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F I S C A L I M P A C T R E P O R T
SPONSOR Miera
ORIGINAL DATE
LAST UPDATED
1/29/08
1/30/08 HB 435
SHORT TITLE County Correctional Facility Gross Receipts
SB
ANALYST Schardin
REVENUE (dollars in thousands)
Estimated Revenue
Recurring
or Non-Rec
Fund
Affected
FY08
FY09
FY10
(See Narrative)
Recurring
County
Governments
(See Narrative)
Recurring General Fund
(Parenthesis ( ) Indicate Revenue Decreases)
SOURCES OF INFORMATION
LFC Files
Responses Received From
Taxation and Revenue Department (TRD)
SUMMARY
Synopsis of Bill
House Bill 435 increases the maximum rate at which a county correctional facility gross receipts
tax may be imposed from 1/8 to 1/4 percent. Counties will still be able to impose the tax in any
one-sixteenth percent increment.
Under current law, up to 1/8 percent may be imposed with an optional county referendum. The
bill would allow leave a referendum optional for the first two 1/16 percent increments but require
a vote to impose the third or fourth 1/16 percent increments.
Since the bill has no effective date it is assumed to become effective on May 14, 2008, 90 days
after the 2008 legislative session adjourns.
FISCAL IMPLICATIONS
The fiscal impact of this bill depends on if and when county governments choose to impose
county correctional gross receipts tax rates above the current limit of 0.125 percent. The table
below, based on data provided by TRD, indicates the potential revenue increase to each county if
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House Bill 435 – Page
2
an additional 1/8 percent tax were imposed in FY09. If all counties chose to impose an additional
1/8 percent tax, about $58.9 million in revenue would be generated.
The table below also indicates the potential general fund revenue loss that would occur if all
counties imposed an additional 1/8 percent tax in FY09. The food and medical gross receipts tax
deductions enacted in 2004 include “hold harmless" provisions to protect local governments
from associated revenue losses. In 2007, legislation froze the tax rate at which some local
governments are held harmless from the food and medical deductions. However, in smaller cities
and counties, the general fund hold harmless distribution grows larger when higher local option
taxes are imposed. The general fund revenue loss would be about $668 thousand in FY09 if all
local governments chose to impose the tax.
County
Potential Revenue: 1/8%
County Correctional
Facility GRT Increment
Potential General Fund Loss Due
to Hold Harmless Distribution:
1/8% County Correctional Facility
GRT Increment
Bernalillo
21,839,781
Hold Harmless Rate Frozen
Catron
42,862
(1,706)
Chaves
1,443,105
Hold Harmless Rate Frozen
Cibola
362,968
(35,947)
Colfax
422,248
(19,188)
Curry
991,230
(90,796)
De Baca
30,070
(2,811)
Dona Ana
4,181,818
Hold Harmless Rate Frozen
Eddy
2,754,956
Hold Harmless Rate Frozen
Grant
654,731
(69,526)
Guadalupe
192,720
(7,867)
Harding
15,563
(460)
Hidalgo
117,692
(4,153)
Lea
3,608,488
Hold Harmless Rate Frozen
Lincoln
629,369
(46,926)
Los Alamos
2,081,426
(62,054)
Luna
418,578
(43,400)
McKinley
1,330,096
Hold Harmless Rate Frozen
Mora
31,594
(2,994)
Otero
1,024,484
Hold Harmless Rate Frozen
Quay
176,566
Hold Harmless Rate Frozen
Rio Arriba
769,790
(67,516)
Roosevelt
321,051
(30,850)
San Juan
5,105,325
Hold Harmless Rate Frozen
San Miguel
429,856
(51,451)
Sandoval
2,275,493
Hold Harmless Rate Frozen
Santa Fe
4,965,236
Hold Harmless Rate Frozen
Sierra
186,755
(10,503)
Socorro
248,880
(26,358)
Taos
802,158
(76,190)
Torrance
268,732
(10,361)
Union
153,394
(7,062)
Valencia
979,739
Hold Harmless Rate Frozen
Total
58,856,751
(668,118)
Source: Taxation and Revenue Department, Office of Research and S tatistics
Illistration of Potential Revenue from Additional County
Local Option Increments - Fiscal Year 2009
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House Bill 435 – Page
3
SIGNIFICANT ISSUES
Any county in New Mexico may impose the county correctional facility gross receipts tax.
Imposition of this tax does not require approval by a majority of county voters, although voters
may petition an election to approve or disapprove the tax.
County revenue collected due to a county correctional facility gross receipts tax is restricted for
use in operating, maintaining, constructing, purchasing, furnishing, equipping, rehabilitating,
expanding, or improving a judicial correctional or county correctional facility. Revenue may also
be used to transport or extradite prisoners or to pay principal and interest on county correctional
facility gross receipts tax bonds.
Currently, counties are experiencing escalating costs to extradite and transport prisoners. For
example, Bernalillo County reports that the county jail’s operating budget grew by an average of
9.5 percent per year from 1995 to 2007.
New Mexico’s municipalities and counties are authorized to impose over 4 percent of local
option gross receipts taxes (that figure excludes several additional local option taxes that have
been authorized for selected local governments). Due to increasing imposition of local option
taxes, the statewide gross receipts tax rate is increasing steadily. On average, a local option gross
receipts tax of about 1.9 percent will be imposed by local governments statewide by FY09.
Combined with the state gross receipts tax of 5 percent, the statewide tax rate is therefore 6.9
percent.
ADMINISTRATIVE IMPLICATIONS
The administrative impact on TRD will be minimal.
TECHNICAL ISSUES
TRD notes technical issues with existing statute that could be fixed in this bill:
On page 3, line 3, cite Section 7-20F-1 NMSA 1978.
On page 3, line 8, add the words “Paragraph (1)" before the words “Subsection A" to clarify that
these first two increments are subject to the optional referendum, as distinguished from an
election.
On page 4, line 8 add a comma after, “the redemption fund" to indicate these three separate
items.
SS/bb