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F I S C A L I M P A C T R E P O R T
SPONSOR Barreras
ORIGINAL DATE
LAST UPDATED
02/05/08
HB 602
SHORT TITLE Belen Schools Graduation Prep Counseling
SB
ANALYST Escudero
APPROPRIATION (dollars in thousands)
Appropriation
Recurring
or Non-Rec
Fund
Affected
FY08
FY09
$75.0
Recurring
General Fund
(Parenthesis ( ) Indicate Expenditure Decreases)
Relates to HB640 and SB60
SOURCES OF INFORMATION
LFC Files
Responses Received From
Public Education Department (PED)
Higher Education Department (HED)
SUMMARY
Synopsis of Bill
House Bill 602 appropriates $75.0 to the Public Education Department (PED) for a pilot program
at Belen Consolidated Schools in graduation counseling aimed at high school seniors and juniors.
The purpose of this bill is to ensure that students are on track toward graduation in terms of their
course taking and the corresponding credit hours needed to graduate.
FISCAL IMPLICATIONS
The appropriation of $75.0 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.
This appropriation can be implemented by the PED with existing staff and minimal fiscal impact.
This proposal was submitted to the New Mexico Higher Education Department (NMHED) by
NMSU and was not included in the Department's funding recommendation for FY08.
pg_0002
House Bill 602 – Page
2
As stated by HED, NMSU's Cooperative Extension Service and 4-H Youth Development was
the recipient of four federal grants totaling $2,542,815 over a five-year period beginning in 2001
to establish 4-H Outreach Agents in 14 counties in New Mexico. These were three-year grants
and the funding is being completed this year.
With this funding depleted, the programs that the 4-H Youth Outreach and Engagement had
provided has come to an end, leaving many vulnerable youth without a caring adult support
system, life skill development opportunities, and the chance to be engaged in their communities.
The success of this program has shown that the need persists and cannot be met without
additional funding from the state legislature.
SIGNIFICANT ISSUES
According to PED, the New Mexico team that participated in Leadership Training Institutes
conducted through The Wallace Foundation for states last year learned of such a model and pilot
being implemented in Georgia. Anecdotal evaluation is that this model appears to help juniors
and seniors stay in school, although this may be a little too early to assess.
The dropout data for 2006-2007 uses the 40
th
-day student count factored and corrected for
duplicates -- students leaving to be home schooled, to go to another school within the public
school system in the state and having left but subsequently passing the GED. Using this formula,
the PED’s Data Collection & Reporting Bureau reports a 3.8% dropout rate for juniors and
seniors in Belen high schools. Dropout numbers of juniors and seniors stand at 16 out of a
junior/senior student base of 593.
Juniors and seniors need special attention during the critical transition between postsecondary
education and the workforce. Success in postsecondary life and work hinges a great deal on high
school graduation.
As stated by HED, the principal objectives of this request will focus on providing 4-H outreach
programs to underserved youth in eight selected counties impacting an estimated 5,000 students
per year. NMSU's 4-H Youth Development Program staff will provide teachers or classroom
volunteers with experiential learning lessons and activities that are aligned to New Mexico
educational standards and benchmarks. In addition to the school classroom, NMSU's 4-H Youth
Development professionals will provide educational, hands-on activities and programs in out-of-
school settings throughout the county. To date more than 40,000 youth have been involved in the
4-H program.
In New Mexico there are more than 421,000 youth of 4-H age (5-19). There is a need for adult-
led non-formal educational programs to provide an alternative to negative peer pressure.
PERFORMANCE IMPLICATIONS
As stated by PED, HB 602 aligns to priorities in the PED’s strategic plan for 2005-2010, namely:
student achievement and
cohort graduation rates
.
As stated by HED, NMSU's 4-H Youth Outreach and Engagement Program seeks to support
youth development by mobilizing, strengthening, and aligning systems that affect children’s
pg_0003
House Bill 602 – Page
3
learning. A key strategy is to forge partnerships between NMSU, local schools, and communities
to promote life skills acquisitions that support academic performance and workforce preparation.
CONFLICT, DUPLICATION, COMPANIONSHIP, RELATIONSHIP
HB 602 relates to HB640 and SB60.
OTHER SUBSTANTIVE ISSUES
As stated by PED, the Next Step Plan, implemented in school districts since 2004, replaced the
previous 4 Year Plan. Despite regional trainings to build capacity in advisement, full
implementation with fidelity has not been achieved in the state. If the pilot program envisioned
in HB 602 is a different model from traditional counseling/advisement programs, it would be
interesting to gauge its success in increasing graduation rates and overall access to postsecondary
education and work.
As stated by HED, in 2005-2006, more than 74,000 of the states youth were involved in life
skills education through 4-H, making 4-H the largest youth development program in New
Mexico. 4-H provides educational opportunities through which youth can learn information and
develop the skills they need. The 4-H Youth Development Program emphases 35 life skills
including leadership, responsible citizenship, critical thinking, problem solving, decision-
making, conflict resolution, respect for others, and communication that directly contribute to the
successful transition of young people into productive adulthood.
NMSUs 4-H Program is involved in partnerships throughout New Mexico with volunteers
efforts. Last year 5,220 adult 4-H volunteers contributed more than 260,000 hours of volunteer
service to the youth of the state. Had that service been provided by paid staff, it would have cost
$4,690,400.
PME/bb