officials from more than 20 states, hundreds of tribes and Native
American organizations, and have trained thousands of professionals and paraprofessionals. As
a result, AILC has a unique, in-depth knowledge about tribal institutions, including tribal courts
and their place in tribal government, and about tribal, state, and federal relations."
In New Mexico, there are 26 tribal courts—21 at each of NM’s Tribes, Nations, Pueblos, and 5
being Navajo Nation tribal district courts located at Magdalena, To’hajiilee, Crownpoint, Ramah,
and Shiprock, New Mexico. According to the Tribal Courts Council of the American Bar
Association Judicial Division, “[o]nce an unknown entity to most of the American legal system,
tribal courts and indigenous justice systems have experienced marked growth over the last few
decades….Tribal judges, like their state and federal counterparts, are experiencing substantial
increased dockets which include an array of subject matter from criminal law to family court to
complex tort and commercial litigation." The bill would provide New Mexico’s tribal courts
with training and would assist in the development of their systems.
Signified by the increasing number of law schools around the country that are implementing
Indian law classes and/or programs to their curriculum, the practice and knowledge of Indian law
and policy is very important, especially in New Mexico. New Mexico became “the first state to
require federal Indian law as a subject on its state bar exam." According to then UNM School of
Law Dean Robert J. Desiderio, “Indian law in New Mexico is becoming as important as state law
to practitioners, courts and citizens….We try to insert Indian law issues into most subjects we
teach and not just the courses marked Indian law." HB 283 could allow for the AILC to continue
to its work in providing in-depth knowledge about tribal institutions for not only New Mexico
but nationally.
MW/bb