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committees of the NM Legislature. The LFC does not assume responsibility for the accuracy of these reports
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F I S C A L I M P A C T R E P O R T
SPONSOR SRC
ORIGINAL DATE
LAST UPDATED
1/28/08
2/11/08
HB
SHORT TITLE Penitentiary Wastewater Lease System Lease
SJR
CS/10/aSJC
ANALYST Propst
ESTIMATED ADDITIONAL OPERATING BUDGET IMPACT (dollars in thousands)
FY08
FY09
FY10 3 Year
Total Cost
Recurring
or Non-Rec
Fund
Affected
Total
$83.8
$147.6 $147.6
$379.0 Recurring General
Fund
(Parenthesis ( ) Indicate Expenditure Decreases)
SOURCES OF INFORMATION
LFC Files
Responses Received From
NM Corrections Department (NMCD)
General Services Department (GSD)
SUMMARY
Synopsis of SJC Amendment
On page 2, strike lines 24 and 25 in their entirety.
On page 3, strike lines 1 through 5 in their entirety.
The amendment strikes the provision requiring Santa Fe County to provide the Corrections
Department and NM National Guard a 7% reduction in the government/institutions commodity
charge for all wastewater flow from their existing facilities as of January 2008 for a period of 10
years.
Synopsis of SRC Substitute
The Senate Rules Committee substitute to Senate Joint Resolution 10 removes “purchase" and
“donation," allowing only for a lease of the wastewater treatment system for up to ninety (99)
years. It specifically excludes transfer of water rights owned by the state.
pg_0002
CS/Senate Joint Resolution 10/aSJC – Page
2
FISCAL IMPLICATIONS
NMCD reports that even with a 7% reduction in the commodity charge, NMCD would still have
to pay at least $135,928.80 each and every year (for the next ten years) in commodity charges to
Santa Fe County for its wastewater flow from the Penitentiary of New Mexico and the Central
Office administrative complex. The joint resolution appropriates no money to NMCD to defray
or pay these significant costs. Further, if the commodity charge increases in the future, and it is
likely to do so, then costs would be even greater in years to come. If the facility were to become
the property of Santa Fe County, the County would ultimately be able to charge NMCD almost
any amount it wanted.
GSD noted that the transfer proposed in SJR 10 will result in a recurring operating budget
increase for PNM. PNM does not pay for wastewater treatment services under the current lease
between PCD and Santa Fe County. SJR 10 would require PNM to pay for wastewater treatment
service beginning this month (January 2008) but funding was not included in the current year
(FY08) budget and funding is not included in the FY09 budget being considered during this
legislative session.
The cost estimate for the Corrections Department, based on current usage of more than 3.5
million gallons a month, would be $135,900 a year for PNM. After the 10-year discount, the
recurring cost to PNM would increase by 7 percent. The annual cost for the NM National Guard
would be reduced by $882 a year (current cost of $12,600 minus 7% discount equals $11,700).
SIGNIFICANT ISSUES
GSD notes that many of the amendments proposed by GSD in the analysis of the original bill are
incorporated in the SRC/sub for SJR 10. However, the substitute bill retains language requiring
the Corrections Department (CD) to pay for wastewater treatment services beginning last month
(January 2008). GSD recommended this unfunded requirement be removed and continues to
recommend this because CD is not funded to pay wastewater charges in FY08 or FY09 budgets.
To protect the CD budget for the Penitentiary of New Mexico, PCD recommends that the
execution of the lease be contingent upon operating budget funding for this purpose being in the
appropriate CD budgets for FY08 and FY09.
GSD further notes that the SRC substitute does not address the budget deficiency for CD if
charges go into effect retroactively, in January, 2008. In addition, the seven percent discount on
usage for ten years may not adequately compensate the state for the asset value of the wastewater
treatment facility and land upon which it is located.
WEP/mt