STATE OF NEW MEXICO
SENATE
FORTY-NINTH LEGISLATURE
SECOND SESSION, 2010
Madam President: FEBRUARY 13, 2010
Your FINANCE COMMITTEE, to whom has been referred
HOUSE APPROPRIATIONS AND FINANCE COMMITTEE SUBSTITUTE FOR
HOUSE BILLS 2, 3, 4, 5 AND 6
has had it under consideration and reports same with recommendation that it DO PASS, amended as follows:
1. On pages 6 through 235, strike Sections 4 through 10 in their entirety and insert in lieu thereof the following sections:
“Section 4. FISCAL YEAR 2011 APPROPRIATIONS.--
A. LEGISLATIVE
LEGISLATIVE COUNCIL SERVICE:
(1) Legislative building services:
Appropriations:
(a) Personal services and
employee benefits 2,860.5 2,860.5
(b) Contractual services 100.6 100.6
(c) Other 1,126.9 1,126.9
Authorized FTE: 53.00 Permanent; 4.00 Temporary
(2) Energy council dues:
Appropriations: 32.0 32.0 Subtotal [4,120.0] 4,120.0
TOTAL LEGISLATIVE 4,120.0 4,120.0
B. JUDICIAL
SUPREME COURT LAW LIBRARY:
The purpose of the supreme court law library program is to provide and produce legal information for the judicial, legislative and executive branches of state government, the legal community and the public at large so they may have equal access to the law, effectively address the courts, make laws and write regulations, better understand the legal system and conduct their affairs in accordance with the principles of law.
Appropriations:
(a) Personal services and
employee benefits 687.4 687.4
(b) Contractual services 381.0 381.0
(c) Other 553.6 1.8 555.4
Authorized FTE: 8.00 Permanent
Performance measures:
(a) Output: Percent of updated titles 80%
(b) Output: Number of research requests 7,000
Subtotal [1,622.0] [1.8] 1,623.8
NEW MEXICO COMPILATION COMMISSION:
The purpose of the New Mexico compilation commission program is to publish in print and electronic format, distribute and sell (1) laws enacted by the legislature, (2) opinions of the supreme court and court of appeals, (3) rules approved by the supreme court, (4) attorney general opinions and (5) other state and federal rules and opinions. The commission ensures the accuracy and reliability of its publications.
Appropriations:
(a) Personal services and
employee benefits 159.5 334.8 494.3
(b) Contractual services 943.0 400.0 1,343.0
(c) Other 149.2 149.2
Authorized FTE: 5.00 Permanent; 1.00 Term
Performance measures:
(a) Output: Amount of revenue collected, in thousands $1,300
Subtotal [159.5] [1,427.0] [400.0] 1,986.5
JUDICIAL STANDARDS COMMISSION:
The purpose of the judicial standards commission program is to provide a public review process addressing complaints involving judicial misconduct in order to preserve the integrity and impartiality of the judicial process.
Appropriations:
(a) Personal services and
employee benefits 609.3 609.3
(b) Contractual services 39.0 39.0
(c) Other 112.2 25.0 137.2
Authorized FTE: 7.00 Permanent; 1.00 Temporary
Any unexpended balances remaining at the end of fiscal year 2011 in other state funds from funds received from trial cost reimbursements from respondents shall not revert to the general fund.
Performance measures:
(a) Efficiency: Upon knowledge of cause for emergency interim suspension,
time for commission to file petition for temporary
suspension, in days 2
(b) Output: Time for release of annual report to the public, from the
end of the fiscal year, in months 2
(c) Efficiency: For cases in which formal charges are filed, average time
for formal hearings to be held, in meeting cycles 3
Subtotal [760.5] [25.0] 785.5
COURT OF APPEALS:
The purpose of the court of appeals program is to provide access to justice, resolve disputes justly and timely and maintain accurate records of legal proceedings that affect rights and legal status in order to independently protect the rights and liberties guaranteed by the constitutions of New Mexico and the United States.
Appropriations:
(a) Personal services and
employee benefits 5,187.8 5,187.8
(b) Contractual services 63.0 63.0
(c) Other 444.4 1.0 445.4
Authorized FTE: 62.50 Permanent
Performance measures:
(a) Explanatory: Cases disposed as a percent of cases filed 95%
Subtotal [5,695.2] [1.0] 5,696.2
SUPREME COURT:
The purpose of the supreme court program is to provide access to justice, resolve disputes justly and timely and maintain accurate records of legal proceedings that affect rights and legal status in order to independently protect the rights and liberties guaranteed by the constitutions of New Mexico and the United States.
Appropriations:
(a) Personal services and
employee benefits 2,813.1 2,813.1
(b) Contractual services 17.9 17.9
(c) Other 138.4 138.4
Authorized FTE: 34.00 Permanent
Performance measures:
(a) Explanatory: Cases disposed as a percent of cases filed 95%
Subtotal [2,969.4] 2,969.4
ADMINISTRATIVE OFFICE OF THE COURTS:
(1) Administrative support:
The purpose of the administrative support program is to provide administrative support to the chief justice, all judicial branch units and the administrative office of the courts so that they can effectively administer the New Mexico court system.
Appropriations:
(a) Personal services and
employee benefits 3,021.7 145.8 82.4 3,249.9
(b) Contractual services 187.5 100.0 241.2 712.1 1,240.8
(c) Other 4,391.7 1,325.0 233.0 171.8 6,121.5
Authorized FTE: 37.80 Permanent; 4.00 Term
Performance measures:
(a) Outcome: Percent of jury summons successfully executed 92%
(b) Output: Average cost per juror $50
(2) Statewide judiciary automation:
The purpose of the statewide judiciary automation program is to provide development, enhancement, maintenance and support for core court automation and usage skills for appellate, district, magistrate and municipal courts and ancillary judicial agencies.
Appropriations:
(a) Personal services and
employee benefits 2,378.7 1,986.4 4,365.1
(b) Contractual services 887.1 887.1
(c) Other 238.6 2,405.5 2,644.1
Authorized FTE: 41.50 Permanent; 9.00 Term
Performance measures:
(a) Quality: Percent of accurate driving-while-intoxicated court reports 98%
(b) Quality: Average time to respond to automation calls for assistance,
in minutes 25
(3) Magistrate court:
The purpose of the magistrate court and warrant enforcement program is to provide access to justice, resolve disputes justly and timely and maintain accurate records of legal proceedings that affect rights and legal status in order to independently protect the rights and liberties guaranteed by the constitutions of New Mexico and the United States.
Appropriations:
(a) Personal services and
employee benefits 16,447.7 2,418.7 18,866.4
(b) Contractual services 56.3 403.0 459.3
(c) Other 6,907.2 793.3 800.0 8,500.5
Authorized FTE: 284.50 Permanent; 56.50 Term
Performance measures:
(a) Outcome: Bench warrant revenue collected annually, in millions $2.4
(b) Explanatory: Percent of cases disposed as a percent of cases filed 95%
(c) Efficiency: Percent of magistrate courts financial reports submitted to
fiscal services division and reconciled on a monthly basis 100%
(4) Special court services:
The purpose of the special court services program is to provide court advocates, legal counsel and safe exchanges for children and families, to provide judges pro tem, and to adjudicate water rights disputes so that the constitutional rights and safety of citizens, especially children and families, are protected.
Appropriations:
(a) Personal services and
employee benefits 220.8 220.8
(b) Contractual services 5,672.1 380.0 6,052.1
(c) Other 21.0 21.0
(d) Other financing uses 1,402.7 1,560.0 2,962.7
Authorized FTE: 3.00 Permanent
Notwithstanding the provisions of Section 11-6A-3 NMSA 1978 or other substantive law, the internal service funds/interagency transfers appropriation to the special court services program of administrative office of the courts in the other financing uses category includes one million five hundred thousand dollars ($1,500,000) from the local DWI grant fund for drug courts. Any unexpended balances from the local DWI grant fund appropriation remaining at the end of fiscal year 2011 shall revert to the local DWI grant fund.
Performance measures:
(a) Output: Number of required events attended by attorneys in abuse
and neglect cases
(b) Output: Number of cases to which court-appointed special advocates
volunteers are assigned
(c) Output: Number of monthly supervised child visitations and
exchanges conducted
Subtotal [40,946.0] [10,319.0] [3,360.0] [966.3] 55,591.3
SUPREME COURT BUILDING COMMISSION:
The purpose of the supreme court building commission program is to retain custody and control of the supreme court building and its grounds and to provide care, preservation, repair, cleaning, heating and lighting and to hire necessary employees for these purposes.
Appropriations:
(a) Personal services and
employee benefits 662.8 662.8
(b) Contractual services 9.8 9.8
(c) Other 138.0 138.0
Authorized FTE: 15.80 Permanent
Subtotal [810.6] 810.6
DISTRICT COURTS:
(1) First judicial district:
The purpose of the first judicial district court program, statutorily created in Santa Fe, Rio Arriba and Los Alamos counties, is to provide access to justice, resolve disputes justly and timely and maintain accurate records of legal proceedings that affect rights and legal status in order to independently protect the rights and liberties guaranteed by the constitutions of New Mexico and the United States.
Appropriations:
(a) Personal services and
employee benefits 5,595.0 255.7 319.4 6,170.1
(b) Contractual services 579.7 55.0 87.2 721.9
(c) Other 112.6 183.5 26.1 322.2
Authorized FTE: 86.00 Permanent; 8.80 Term
Performance measures:
(a) Explanatory: Cases disposed as a percent of cases filed 100%
(b) Quality: Recidivism of adult drug-court graduates 9%
(c) Quality: Recidivism of juvenile drug-court graduates 15%
(d) Output: Number of adult drug-court graduates 19
(e) Output: Number of juvenile drug-court graduates 17
(f) Output: Number of days to process juror payment vouchers 5
(g) Explanatory: Graduation rate, juvenile drug court 50%
(h) Explanatory: Graduation rate, adult drug court 45%
(2) Second judicial district:
The purpose of the second judicial district court program, statutorily created in Bernalillo county, is to provide access to justice, resolve disputes justly and timely and maintain accurate records of legal proceedings that affect rights and legal status in order to independently protect the rights and liberties guaranteed by the constitutions of New Mexico and the United States.
Appropriations:
(a) Personal services and
employee benefits 20,478.9 1,284.7 817.1 22,580.7
(b) Contractual services 159.9 75.0 234.9
(c) Other 468.0 255.0 79.1 802.1
Authorized FTE: 331.50 Permanent; 28.50 Term
Performance measures:
(a) Explanatory: Cases disposed as a percent of cases filed 95%
(b) Quality: Recidivism of adult drug-court graduates 8%
(c) Quality: Recidivism of juvenile drug-court graduates 10%
(d) Output: Number of adult drug-court graduates 130
(e) Output: Number of juvenile drug-court graduates 20
(f) Output: Number of days to process juror payment vouchers 14
(g) Explanatory: Graduation rate, adult drug court 55%
(h) Explanatory: Graduation rate, juvenile drug court 70%
(3) Third judicial district:
The purpose of the third judicial district court program, statutorily created in Dona Ana county, is to provide access to justice, resolve disputes justly and timely and maintain accurate records of legal proceedings that affect rights and legal status in order to independently protect the rights and liberties guaranteed by the constitutions of New Mexico and the United States.
Appropriations:
(a) Personal services and
employee benefits 5,374.0 53.0 491.5 5,918.5
(b) Contractual services 661.1 67.0 98.1 826.2
(c) Other 209.8 55.0 67.4 332.2
Authorized FTE: 88.30 Permanent; 6.50 Term
Performance measures:
(a) Explanatory: Cases disposed as a percent of cases filed 90%
(b) Quality: Recidivism of adult drug-court graduates 10%
(c) Output: Number of adult drug-court graduates 30
(d) Output: Number of juvenile drug-court graduates 20
(e) Explanatory: Graduation rate, adult drug court 65%
(f) Explanatory: Graduation rate, juvenile drug court 70%
(4) Fourth judicial district:
The purpose of the fourth judicial district court program, statutorily created in Mora, San Miguel and Guadalupe counties, is to provide access to justice, resolve disputes justly and timely and maintain accurate records of legal proceedings that affect rights and legal status in order to independently protect the rights and liberties guaranteed by the constitutions of New Mexico and the United States.
Appropriations:
(a) Personal services and
employee benefits 1,798.2 1,798.2
(b) Contractual services 122.0 10.0 29.1 161.1
(c) Other 131.3 20.0 151.3
Authorized FTE: 29.50 Permanent
Performance measures:
(a) Explanatory: Cases disposed as a percent of cases filed 95%
(b) Output: Number of days to process juror payment vouchers 12
(c) Explanatory: Graduation rate, juvenile drug court 70%
(d) Quality: Recidivism of juvenile drug-court graduates 15%
(e) Output: Number of juvenile drug-court graduates 9
(5) Fifth judicial district:
The purpose of the fifth judicial district court program, statutorily created in Eddy, Chaves and Lea counties, is to provide access to justice, resolve disputes justly and timely and maintain accurate records of legal proceedings that affect rights and legal status in order to independently protect the rights and liberties guaranteed by the constitutions of New Mexico and the United States.
Appropriations:
(a) Personal services and
employee benefits 5,257.3 45.8 5,303.1
(b) Contractual services 447.3 70.0 285.0 802.3
(c) Other 247.8 45.0 8.2 301.0
Authorized FTE: 82.00 Permanent; 1.00 Term
Performance measures:
(a) Explanatory: Cases disposed as a percent of cases filed 95%
(b) Output: Number of days to process juror payment vouchers 10
(c) Explanatory: Graduation rate, family drug court 50%
(d) Quality: Recidivism of family drug-court graduates 15%
(e) Output: Number of family drug-court graduates 9
(6) Sixth judicial district:
The purpose of the sixth judicial district court program, statutorily created in Grant, Luna and Hidalgo counties, is to provide access to justice, resolve disputes justly and timely and maintain accurate records of legal proceedings that affect rights and legal status in order to independently protect the rights and liberties guaranteed by the constitutions of New Mexico and the United States.
Appropriations:
(a) Personal services and
employee benefits 2,297.8 2,297.8
(b) Contractual services 628.1 14.8 72.7 715.6
(c) Other 155.7 11.0 166.7
Authorized FTE: 35.50 Permanent; .50 Term
Performance measures:
(a) Explanatory: Cases disposed as a percent of cases filed 90%
(b) Quality: Recidivism of juvenile drug-court graduates 13%
(c) Output: Number of juvenile drug-court graduates 9
(d) Output: Number of days to process juror payment vouchers 14
(e) Explanatory: Graduation rate, juvenile drug court 90%
(7) Seventh judicial district:
The purpose of the seventh judicial district court program, statutorily created in Torrance, Socorro and Catron counties, is to provide access to justice, resolve disputes justly and timely and maintain accurate records of legal proceedings that affect rights and legal status in order to independently protect the rights and liberties guaranteed by the constitutions of New Mexico and the United States.
Appropriations:
(a) Personal services and
employee benefits 1,780.2 275.6 2,055.8
(b) Contractual services 288.1 28.0 80.1 396.2
(c) Other 135.6 1.0 52.5 189.1
Authorized FTE: 32.00 Permanent; 4.00 Term
Performance measures:
(a) Explanatory: Cases disposed as a percent of cases filed 95%
(b) Output: Number of days to process juror payment vouchers 14
(8) Eighth judicial district:
The purpose of the eighth judicial district court program, statutorily created in Taos, Colfax and Union counties, is to provide access to justice, resolve disputes justly and timely and maintain accurate records of legal proceedings that affect rights and legal status in order to independently protect the rights and liberties guaranteed by the constitutions of New Mexico and the United States.
Appropriations:
(a) Personal services and
employee benefits 1,664.2 1,664.2
(b) Contractual services 865.4 45.0 80.0 990.4
(c) Other 101.8 26.0 127.8
Authorized FTE: 27.50 Permanent
Performance measures:
(a) Explanatory: Cases disposed as a percent of cases filed 90%
(b) Quality: Recidivism of adult drug-court graduates 10%
(c) Quality: Recidivism of juvenile drug-court graduates 5%
(d) Output: Number of adult drug-court graduates 18
(e) Output: Number of juvenile drug-court graduates 15
(f) Output: Number of days to process juror payment vouchers 9
(g) Explanatory: Graduation rate, juvenile drug court 70%
(h) Explanatory: Graduation rate, adult drug court 75%
(9) Ninth judicial district:
The purpose of the ninth judicial district court program, statutorily created in Curry and Roosevelt counties, is to provide access to justice, resolve disputes justly and timely and maintain accurate records of legal proceedings that affect rights and legal status in order to independently protect the rights and liberties guaranteed by the constitutions of New Mexico and the United States.
Appropriations:
(a) Personal services and
employee benefits 3,054.9 417.5 3,472.4
(b) Contractual services 40.3 16.5 85.0 141.8
(c) Other 92.0 26.5 103.4 221.9
Authorized FTE: 43.80 Permanent; 5.50 Term
Performance measures:
(a) Explanatory: Cases disposed as a percent of cases filed 90%
(b) Output: Number of days to process juror payment vouchers 14
(10) Tenth judicial district:
The purpose of the tenth judicial district court program, statutorily created in Quay, DeBaca and Harding counties, is to provide access to justice, resolve disputes justly and timely and maintain accurate records of legal proceedings that affect rights and legal status in order to independently protect the rights and liberties guaranteed by the constitutions of New Mexico and the United States.
Appropriations:
(a) Personal services and
employee benefits 673.2 673.2
(b) Contractual services 3.6 28.2 31.8
(c) Other 84.7 84.7
Authorized FTE: 10.00 Permanent
Performance measures:
(a) Explanatory: Cases disposed as a percent of cases filed 90%
(b) Output: Number of days to process juror payment vouchers 9
(11) Eleventh judicial district:
The purpose of the eleventh judicial district court program, statutorily created in San Juan and McKinley counties, is to provide access to justice, resolve disputes justly and timely and maintain accurate records of legal proceedings that affect rights and legal status in order to independently protect the rights and liberties guaranteed by the constitutions of New Mexico and the United States.
Appropriations:
(a) Personal services and
employee benefits 5,089.1 391.3 5,480.4
(b) Contractual services 437.2 84.9 134.7 656.8
(c) Other 353.4 48.1 19.2 420.7
Authorized FTE: 80.50 Permanent; 6.50 Term
Performance measures:
(a) Explanatory: Cases disposed as a percent of cases filed 90%
(b) Quality: Recidivism of adult drug-court graduates 10%
(c) Quality: Recidivism of juvenile drug-court graduates 10%
(d) Output: Number of adult drug-court graduates 40
(e) Output: Number of juvenile drug-court graduates 16
(f) Output: Number of days to process juror payment vouchers 14
(g) Explanatory: Graduation rate, juvenile drug court 75%
(h) Explanatory: Graduation rate, adult drug court 70%
(12) Twelfth judicial district:
The purpose of the twelfth judicial district court program, statutorily created in Otero and Lincoln counties, is to provide access to justice, resolve disputes justly and timely and maintain accurate records of legal proceedings that affect rights and legal status in order to independently protect the rights and liberties guaranteed by the constitutions of New Mexico and the United States.
Appropriations:
(a) Personal services and
employee benefits 2,699.8 2,699.8
(b) Contractual services 161.2 44.5 87.3 293.0
(c) Other 135.3 23.0 158.3
Authorized FTE: 45.50 Permanent
Performance measures:
(a) Explanatory: Cases disposed as a percent of cases filed 90%
(b) Quality: Recidivism of juvenile drug-court participants 20%
(c) Output: Number of juvenile drug-court graduates 14
(d) Output: Number of days to process juror payment vouchers 14
(e) Explanatory: Graduation rate, juvenile drug court 65%
(13) Thirteenth judicial district:
The purpose of the thirteenth judicial district court program, statutorily created in Valencia, Sandoval and Cibola counties, is to provide access to justice, resolve disputes justly and timely and maintain accurate records of legal proceedings that affect rights and legal status in order to independently protect the rights and liberties guaranteed by the constitutions of New Mexico and the United States.
Appropriations:
(a) Personal services and
employee benefits 5,047.2 279.0 5,326.2
(b) Contractual services 922.9 101.9 203.6 1,228.4
(c) Other 373.8 4.0 38.5 416.3
Authorized FTE: 78.50 Permanent; 4.00 Term
Performance measures:
(a) Explanatory: Cases disposed as a percent of cases filed 90%
(b) Quality: Recidivism of juvenile drug-court graduates 15%
(c) Output: Number of juvenile drug-court graduates 20
(d) Output: Number of days to process juror payment vouchers 14
(e) Explanatory: Graduation rate, juvenile drug court 65%
Subtotal [68,728.4] [2,932.3] [4,674.4] 76,335.1
BERNALILLO COUNTY METROPOLITAN COURT:
The purpose of the Bernalillo county metropolitan court program is to provide access to justice, resolve disputes justly and timely and to maintain accurate records of legal proceedings that affect rights and legal status in order to independently protect the rights and liberties guaranteed by the constitutions of New Mexico and the United States.
Appropriations:
(a) Personal services and
employee benefits 17,145.8 1,976.4 122.0 19,244.2
(b) Contractual services 2,680.6 742.9 3,423.5
(c) Other 2,316.8 333.7 2,650.5
(d) Other financing uses 15.0 15.0
Authorized FTE: 301.00 Permanent; 44.50 Term
Performance measures:
(a) Explanatory: Cases disposed as a percent of cases filed 100%
(b) Efficiency: Cost per client per day for adult drug-court participants $15
(c) Quality: Recidivism of driving-while-intoxicated/drug-court graduates 4%
(d) Output: Number of driving-while-intoxicated/drug-court graduates 240
(e) Explanatory: Graduation rate of drug-court participants 70%
(f) Outcome: Fees and fines collected as a percent of fees and fines
assessed 95%
Subtotal [22,143.2] [3,068.0] [122.0] 25,333.2
DISTRICT ATTORNEYS:
(1) First judicial district:
The purpose of the prosecution program is to provide litigation, special programs and administrative support for the enforcement of state laws as they pertain to the district attorney and to improve and ensure the protection, safety, welfare and health of the citizens within Santa Fe, Rio Arriba and Los Alamos counties.
Appropriations:
(a) Personal services and
employee benefits 4,418.2 78.8 4,497.0
(b) Contractual services 21.5 21.5
(c) Other 333.2 333.2
Authorized FTE: 70.00 Permanent; 2.00 Term
Performance measures:
(a) Outcome: Percent of cases dismissed under the six-month rule <1%
(b) Output: Number of cases prosecuted 2,500
(c) Output: Number of cases referred for screening 3,000
(2) Second judicial district:
The purpose of the prosecution program is to provide litigation, special programs and administrative support for the enforcement of state laws as they pertain to the district attorney and to improve and ensure the protection, safety, welfare and health of the citizens within Bernalillo county.
Appropriations:
(a) Personal services and
employee benefits 16,199.0 376.3 484.0 268.9 17,328.2
(b) Contractual services 44.0 44.0
(c) Other 509.6 509.6
Authorized FTE: 283.00 Permanent; 14.00 Term
Performance measures:
(a) Outcome: Percent of cases dismissed under the six-month rule <2.5%
(b) Output: Number of cases prosecuted 26,000
(c) Output: Number of cases referred for screening 30,500
(3) Third judicial district:
The purpose of the prosecution program is to provide litigation, special programs and administrative support for the enforcement of state laws as they pertain to the district attorney and to improve and ensure the protection, safety, welfare and health of the citizens within Dona Ana county.
Appropriations:
(a) Personal services and
employee benefits 4,185.4 557.7 205.7 497.1 5,445.9
(b) Contractual services 17.4 17.4
(c) Other 278.1 278.1
Authorized FTE: 62.00 Permanent; 19.00 Term
Performance measures:
(a) Output: Number of cases referred for screening 5,800
(b) Output: Number of cases prosecuted 4,600
(c) Outcome: Percent of cases dismissed under the six-month rule 0.5%
(4) Fourth judicial district:
The purpose of the prosecution program is to provide litigation, special programs and administrative support for the enforcement of state laws as they pertain to the district attorney and to improve and ensure the protection, safety, welfare and health of the citizens within Mora, San Miguel and Guadalupe counties.
Appropriations:
(a) Personal services and
employee benefits 2,908.1 2,908.1
(b) Contractual services 15.3 15.3
(c) Other 172.8 172.8
Authorized FTE: 42.00 Permanent
Performance measures:
(a) Output: Number of cases referred for screening 2,375
(b) Outcome: Percent of cases dismissed under the six-month rule <1%
(c) Output: Number of cases prosecuted 2,000
(5) Fifth judicial district:
The purpose of the prosecution program is to provide litigation, special programs and administrative support for the enforcement of state laws as they pertain to the district attorney and to improve and ensure the protection, safety, welfare and health of the citizens within Eddy, Lea and Chaves counties.
Appropriations:
(a) Personal services and
employee benefits 4,094.7 4,094.7
(b) Contractual services 80.7 80.7
(c) Other 151.4 151.4
Authorized FTE: 60.00 Permanent
Performance measures:
(a) Outcome: Percent of cases dismissed under the six-month rule <1%
(b) Output: Number of cases prosecuted 4,200
(c) Output: Number of cases referred for screening 4,700
(6) Sixth judicial district:
The purpose of the prosecution program is to provide litigation, special programs and administrative support for the enforcement of state laws as they pertain to the district attorney and to improve and ensure the protection, safety, welfare and health of the citizens within Grant, Hidalgo and Luna counties.
Appropriations:
(a) Personal services and
employee benefits 2,304.9 244.6 104.5 2,654.0
(b) Contractual services 19.5 19.5
(c) Other 185.6 185.6
Authorized FTE: 35.00 Permanent; 6.00 Term
Performance measures:
(a) Outcome: Percent of cases dismissed under the six-month rule <1%
(b) Output: Number of cases prosecuted 1,900
(c) Output: Number of cases referred for screening 2,200
(7) Seventh judicial district:
The purpose of the prosecution program is to provide litigation, special programs and administrative support for the enforcement of state laws as they pertain to the district attorney and to improve and ensure the protection, safety, welfare and health of the citizens within Catron, Sierra, Socorro and Torrance counties.
Appropriations:
(a) Personal services and
employee benefits 2,151.5 2,151.5
(b) Contractual services 35.5 35.5
(c) Other 176.2 176.2
Authorized FTE: 36.00 Permanent; 1.00 Term
Performance measures:
(a) Outcome: Percent of cases dismissed under the six-month rule <1.5%
(b) Output: Number of cases prosecuted 1,975
(c) Output: Number of cases referred for screening 2,100
(8) Eighth judicial district:
The purpose of the prosecution program is to provide litigation, special programs and administrative support for the enforcement of state laws as they pertain to the district attorney and to improve and ensure the protection, safety, welfare and health of the citizens within Taos, Colfax and Union counties.
Appropriations:
(a) Personal services and
employee benefits 2,352.4 2,352.4
(b) Contractual services 11.0 11.0
(c) Other 191.5 191.5
Authorized FTE: 36.00 Permanent
Performance measures:
(a) Output: Number of cases referred for screening 2,800
(b) Output: Number of cases prosecuted 1,500
(c) Outcome: Percent of cases dismissed under the six-month rule <3%
(9) Ninth judicial district:
The purpose of the prosecution program is to provide litigation, special programs and administrative support for the enforcement of state laws as they pertain to the district attorney and to improve and ensure the protection, safety, welfare and health of the citizens within Curry and Roosevelt counties.
Appropriations:
(a) Personal services and
employee benefits 2,577.8 2,577.8
(b) Contractual services 10.9 10.9
(c) Other 128.2 128.2
Authorized FTE: 39.00 Permanent
Performance measures:
(a) Output: Number of cases prosecuted 3,000
(b) Output: Number of cases referred for screening 3,200
(c) Outcome: Percent of cases dismissed under the six-month rule <1%
(10) Tenth judicial district:
The purpose of the prosecution program is to provide litigation, special programs and administrative support for the enforcement of state laws as they pertain to the district attorney and to improve and ensure the protection, safety, welfare and health of the citizens within Quay, Harding and DeBaca counties.
Appropriations:
(a) Personal services and
employee benefits 875.5 875.5
(b) Contractual services 10.8 10.8
(c) Other 97.8 97.8
Authorized FTE: 13.00 Permanent
Performance measures:
(a) Outcome: Percent of cases dismissed under the six-month rule <1%
(b) Output: Number of cases prosecuted 1,000
(c) Output: Number of cases referred for screening 900
(11) Eleventh judicial district-division I:
The purpose of the prosecution program is to provide litigation, special programs and administrative support for the enforcement of state laws as they pertain to the district attorney and to improve and ensure the protection, safety, welfare and health of the citizens within San Juan county.
Appropriations:
(a) Personal services and
employee benefits 2,868.2 763.7 132.0 77.2 3,841.1
(b) Contractual services 23.0 23.0
(c) Other 355.8 355.8
Authorized FTE: 55.00 Permanent; 11.60 Term
Performance measures:
(a) Output: Number of cases referred for screening 4,500
(b) Output: Number of cases prosecuted 3,000
(c) Outcome: Percent of cases dismissed under the six-month rule <0.5%
(12) Eleventh judicial district-division II:
The purpose of the prosecution program is to provide litigation, special programs and administrative support for the enforcement of state laws as they pertain to the district attorney and to improve and ensure the protection, safety, welfare and health of the citizens within McKinley county.
Appropriations:
(a) Personal services and
employee benefits 1,874.7 124.1 1,998.8
(b) Contractual services 11.6 11.6
(c) Other 143.0 143.0
Authorized FTE: 33.00 Permanent; 1.00 Term
Performance measures:
(a) Outcome: Percent of cases dismissed under the six-month rule <2%
(b) Output: Number of cases prosecuted 2,700
(c) Output: Number of cases referred for screening 3,718
(13) Twelfth judicial district:
The purpose of the prosecution program is to provide litigation, special programs and administrative support for the enforcement of state laws as they pertain to the district attorney and to improve and ensure the protection, safety, welfare and health of the citizens within Lincoln and Otero counties.
Appropriations:
(a) Personal services and
employee benefits 2,368.7 53.0 225.6 2,647.3
(b) Contractual services 19.5 19.5
(c) Other 162.9 0.3 163.2
Authorized FTE: 39.00 Permanent; 8.50 Term
Performance measures:
(a) Outcome: Percent of cases dismissed under the six-month rule <0.5%
(b) Output: Number of cases prosecuted 3,400
(c) Output: Number of cases referred for screening 5,000
(14) Thirteenth judicial district:
The purpose of the prosecution program is to provide litigation, special programs and administrative support for the enforcement of state laws as they pertain to the district attorney and to improve and ensure the protection, safety, welfare and health of the citizens within Cibola, Sandoval and Valencia counties.
Appropriations:
(a) Personal services and
employee benefits 4,306.1 147.7 4,453.8
(b) Contractual services 6.9 6.9
(c) Other 295.8 295.8
Authorized FTE: 80.00 Permanent; 2.00 Term
Performance measures:
(a) Outcome: Percent of cases dismissed under the six-month rule <0.2%
(b) Output: Number of cases prosecuted 6,200
(c) Output: Number of cases referred for screening 7,966
Subtotal [56,994.7] [1,845.4] [1,243.7] [1,252.1] 61,335.9
ADMINISTRATIVE OFFICE OF THE DISTRICT ATTORNEYS:
(1) Administrative support:
The purpose of the administrative support program is to provide fiscal, human resource, staff development, automation, victim program services and support to all district attorneys' offices in New Mexico and to members of the New Mexico children's safehouse network so that they may obtain and access the necessary resources in order to effectively and efficiently carry out their prosecutorial, investigative and programmatic functions.
Appropriations:
(a) Personal services and
employee benefits 974.7 974.7
(b) Contractual services 12.1 12.1
(c) Other 948.2 180.0 1,128.2
Authorized FTE: 13.00 Permanent
Performance measures:
(a) Output: Number of victim notification events and escapes reported,
monthly 7,500
(b) Output: Number of trainings conducted during the fiscal year 10
Subtotal [1,935.0] [180.0] 2,115.0
TOTAL JUDICIAL 202,764.5 19,799.5 9,800.1 2,218.4 234,582.5
C. GENERAL CONTROL
ATTORNEY GENERAL:
(1) Legal services:
The purpose of the legal services program is to deliver quality legal services opinions, counsel and representation to state government entities and to enforce state law on behalf of the public so that New Mexicans have an open, honest, efficient government and enjoy the protection of state law.
Appropriations:
(a) Personal services and
employee benefits 8,480.6 4,701.0 13,181.6
(b) Contractual services 236.0 300.0 536.0
(c) Other 1,647.7 631.0 104.0 2,382.7
Authorized FTE: 158.00 Permanent; 1.00 Term
The internal service funds/interagency transfers appropriation to the legal services program of the attorney general in the other category includes one hundred four thousand dollars ($104,000) from the medicaid fraud division.
All revenue generated from antitrust cases and consumer protection settlements through the attorney general on behalf of the state, political subdivisions or private citizens shall revert to the general fund, unless otherwise required by the terms of a court-approved order or settlement.
The other state funds appropriations to the legal services program of the attorney general include five million six hundred thirty-two thousand dollars ($5,632,000) from the consumer settlement fund.
The other state funds appropriations to the legal services program of the attorney general include three hundred thousand dollars ($300,000) for tobacco litigation and arbitration costs, one hundred fifty thousand dollars ($150,000) for the purpose of qui tam and one hundred fifty thousand dollars ($150,000) for the purpose of government accountability.
Performance measures:
(a) Outcome: Percent of initial responses to requests for attorney
general opinions made within three days of request 95%
(2) Medicaid fraud:
The purpose of the medicaid fraud program is to investigate and prosecute medicaid provider fraud, recipient abuse and neglect in the medicaid program.
Appropriations:
(a) Personal services and
employee benefits 107.2 1,578.6 1,685.8
(b) Contractual services 7.0 7.0
(c) Other 383.3 200.0 583.3
(d) Other financing uses 104.0 104.0
Authorized FTE: 21.00 Permanent
The other state funds appropriation to the medicaid fraud program of the attorney general in the other category includes two hundred thousand dollars ($200,000) for the purpose of court reporting services, witness fees, transcription fees and supplies.
Performance measures:
(a) Outcome: Three-year projected savings resulting from fraud
investigations, in millions $12.2
(b) Explanatory: Total medicaid recoveries, in thousands $2,000
Subtotal [10,861.8] [5,832.0] [104.0] [1,682.6] 18,480.4
STATE AUDITOR:
The purpose of the state auditor program is to audit the financial affairs of every agency annually so they can improve accountability and performance and to assure New Mexico citizens that funds are expended properly.
Appropriations:
(a) Personal services and
employee benefits 1,890.0 346.6 345.3 2,581.9
(b) Contractual services 114.6 23.8 20.9 159.3
(c) Other 286.4 59.6 51.9 397.9
Authorized FTE: 32.00 Permanent; 1.00 Term
Performance measures:
(a) Output: Total audit fees generated $430,000
(b) Explanatory: Percent of audits completed by regulatory due date 75%
Subtotal [2,291.0] [430.0] [418.1] 3,139.1
TAXATION AND REVENUE DEPARTMENT:
(1) Tax administration:
The purpose of the tax administration program is to provide registration and licensure requirements for tax programs and to ensure compliance with state tax laws and the administration and to collect state taxes and fees that provide funding for support services for the general public through appropriations.
Appropriations:
(a) Personal services and
employee benefits 22,615.9 2,226.4 1,242.6 26,084.9
(b) Contractual services 68.6 44.0 11.8 124.4
(c) Other 5,945.0 504.2 222.9 6,672.1
Authorized FTE: 489.50 Permanent; 26.00 Term; 29.50 Temporary
Performance measures:
(a) Output: Percent of electronically filed returns for personal income
tax and combined reporting system 65%
(b) Outcome: Collections as a percent of collectible audit assessments
generated in the current fiscal year 40%
(c) Outcome: Collections as a percent of collectable outstanding
balances from the end of the prior fiscal year 20%
(2) Motor vehicle:
The purpose of the motor vehicle program is to register, title and license vehicles, boats and motor vehicle dealers and to enforce operator compliance with the Motor Vehicle Code and federal regulations by conducting tests, investigations and audits.
Appropriations:
(a) Personal services and
employee benefits 7,901.9 7,662.8 15,564.7
(b) Contractual services 1,208.6 1,749.5 2,958.1
(c) Other 3,965.0 2,343.4 6,308.4
Authorized FTE: 351.00 Permanent; 3.00 Term; 3.00 Temporary
Performance measures:
(a) Efficiency: Average call center wait time to reach an agent, in minutes 3.45
(b) Outcome: Percent of registered vehicles with liability insurance 91%
(c) Efficiency: Average wait time in q-matic-equipped offices, in minutes 14
(3) Property tax:
The purpose of property tax program is to administer the Property Tax Code, to ensure the fair appraisal of property and to assess property taxes within the state.
Appropriations:
(a) Personal services and
employee benefits 2,639.9 2,639.9
(b) Contractual services 81.6 81.6
(c) Other 573.2 573.2
Authorized FTE: 45.00 Permanent
Performance measures:
(a) Output: Number of appraisals or valuations for companies conducting
business within the state subject to state assessment 500
(b) Outcome: Percent of counties in compliance with sales ratio standard
of eighty-five percent assessed value-to-market value 92%
(4) Compliance enforcement:
The purpose of the compliance enforcement program is to support the overall mission of the taxation and revenue department by enforcing criminal statutes relative to the New Mexico Tax Administration Act and other related financial crimes, as they impact New Mexico state taxes, in order to encourage and achieve voluntary compliance with state tax laws.
Appropriations:
(a) Personal services and
employee benefits 1,913.5 1,913.5
(b) Contractual services 10.2 10.2
(c) Other 415.0 415.0
Authorized FTE: 31.00 Permanent
Performance measures:
(a) Outcome: Number of tax investigations referred to prosecutors as a
percent of total investigations assigned during the year 40%
(5) Program support:
The purpose of program support is to provide information system resources, human resource services, finance and accounting services, revenue forecasting and legal services in order to give agency personnel the resources needed to meet departmental objectives. For the general public, the program conducts hearings for resolving taxpayer protests and provides stakeholders with reliable information regarding the state’s tax programs.
Appropriations:
(a) Personal services and
employee benefits 13,273.7 699.7 357.8 14,331.2
(b) Contractual services 2,375.9 48.0 2,423.9
(c) Other 4,540.5 34.8 153.0 4,728.3
Authorized FTE: 205.00 Permanent
Notwithstanding the provisions of Subsection E of Section 7-1-6.41 NMSA 1978, in order to fund the fair share initiative, the department shall withhold an administrative fee in the amount of three and twenty-five hundredths percent of the distributions specified in Subsection E of Section 7-1-6.41 NMSA 1978 and, notwithstanding the provisions of Subsection F of that section, the portion of the fee equal to twenty-five hundredths percent of the amount to be distributed shall not be deposited in the general fund but shall be retained by the department and is included in the other state fund appropriations to the department.
Performance measures:
(a) Outcome: Percent of driving-while-intoxicated drivers license
revocations rescinded due to failure to hold hearings
within ninety days < 1%
Subtotal [64,233.8] [18,559.5] [558.8] [1,477.3] 84,829.4
STATE INVESTMENT COUNCIL:
(1) State investment:
The purpose of the state investment program is to provide investment management of the state's permanent funds for the citizens of New Mexico in order to maximize distributions to the state's operating budget while preserving the real value of the funds for future generations of New Mexicans.
Appropriations:
(a) Personal services and
employee benefits 3,582.1 3,582.1
(b) Contractual services 30,071.1 30,071.1
(c) Other 824.4 824.4
Authorized FTE: 32.00 Permanent
The other state funds appropriation to the state investment council in the contractual services category includes twenty-seven million seven hundred ninety-three thousand four hundred dollars ($27,793,400) for money manager fees.
Performance measures:
(a) Outcome: One-year annualized investment returns to exceed internal
benchmarks, in basis points >25
(b) Outcome: Five-year annualized investment returns to exceed internal
benchmarks, in basis points >25
(c) Outcome: One-year annualized percentile performance ranking in
endowment investment peer universe <49
(d) Outcome: Five-year annualized percentile performance ranking in
endowment investment peer universe <49
Subtotal [34,477.6] 34,477.6
DEPARTMENT OF FINANCE AND ADMINISTRATION:
(1) Policy development, fiscal analysis, budget oversight and education accountability:
The purpose of the policy development, fiscal analysis, budget oversight and education accountability program is to provide professional, coordinated policy development and analysis and oversight to the governor, the legislature and state agencies so they can advance the state's policies and initiatives using appropriate and accurate data to make informed decisions for the prudent use of the public's tax dollars.
Appropriations:
(a) Personal services and
employee benefits 3,268.0 3,268.0
(b) Contractual services 115.9 115.9
(c) Other 208.2 208.2
Authorized FTE: 36.00 Permanent
Performance measures:
(a) Outcome: Level of general fund reserves maintained as a percent of
recurring appropriations 5%
(b) Outcome: Percent of bond projects that expired at the end of the
previous fiscal year for which proceeds are reverted six
months following fiscal year-end 95%
(2) Community development, local government assistance and fiscal oversight:
The purpose of the community development, local government assistance and fiscal oversight program is to help counties, municipalities and special districts maintain strong communities through sound fiscal advice and oversight, technical assistance, monitoring of project and program progress and timely processing of payments, grant agreements and contracts.
Appropriations:
(a) Personal services and
employee benefits 2,113.4 1,027.8 423.9 3,565.1
(b) Contractual services 2,078.9 2,056.1 32.0 4,167.0
(c) Other 132.2 36,563.4 14,084.4 50,780.0
(d) Other financing uses 1,800.0 1,800.0
Authorized FTE: 31.00 Permanent; 21.00 Term
Notwithstanding the provisions of Section 11-6A-3 NMSA 1978 or other substantive law, the other state funds appropriation in the other financing uses category includes one million five hundred thousand dollars ($1,500,000) from the local DWI grant fund to be transferred to the administrative office of the courts for drug courts.
Performance measures:
(a) Output: Number of capital projects older than five years that are
unexpended or not reverted 20
(b) Output: Percent of local entity budgets submitted to the local
government division by established deadline 90%
(c) Outcome: Percent of local capital outlay projects included in the
infrastructure capital improvement plan 90%
(d) Output: Percent of state agency capital outlay projects included in
the infrastructure capital improvement plan 90%
(3) Fiscal management and oversight:
The purpose of the fiscal management and oversight program is to provide for and promote financial accountability for public funds throughout state government and provide state agencies and the citizens of New Mexico with timely, accurate and comprehensive information on the financial status and expenditures of the state.
Appropriations:
(a) Personal services and
employee benefits 4,252.3 582.9 4,835.2
(b) Contractual services 247.3 247.3
(c) Other 685.4 685.4
Authorized FTE: 65.00 Permanent
Performance measures:
(a) Efficiency: Length of time to issue the comprehensive annual financial
report after the end of the fiscal year, in months 7
(4) Program support:
The purpose of program support is to provide other department of finance and administration programs with central direction to agency management processes to ensure consistency, legal compliance and financial integrity to administer the executive's exempt salary plan and to review and approve all state professional service contracts.
Appropriations:
(a) Personal services and
employee benefits 1,509.5 1,509.5
(b) Contractual services 100.3 100.3
(c) Other 58.3 58.3
Authorized FTE: 19.00 Permanent
Performance measures:
(a) Outcome: Percent of funds reconciled and closed, as an internal
process, within 15 days after month-end 100%
(5) Dues and membership fees/special appropriations:
(a) Council of state governments 96.1 96.1
(b) Western interstate commission
for higher education 125.0 125.0
(c) Education commission of the
states 60.5 60.5
(d) National association of
state budget officers 15.7 15.7
(e) National conference of state
legislatures 132.1 132.1
(f) Western governors'
association 36.0 36.0
(g) Governmental accounting
standards board 15.7 15.7
(h) National center for state
courts 93.0 93.0
(i) National conference of
insurance legislators 10.0 10.0
(j) National council of legislators
from gaming states 3.0 3.0
(k) National governors'
association 80.4 80.4
(l) Citizens' review board 343.6 190.0 533.6
(m) Emergency water supply fund 127.5 127.5
(n) Fiscal agent contract 760.0 760.0
(o) State planning districts 721.7 721.7
(p) Youth mentoring program 2,377.4 2,377.4
(q) Luna county teen court 20.7 20.7
(r) Santa Fe teen court 62.0 62.0
(s) Law enforcement protection
fund 7,809.4 7,809.4
(t) Leasehold community
assistance 133.9 133.9
(u) Acequia and community ditch
education program 231.4 231.4
(v) New Mexico acequia
commission 13.9 13.9
(w) Food banks 365.5 365.5
(x) County detention of
prisoners 4,390.6 4,390.6
(y) New Mexico rodeo 70.0 70.0
(z) New Mexico mortgage finance
authority-regional housing 30.0 30.0
Notwithstanding the provisions of Section 34-16-1 NMSA 1978 or other substantive law, thirty-one thousand dollars ($31,000) is transferred from the juvenile adjudication fund to the general fund.
The general fund appropriation of thirty thousand dollars ($30,000) to the department of finance and administration in the dues and membership fees/special appropriations is for disbursement to the New Mexico mortgage finance authority to carry out the responsibilities, duties and provisions of the regional housing law.
Upon certification by the state board of finance pursuant to Section 6-1-2 NMSA 1978 that a critical emergency exists that cannot be addressed by disaster declaration or other emergency or contingency funds and on review by the legislative finance committee, the secretary of the department of finance and administration is authorized to transfer from the general fund operating reserve to the state board of finance emergency fund the amount necessary to meet the emergency. Such transfers shall not exceed an aggregate amount of one million five hundred thousand dollars ($1,500,000) in fiscal year 2011.
Subtotal [25,085.4] [49,256.7] [772.9] [14,540.3] 89,655.3
PUBLIC SCHOOL INSURANCE AUTHORITY:
(1) Benefits:
The purpose of the benefits program is to provide an effective health insurance package to educational employees and their eligible family members so they are protected against catastrophic financial losses due to medical problems, disability or death.
Appropriations:
(a) Contractual services 285,660.0 285,660.0
(b) Other financing uses 648.1 648.1
(a) Outcome: Average number of days to resolve inquiries and appeals
related to customer service claims 12
(b) Efficiency: Percent variance of medical premium change between the
public school insurance authority and industry average 0%
(c) Output: Number of participants covered by health plans 60,000
(2) Risk:
The purpose of the risk program is to provide economical and comprehensive property, liability and workers’ compensation programs to educational entities so they are protected against injury and loss.
Appropriations:
(a) Contractual services 56,694.7 56,694.7
(b) Other financing uses 648.1 648.1
(a) Outcome: Number of workers' compensation claims in the area of
ergonomics ≤65
(b) Outcome: Average cost per workers' compensation claim for current
fiscal year ≤$5,000
(3) Program support:
The purpose of program support is to provide administrative support for the benefits and risk programs and to assist the agency in delivering services to its constituents.
Appropriations:
(a) Personal services and
employee benefits 867.0 867.0
(b) Contractual services 192.6 192.6
(c) Other 236.6 236.6
Authorized FTE: 11.00 Permanent
Subtotal [343,650.9] [1,296.2] 344,947.1
RETIREE HEALTH CARE AUTHORITY:
(1) Health care benefits administration:
The purpose of the health care benefits administration program is to provide fiscally solvent core group and optional healthcare benefits and life insurance to current and future eligible retirees and their dependents so they may access covered and available core group and optional healthcare benefits and life insurance benefits when they need them.
Appropriations:
(a) Contractual services 217,911.1 217,911.1
(b) Other financing uses 2,756.5 2,756.5
(a) Output: Minimum number of years of long-term actuarial solvency 15
(b) Outcome: Total revenue generated, in millions $217.8
(c) Efficiency: Total revenue increase to the reserve fund, in millions $14
(d) Efficiency: Average monthly per-participant claim cost, non-medicare
eligible ≤$585
(e) Output: Average monthly per-participant claim cost, medicare
eligible ≤$298
(2) Program support:
The purpose of program support is to provide administrative support for the health care benefits administration program to assist the agency in delivering its services to its constituents.
Appropriations:
(a) Personal services and
employee benefits 1,713.9 1,713.9
(b) Contractual services 488.2 488.2
(c) Other 554.4 554.4
Authorized FTE: 25.00 Permanent
Any unexpended balances in program support of the retiree health care authority remaining at the end of fiscal year 2011 shall revert to the health care benefits administration program.
Subtotal [220,667.6] [2,756.5] 223,424.1
GENERAL SERVICES DEPARTMENT:
(1) Employee group health benefits:
The purpose of the employee group health benefits program is to effectively administer comprehensive health-benefit plans to state and local government employees.
Appropriations:
(a) Contractual services 20,280.0 20,280.0
(b) Other 331,167.8 331,167.8
(c) Other financing uses 1,626.7 1,626.7
(a) Efficiency: Percent change in state employee medical premium compared
with the industry average 0%
(b) Efficiency: Percent change in dental premium compared with the national
average 0%
(c) Explanatory: Percent of eligible state employees purchasing state health
insurance 90%
(2) Risk management:
The purpose of the risk management program is to protect the state’s assets against property, public liability, workers’ compensation, state unemployment compensation, local public bodies unemployment compensation and surety bond losses so that agencies can perform their missions in an efficient and responsive manner.
Appropriations:
(a) Personal services and
employee benefits 4,224.7 4,224.7
(b) Other 515.0 515.0
(c) Other financing uses 2,201.3 2,201.3
Authorized FTE: 63.00 Permanent
Performance measures:
(a) Explanatory: Projected financial position of the public property reserve
fund 50%
(b) Explanatory: Projected financial position of the workers' compensation
retention fund 20%
(3) Risk management funds:
Appropriations:
(a) Public liability 35,921.4 35,921.4
(b) Surety bond 150.3 150.3
(c) Public property reserve 8,860.1 8,860.1
(d) Local public body unemployment
compensation reserve 1,533.7 1,533.7
(e) Workers' compensation
retention 22,178.2 22,178.2
(f) State unemployment
compensation 5,809.2 5,809.2
(g) Employee assistance program 400.0 400.0
The purpose of the state printing services program is to provide quality information processing services that are both timely and cost-effective so agencies can perform their missions in an efficient and responsive manner.
Appropriations:
(a) Personal services and
employee benefits 1,178.2 1,178.2
(b) Contractual services 13.0 13.0
(c) Other 682.6 682.6
(d) Other financing uses 92.3 92.3
Authorized FTE: 18.00 Permanent
(5) Business office space management and maintenance services:
The purpose of the business office space management and maintenance services program is to provide employees and the public with effective property management so that agencies can perform their missions in an efficient and responsive manner.
Appropriations:
(a) Personal services and
employee benefits 6,910.7 136.3 7,047.0
(b) Contractual services 433.5 8.6 442.1
(c) Other 5,395.2 106.4 5,501.6
(d) Other financing uses 159.5 3.2 162.7
Authorized FTE: 165.00 Permanent
Performance measures:
(a) Explanatory: Percent of state-controlled office space occupied 95%
(b) Outcome: Annual percent reduction of greenhouse gas emissions for
state-owned buildings served by building services division
relative to fiscal year 2005 baseline ≥3%
(c) Explanatory: Percent of projects greater than one million dollars in
compliance with appropriation guidelines 100%
(d) Outcome: Percent of electricity purchased by the building services
division from renewable energy sources 90%
(6) Transportation services:
The purpose of the transportation services program is to provide centralized and effective administration of the state's motor pool and aircraft transportation services so that agencies can perform their missions in an efficient and responsive manner.
Appropriations:
(a) Personal services and
employee benefits 121.3 2,288.2 2,409.5
(b) Contractual services 4.3 80.8 85.1
(c) Other 349.2 10,564.0 10,913.2
(d) Other financing uses 18.4 348.4 366.8
Authorized FTE: 38.00 Permanent
Performance measures:
(a) Explanatory: Percent of short-term vehicle use 80%
(b) Output: Percent of cars and other light-duty vehicles purchased by
state agencies that exceed existing federal fuel efficiency
standards for passenger vehicles 100%
(c) Efficiency: Percent of total available aircraft fleet hours used 65%
(7) Procurement services:
The purpose of the procurement services program is to provide a procurement process for tangible property for government entities to ensure compliance with the Procurement Code so that agencies can perform their missions in an efficient and responsive manner.
Appropriations:
(a) Personal services and
employee benefits 1,299.9 571.8 1,871.7
(b) Other 176.0 37.2 213.2
(c) Other financing uses 70.3 16.2 86.5
Authorized FTE: 29.00 Permanent
Performance measures:
(a) Outcome: Percent of all price agreement renewals considered for
"best value" strategic sourcing option 10%
(b) Quality: Percent of customers satisfied with procurement services 90%
(c) Outcome: Number of small business clients assisted 250
(d) Output: Number of government employees trained on Procurement Code
compliance and methods 500
(8) Program support:
The purpose of program support is to manage the program performance process to demonstrate success.
Appropriations:
(a) Personal services and
employee benefits 2,750.7 2,750.7
(b) Contractual services 327.0 327.0
(c) Other 518.4 518.4
Authorized FTE: 39.00 Permanent
Any unexpended balances in program support of the general services department remaining at the end of fiscal year 2011 shall revert to the procurement services, printing services, risk management, employee group benefits, business office space management and maintenance and transportation services programs based on the proportion of the individual programs' assessments for program support.
Performance measures:
(a) Efficiency: Average number of working days to process purchase orders
and invoices PO:2/Inv:2
(b) Quality: Percent decrease of audit findings compared with audit
findings in the previous fiscal year 95%
Subtotal [14,938.3] [625.2] [453,966.5] 469,530.0
EDUCATIONAL RETIREMENT BOARD:
(1) Educational retirement:
The purpose of the educational retirement program is to provide secure retirement benefits to active and retired members so they can have secure monthly benefits when their careers are finished.
Appropriations:
(a) Personal services and
employee benefits 4,197.4 4,197.4
(b) Contractual services 21,826.7 21,826.7
(c) Other 884.2 884.2
Authorized FTE: 58.00 Permanent
The other state funds appropriation to the educational retirement program of the educational retirement board in the contractual services category includes nineteen million five hundred sixty-nine thousand six hundred dollars ($19,569,600) for investment manager and consulting fees.
The other state funds appropriation to the educational retirement program of the educational retirement board in the contractual services category includes seven hundred thousand dollars ($700,000) for payment of custody services associated with the fiscal agent contract.
Performance measures:
(a) Outcome: Funding period of unfunded actuarial accrued liability, in
years ≤30
(b) Outcome: Average rate of return over a cumulative five-year period 8%
Subtotal [26,908.3] 26,908.3
NEW MEXICO SENTENCING COMMISSION:
The purpose of the New Mexico sentencing commission is to provide information, analysis, recommendations and assistance from a coordinated cross-agency perspective to the three branches of government and interested citizens so they have the resources they need to make policy decisions that benefit the criminal and juvenile justice systems.
Appropriations:
(a) Contractual services 675.0 30.0 705.0
(b) Other 8.5 8.5
(a) Output: Percent of criminal and juvenile justice bills analyzed for
a legislative session 100%
(b) Outcome: Percent of total possible victims who receive automated
victim notification 25%
Subtotal [683.5] [30.0] 713.5
PUBLIC DEFENDER DEPARTMENT:
(1) Criminal legal services:
The purpose of the criminal legal service program is to provide effective legal representation and advocacy for eligible clients so that their liberty and constitutional rights are protected and to serve the community as a partner in assuring a fair and efficient criminal justice system that also sustains New Mexico’s statutory and constitutional mandate to adequately fund a statewide indigent defense system.
Appropriations:
(a) Personal services and
employee benefits 25,128.3 25,128.3
(b) Contractual services 10,552.2 74.4 10,626.6
(c) Other 5,593.3 165.6 5,758.9
Authorized FTE: 411.00 Permanent
Performance measures:
(a) Output: Number of alternative sentencing treatment placements for
felony and juvenile clients 4,000
(b) Efficiency: Percent of cases in which application fees were collected 35%
(c) Quality: Percent of felony cases resulting in a reduction of
original formally filed charges 37%
(d) Explanatory: Annual attorney full-time-equivalent vacancy rate 7%
Subtotal [41,273.8] [240.0] 41,513.8
GOVERNOR:
(1) Executive management and leadership:
The purpose of the executive management and leadership program is to provide appropriate management and leadership to the executive branch of government to allow for a more efficient and effective operation of the agencies within that branch of government on behalf of the citizens of the state.
Appropriations:
(a) Personal services and
employee benefits 3,357.0 3,357.0
(b) Contractual services 104.2 104.2
(c) Other 537.6 537.6
Authorized FTE: 37.30 Permanent
Subtotal [3,998.8] 3,998.8
LIEUTENANT GOVERNOR:
(1) State ombudsman:
The purpose of the state ombudsman program is to facilitate and promote cooperation and understanding between the citizens of New Mexico and the agencies of state government, refer any complaints or special problems citizens may have to the proper entities, and keep records of activities and make an annual report to the governor.
Appropriations:
(a) Personal services and
employee benefits 691.7 691.7
(b) Contractual services 33.5 33.5
(c) Other 59.4 59.4
Authorized FTE: 8.00 Permanent
Subtotal [784.6] 784.6
DEPARTMENT OF INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY:
(1) Compliance and project management:
The purpose of the compliance and project management program is to provide information technology strategic planning, oversight and consulting services to New Mexico government agencies so they can improve services provided to New Mexico citizens.
Appropriations:
(a) Personal services and
employee benefits 665.6 665.6
(b) Other 25.8 25.8
(c) Other financing uses 139.9 139.9
Authorized FTE: 7.00 Permanent
Performance measures:
(a) Outcome: Percent of executive agency certified projects reviewed
monthly for compliance and oversight requirements 100%
(b) Output: Percent of information technology projects that require and
receive a formal architecture review prior to project
implementation 100%
(2) Enterprise services:
The purpose of the enterprise services program is to provide reliable and secure infrastructure for voice, radio, video and data communications through the state’s enterprise data center and telecommunications network.
Appropriations:
(a) Personal services and
employee benefits 12,237.1 12,237.1
(b) Contractual services 8,605.5 8,605.5
(c) Other 21,871.1 21,871.1
(d) Other financing uses 9,837.8 9,837.8
Authorized FTE: 153.00 Permanent
The internal service funds/interagency transfers appropriation in the enterprise services program of the department of information technology in the other financing uses category includes six million dollars ($6,000,000) for the equipment replacement revolving funds.
Performance measures:
(a) Output: Queue-time to reach a customer service representative at
the help desk, in seconds ≤17
(b) Outcome: Percent of unscheduled downtime of the mainframe ≤.01%
(3) Equipment replacement revolving funds:
(a) Other 6,000.0 6,000.0
The internal service funds/interagency transfers appropriation in the equipment replacement revolving funds of the department of information technology in the other category includes one million three hundred thousand dollars ($1,300,000) for the statewide human resources, accounting and management reporting system equipment replacement fund and four million seven hundred thousand dollars ($4,700,000) for the enterprise services funds.
(4) Program support:
The purpose of program support is to provide management and ensure cost recovery and allocation services through leadership, policies, procedures and administrative support for the department.
Appropriations:
(a) Personal services and
employee benefits 3,221.3 3,221.3
(b) Contractual services 48.9 48.9
(c) Other 124.1 124.1
Authorized FTE: 41.00 Permanent
Performance measures:
(a) Outcome: Percent of audit corrective action plan commitments
completed on schedule 95%
(b) Outcome: Percent of mainframe services meeting federal standards for
cost recovery 100%
Subtotal [831.3] [61,945.8] 62,777.1
PUBLIC EMPLOYEES RETIREMENT ASSOCIATION:
(1) Pension administration:
The purpose of the pension administration program is to provide information, retirement benefits, and an actuarially sound fund to association members so they can receive the defined benefit they are entitled to when they retire from public service.
Appropriations:
(a) Personal services and
employee benefits 5,951.5 5,951.5
(b) Contractual services 25,305.4 25,305.4
(c) Other 1,327.4 1,327.4
Authorized FTE: 76.00 Permanent; 12.00 Term
The other state funds appropriation to the pension administration program of the public employees retirement association in the contractual services category includes twenty million eight hundred ninety-eight thousand two hundred dollars ($20,898,200) for investment manager and consulting fees.
The other state funds appropriation to the pension administration program of the public employees retirement association in the contractual services category includes two million one hundred one thousand six hundred dollars ($2,101,600) for fiscal agent custody services.
The other state funds appropriation to the pension administration program of the public employees retirement association in the contractual services category includes six hundred thousand dollars ($600,000) for investment-related legal fees.
The other state funds appropriation to the pension administration program of the public employees retirement association in the contractual services category includes eight hundred sixty-one thousand dollars ($861,000) for the retirement information online system maintenance fees.
The other state funds appropriation to the pension administration program of the public employees retirement association in the contractual services category includes one hundred thousand dollars ($100,000) for the document imaging system maintenance fees.
Performance measures:
(a) Efficiency: Average number of days to respond to requests for benefit
estimates, military buy-backs and service credit
verifications 30-40
(b) Explanatory: Number of years needed to finance the unfunded actuarial
accrued liability for the public employees retirement plans
with current statutory contribution rates ≤30
(c) Outcome: Five-year average annualized investment returns to exceed
internal benchmark, in basis points >50
(d) Outcome: Five-year annualized performance ranking in a national
survey of fifty to sixty similar large public pension plans
in the United States, as a percentile <49th
Subtotal [32,584.3] 32,584.3
STATE COMMISSION OF PUBLIC RECORDS:
(1) Records, information and archival management:
The purpose of the records, information and archival management program is to develop, implement and provide tools, methodologies and services for use by, and for the benefit of, government agencies, historical record repositories and the public so that the state can effectively create, preserve, protect and properly dispose of records, facilitate their use and understanding and protect the interests of the people of New Mexico.
Appropriations:
(a) Personal services and
employee benefits 2,367.6 62.5 8.7 2,438.8
(b) Contractual services 51.8 10.0 15.0 76.8
(c) Other 260.7 134.5 14.9 410.1
Authorized FTE: 40.00 Permanent; 2.00 Term
Performance measures:
(a) Outcome: Maximum number of days between rule effective date and
online availability 30
(b) Outcome: Percent of total records items scheduled, reviewed, amended
or replaced within a five-year period 30%
Subtotal [2,680.1] [207.0] [38.6] 2,925.7
SECRETARY OF STATE:
(1) Administration and operations:
The purpose of the administration and operations program is to provide operational services to commercial and business entities and citizens, including administration of notary public commissions, Uniform Commercial Code filings, trademark registrations and partnerships and to provide administrative services needed to carry out elections.
Appropriations:
(a) Personal services and
employee benefits 2,665.8 2,665.8
(b) Contractual services 592.4 592.4
(c) Other 247.8 450.0 697.8
Authorized FTE: 40.00 Permanent; 1.00 Temporary
Performance measures:
(a) Output: Percent of partnership registration requests processed
within the three-day statutory deadline 100%
(2) Elections:
The purpose of the elections program is to provide voter education and information on election law and government ethics to citizens, public officials and candidates so they can comply with state law.
Appropriations:
(a) Contractual services 25.0 25.0
(b) Other 1,113.4 1,113.4
(a) Outcome: Percent of eligible voters who are registered to vote 78%
(b) Outcome: Percent of campaign reports filed electronically by the due
date 98%
(c) Outcome: Percent of voting machines tested 100%
Subtotal [4,644.4] [450.0] 5,094.4
PERSONNEL BOARD:
(1) Human resource management:
The purpose of the human resource management program is to provide a flexible system of merit-based opportunity, appropriate compensation, human resource accountability and employee development that meets the evolving needs of the agencies, employees, applicants and the public, so economy and efficiency in the management of state affairs may be provided while protecting the interest of the public.
Appropriations:
(a) Personal services and
employee benefits 3,915.8 29.0 3,944.8
(b) Contractual services 28.6 28.6
(c) Other 233.0 233.0
Authorized FTE: 58.00 Permanent
Any unexpended balances remaining in the state employees' career development conference fund at the end of fiscal year 2011 shall not revert to the general fund.
Performance measures:
(a) Outcome: Average number of days to fill a vacant position 40
(b) Outcome: Percent of union grievances resolved prior to formal
arbitration 95%
(c) Outcome: Percent of new employees who successfully complete their
probationary period 85%
(d) Outcome: Number of rule compliance audit reviews performed during
the fiscal year 5
(e) Output: Percent of eligible employees with a completed performance
appraisal on record at the close of the fiscal year 99%
(f) Outcome: Number of personnel system review audits performed during
the fiscal year 4
(g) Outcome: Average employee pay as a percent of board-approved
comparator market, based on legislative authorization 100%
(h) Outcome: Percent of new hire employee turnover 25%
Subtotal [4,177.4] [29.0] 4,206.4
PUBLIC EMPLOYEES LABOR RELATIONS BOARD:
The purpose of the public employee labor relations board is to assure all state and local public body employees have the right to organize and bargain collectively with their employers or to refrain from such.
Appropriations:
(a) Personal services and
employee benefits 244.6 244.6
(b) Contractual services 4.1 4.1
(c) Other 50.1 50.1
Authorized FTE: 3.00 Permanent
Subtotal [298.8] 298.8
STATE TREASURER:
The purpose of the state treasurer program is to provide a financial environment that maintains maximum accountability for receipt and disbursement of public funds to protect the financial interests of New Mexico citizens.
Appropriations:
(a) Personal services and
employee benefits 3,221.2 3,221.2
(b) Contractual services 143.0 143.0
(c) Other 584.7 122.3 707.0
Authorized FTE: 42.00 Permanent
Performance measures:
(a) Outcome: Percent of employee development and appraisal assessments
closed out by the deadline 100%
(b) Outcome: One-year annualized investment return on local government
investment pool to exceed internal benchmark, in basis
points 5
(c) Outcome: Percent of agencies rating overall satisfaction with state
investment office services on a scale of one to seven with
a score of five or better 80%
(d) Outcome: One-year annualized investment return on general fund core
portfolio to exceed internal benchmarks, in basis points 5
(e) Outcome: Percent of employees rating their employment experience on
a scale of one to seven with a score of five or higher 80%
(f) Outcome: Percent of reconciling items cleared within thirty days of
identification 100%
(g) Outcome: Percent increase of local government investment pool
average balance over the prior fiscal year end 5%
(h) Outcome: Maximum number of audit findings 3
Subtotal [3,948.9] [122.3] 4,071.2
TOTAL GENERAL CONTROL 180,731.9 733,833.4 522,055.8 17,738.8 1,454,359.9
D. COMMERCE AND INDUSTRY
BOARD OF EXAMINERS FOR ARCHITECTS:
(1) Architectural registration:
The purpose of the architectural registration program is to provide architectural registration to approved applicants so they can practice architecture.
Appropriations:
(a) Personal services and
employee benefits 253.0 253.0
(b) Contractual services 14.4 14.4
(c) Other 94.7 94.7
Authorized FTE: 4.00 Permanent
Subtotal [362.1] 362.1
BORDER AUTHORITY:
(1) Border development:
The purpose of the border development program is to encourage and foster trade development in the state by developing port facilities and infrastructure at international ports of entry to attract new industries and business to the New Mexico border and to assist industries, businesses and the traveling public in their efficient and effective use of ports and related facilities.
Appropriations:
(a) Personal services and
employee benefits 251.2 44.2 295.4
(b) Contractual services 35.4 4.6 40.0
(c) Other 98.8 16.2 115.0
Authorized FTE: 4.00 Permanent
Performance measures:
(a) Outcome: Annual trade share of New Mexico ports within the west
Texas and New Mexico region 4.9%
Subtotal [385.4] [65.0] 450.4
TOURISM DEPARTMENT:
(1) Marketing and promotion:
The purpose of the marketing and promotion program is to produce and provide collateral, editorial and special events for the consumer and trade industry so that they may increase their awareness of New Mexico as a premier tourist destination.
Appropriations:
(a) Personal services and
employee benefits 1,677.2 1,677.2
(b) Contractual services 563.6 563.6
(c) Other 3,766.4 90.0 3,856.4
Authorized FTE: 39.50 Permanent; 1.00 Term
The general fund appropriations to the marketing and promotion program of the tourism department include four hundred thousand dollars ($400,000) in the contractual services category and two million nine hundred thousand dollars ($2,900,000) in the other category for direct marketing, promotion and advertising. Of the appropriation in the other category, one hundred thousand dollars ($100,000) shall be used on statewide advertising efforts with the state parks division of the energy, minerals and natural resources department, one hundred thousand dollars ($100,000) shall be used on statewide advertising efforts with the cultural affairs department and fifty thousand dollars ($50,000) shall be used on statewide advertising efforts to promote golf tourism.
Performance measures:
(a) Outcome: New Mexico's domestic tourism market share 1.25%
(b) Output: Print advertising conversion rate 25%
(c) Output: Broadcast conversion rate 34%
(d) Explanatory: Number of visits to visitor information centers 1,300,000
(2) Tourism development:
The purpose of the tourism development program is to provide constituent services for communities, regions and other entities so that they may identify their needs and assistance can be provided to locate resources to fill those needs, whether internal or external to the organization.
Appropriations:
(a) Personal services and
employee benefits 191.9 168.2 360.1
(b) Contractual services 96.4 84.4 180.8
(c) Other 933.1 819.6 1,752.7
Authorized FTE: 5.00 Permanent
The general fund appropriation to the tourism development program of the tourism department in the other category includes seven hundred fifty thousand dollars ($750,000) for the cooperative advertising program. Performance measures:
(a) Outcome: Number of partnered cooperative advertising applications
received 21
(3) New Mexico magazine:
The purpose of the New Mexico magazine is to produce a monthly magazine and ancillary products for a state and global audience so that the audience can learn about New Mexico from cultural, historical and educational perspectives.
Appropriations:
(a) Personal services and
employee benefits 1,194.8 1,194.8
(b) Contractual services 923.4 923.4
(c) Other 2,221.1 2,221.1
Authorized FTE: 17.00 Permanent
Performance measures:
(a) Outcome: Circulation rate 90,000
(b) Output: Advertising revenue per issue, in thousands $105
(c) Output: Collection rate 99.2%
(4) Sports authority:
The purpose of the sports authority program is to recruit new events and retain existing events of professional and amateur sports to advance the economy and tourism in the state.
Appropriations:
(a) Personal services and
employee benefits 170.2 170.2
(b) Contractual services 15.9 15.9
(c) Other 57.5 57.5
Authorized FTE: 2.00 Permanent
Performance measures:
(a) Outcome: Number of new major sporting events attracted to New Mexico 1
(b) Outcome: Number of new minor sporting events attracted to New Mexico 10
(5) Program support:
The purpose of program support is to provide administrative assistance to support the department’s programs and personnel so they may be successful in implementing and reaching their strategic initiatives and maintaining full compliance with state rules and regulations.
Appropriations:
(a) Personal services and
employee benefits 1,185.0 1,185.0
(b) Contractual services 28.5 28.5
(c) Other 441.7 441.7
Authorized FTE: 17.00 Permanent
Subtotal [9,127.4] [4,429.3] [1,072.2] 14,628.9
ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT DEPARTMENT:
(1) Economic development:
The purpose of the economic development program is to assist communities in preparing for their role in the new economy, focusing on high-quality job creation and improved infrastructure so New Mexicans can increase their wealth and improve their quality of life.
Appropriations:
(a) Personal services and
employee benefits 1,875.4 1,875.4
(b) Contractual services 1,186.3 1,186.3
(c) Other 172.3 172.3
Authorized FTE: 26.00 Permanent
The general fund appropriation to the economic development program of the economic development department in the contractual services category includes one hundred thousand dollars ($100,000) for performance excellence training, assessment services and assistance to businesses using Baldridge criteria.
Performance measures:
(a) Outcome: Percent of employees whose wages were subsidized by the job
training incentive program still employed by the company
after one year 60%
(b) Outcome: Total number of jobs created due to economic development
department efforts 4,500
(c) Outcome: Total number of rural jobs created 1,500
(d) Outcome: Total number of jobs created through business relocations
facilitated by the economic development partnership 3,000
(e) Outcome: Number of jobs created by mainstreet 570
(2) Film:
The purpose of the film program is to maintain the core business for film location services and stimulate growth in digital film media to maintain the economic vitality of the New Mexico film industry.
Appropriations:
(a) Personal services and
employee benefits 888.4 888.4
(b) Contractual services 121.4 121.4
(c) Other 155.3 155.3
Authorized FTE: 11.00 Permanent
Performance measures:
(a) Output: Number of media industry worker days 177,000
(3) Mexican affairs:
The purpose of the Mexican affairs program is to produce new high-paying employment opportunities for New Mexicans so they can increase their wealth and improve their quality of life.
Appropriations:
(a) Personal services and
employee benefits 200.7 200.7
(b) Contractual services 70.3 70.3
(c) Other 80.3 80.3
Authorized FTE: 4.00 Permanent
Performance measures:
(a) Output: Number of jobs created by maquiladora suppliers 230
(4) Technology commercialization:
The purpose of the technology commercialization program is to increase the start-up, relocation and growth of technology-based business in New Mexico to give New Mexicans the opportunity for high-paying jobs.
Appropriations:
(a) Personal services and
employee benefits 83.5 83.5
(b) Contractual services 6.2 6.2
(c) Other 19.1 19.1
Authorized FTE: 2.00 Permanent
Performance measures:
(a) Outcome: Amount of investment as a result of office of science and
technology efforts, in millions $10
(b) Output: Number of new angel investors found as a result of office
of science and technology efforts 18
(5) Program support:
The purpose of program support is to provide central direction to agency management processes and fiscal support to agency programs to ensure consistency, continuity and legal compliance.
Appropriations:
(a) Personal services and
employee benefits 1,700.9 1,700.9
(b) Contractual services 1,322.5 1,322.5
(c) Other 250.9 250.9
Authorized FTE: 22.00 Permanent
Subtotal [8,133.5] 8,133.5
REGULATION AND LICENSING DEPARTMENT:
(1) Construction industries and manufactured housing:
The purpose of the construction industries and manufactured housing program is to provide code compliance oversight; issue licenses, permits and citations; perform inspections; administer exams; process complaints; and enforce laws and rules relating to general construction and manufactured housing standards to industry professionals.
Appropriations:
(a) Personal services and
employee benefits 7,340.9 7,340.9
(b) Contractual services 54.3 54.3
(c) Other 1,292.4 100.0 250.0 107.0 1,749.4
Authorized FTE: 131.00 Permanent; 3.00 Term
Performance measures:
(a) Output: Percent of consumer complaint cases resolved out of the
total number of complaints filed 96%
(b) Efficiency: Percent of all inspections performed, including
installations of manufactured homes in the field, within
seven days of inspection request 70%
(2) Financial institutions and securities:
The purpose of the financial institutions and securities program is to issue charters and licenses, perform examinations, investigate complaints, enforce laws and rules and promote investor protection and confidence so that capital formation is maximized and a secure financial infrastructure is available to support economic development.
Appropriations:
(a) Personal services and
employee benefits 2,506.9 512.3 3,019.2
(b) Contractual services 28.1 175.3 203.4
(c) Other 238.0 167.9 405.9
Authorized FTE: 46.00 Permanent
Performance measures:
(a) Outcome: Percent of statutorily complete applications processed
within a standard number of days by type of application 95%
(b) Outcome: Percent of examination reports mailed to a depository
institution within thirty days of exit from the institution
or the exit conference meeting 95%
(3) Alcohol and gaming:
The purpose of the alcohol and gaming program is to regulate the sale, service and public consumption of alcoholic beverages and, in cooperation with the department of public safety, enforce the Liquor Control Act to protect the health, safety and welfare of the citizens of and visitors to New Mexico.
Appropriations:
(a) Personal services and
employee benefits 831.1 831.1
(b) Contractual services 44.8 44.8
(c) Other 45.1 45.1
Authorized FTE: 16.00 Permanent
Performance measures:
(a) Output: Number of days to resolve an administrative citation that
does not require a hearing 30
(b) Outcome: Number of days to issue a restaurant (beer and wine) liquor
license 120
(4) Program support:
The purpose of program support is to provide leadership and centralized direction, financial management, information systems support and human resources support for all agency organizations in compliance with governing regulations, statutes and procedures so they can license qualified applicants, verify compliance with statutes and resolve or mediate consumer complaints.
Appropriations:
(a) Personal services and
employee benefits 1,669.9 839.8 2,509.7
(b) Contractual services 26.0 206.3 232.3
(c) Other 205.3 388.0 593.3
Authorized FTE: 33.70 Permanent; 3.00 Term
(5) New Mexico public accountancy board:
The purpose of the public accountancy board program is to provide efficient licensing, compliance and regulatory services to protect the public by ensuring that licensed professionals are qualified to practice.
Appropriations:
(a) Personal services and
employee benefits 298.0 298.0
(b) Contractual services 17.0 17.0
(c) Other 125.3 125.3
(d) Other financing uses 69.3 69.3
Authorized FTE: 5.00 Permanent
(6) Board of acupuncture and oriental medicine:
The purpose of the acupuncture and oriental medicine board program is to provide efficient licensing, compliance and regulatory services to protect the public by ensuring that licensed professionals are qualified to practice.
Appropriations:
(a) Personal services and
employee benefits 168.2 168.2
(b) Contractual services 19.2 19.2
(c) Other 21.0 21.0
(d) Other financing uses 17.7 17.7
Authorized FTE: 3.20 Permanent
(7) New Mexico athletic commission:
The purpose of the New Mexico athletic commission program is to provide efficient licensing, compliance and regulatory services to protect the public by ensuring that licensed professionals are qualified to practice.
Appropriations:
(a) Personal services and
employee benefits 78.2 78.2
(b) Contractual services 9.0 9.0
(c) Other 29.0 29.0
(d) Other financing uses 24.6 24.6
Authorized FTE: 1.00 Permanent
(8) Athletic trainer practice board:
The purpose of the athletic trainers practice board program is to provide efficient licensing, compliance and regulatory services to protect the public by ensuring that licensed professionals are qualified to practice.
Appropriations:
(a) Personal services and
employee benefits 11.0 11.0
(b) Contractual services 0.5 0.5
(c) Other 5.0 5.0
(d) Other financing uses 4.5 4.5
(9) Board of barbers and cosmetologists:
The purpose of the barbers and cosmetology board program is to provide efficient licensing, compliance and regulatory services to protect the public by ensuring that licensed professionals are qualified to practice.
Appropriations:
(a) Personal services and
employee benefits 606.5 606.5
(b) Contractual services 45.0 45.0
(c) Other 102.0 102.0
(d) Other financing uses 148.4 148.4
Authorized FTE: 11.90 Permanent
(10) Chiropractic board:
The purpose of the chiropractic board program is to provide efficient licensing, compliance and regulatory services to protect the public by ensuring that licensed professionals are qualified to practice.
Appropriations:
(a) Personal services and
employee benefits 122.0 122.0
(b) Contractual services 1.6 1.6
(c) Other 17.8 17.8
(d) Other financing uses 20.0 20.0
Authorized FTE: 2.10 Permanent
(11) Counseling and therapy practice board:
The purpose of the counseling and therapy practice board program is to provide efficient licensing, compliance and regulatory services to protect the public by ensuring that licensed professionals are qualified to practice.
Appropriations:
(a) Personal services and
employee benefits 248.0 248.0
(b) Contractual services 15.5 15.5
(c) Other 84.4 84.4
(d) Other financing uses 68.7 68.7
Authorized FTE: 5.90 Permanent
(12) New Mexico board of dental health care:
The purpose of the dental health care board program is to provide efficient licensing, compliance and regulatory services to protect the public by ensuring that licensed professionals are qualified to practice.
Appropriations:
(a) Personal services and
employee benefits 271.0 271.0
(b) Contractual services 22.0 22.0
(c) Other 64.2 64.2
(d) Other financing uses 67.3 67.3
Authorized FTE: 4.90 Permanent
(13) Interior design board:
The purpose of the interior design board program is to provide efficient licensing, compliance and regulatory services to protect the public by ensuring that licensed professionals are qualified to practice.
Appropriations:
(a) Personal services and
employee benefits 11.0 11.0
(b) Other 9.1 9.1
(c) Other financing uses 8.3 8.3
(14) Board of landscape architects:
The purpose of the landscape architects board program is to provide efficient licensing, compliance and regulatory services to protect the public by ensuring that licensed professionals are qualified to practice.
Appropriations:
(a) Personal services and
employee benefits 15.7 15.7
(b) Contractual services 1.0 1.0
(c) Other 10.2 10.2
(d) Other financing uses 6.2 6.2
The purpose of the massage therapy board program is to provide efficient licensing, compliance and regulatory services to protect the public by ensuring that licensed professionals are qualified to practice.
Appropriations:
(a) Personal services and
employee benefits 158.4 158.4
(b) Contractual services 17.0 17.0
(c) Other 45.4 45.4
(d) Other financing uses 39.5 39.5
Authorized FTE: 3.50 Permanent
(16) Board of nursing home administrators:
The purpose of the nursing home administrators board program is to provide efficient licensing, compliance and regulatory services to protect the public by ensuring that licensed professionals are qualified to practice.
Appropriations:
(a) Personal services and
employee benefits 25.9 25.9
(b) Contractual services 0.2 0.2
(c) Other 8.2 8.2
(d) Other financing uses 8.9 8.9
(17) Nutrition and dietetics practice board:
The purpose of the nutrition and dietetics practice board program is to provide efficient licensing, compliance and regulatory services to protect the public by ensuring that licensed professionals are qualified to practice.
Appropriations:
(a) Personal services and
employee benefits 20.2 20.2
(b) Other 10.2 10.2
(c) Other financing uses 4.8 4.8
(18) Board of examiners for occupational therapy:
The purpose of the examiners for occupational therapy board program is to provide efficient licensing, compliance and regulatory services to protect the public by ensuring that licensed professionals are qualified to practice.
Appropriations:
(a) Personal services and
employee benefits 46.2 46.2
(b) Contractual services 2.0 2.0
(c) Other 15.2 15.2
(d) Other financing uses 10.9 10.9
(19) Board of optometry:
The purpose of the optometry board program is to provide efficient licensing, compliance and regulatory services to protect the public by ensuring that licensed professionals are qualified to practice.
Appropriations:
(a) Personal services and
employee benefits 36.3 36.3
(b) Contractual services 11.5 11.5
(c) Other 12.9 12.9
(d) Other financing uses 11.0 11.0
(20) Board of osteopathic medical examiners:
The purpose of the osteopathic medical examiners board program is to provide efficient licensing, compliance and regulatory services to protect the public by ensuring that licensed professionals are qualified to practice.
Appropriations:
(a) Personal services and
employee benefits 44.6 44.6
(b) Contractual services 2.0 2.0
(c) Other 24.3 24.3
(d) Other financing uses 9.9 9.9
Authorized FTE: 1.00 Permanent
(21) Board of pharmacy:
The purpose of the pharmacy board program is to provide efficient licensing, compliance and regulatory services to protect the public by ensuring that licensed professionals are qualified to practice.
Appropriations:
(a) Personal services and
employee benefits 1,004.2 1,004.2
(b) Contractual services 20.5 20.5
(c) Other 242.3 242.3
(d) Other financing uses 265.3 265.3
Authorized FTE: 12.00 Permanent
(22) Physical therapy board:
The purpose of the physical therapy board program is to provide efficient licensing, compliance and regulatory services to protect the public by ensuring that licensed professionals are qualified to practice.
Appropriations:
(a) Personal services and
employee benefits 84.3 84.3
(b) Contractual services 3.0 3.0
(c) Other 26.4 26.4
(d) Other financing uses 20.7 20.7
The purpose of the podiatry board program is to provide efficient licensing, compliance and regulatory services to protect the public by ensuring that licensed professionals are qualified to practice.
Appropriations:
(a) Personal services and
employee benefits 18.8 18.8
(b) Contractual services 0.5 0.5
(c) Other 10.3 10.3
(d) Other financing uses 5.3 5.3
(24) Private investigations advisory board:
The purpose of the private investigations advisory board program is to provide efficient licensing, compliance and regulatory services to protect the public by ensuring that licensed professionals are qualified to practice.
Appropriations:
(a) Personal services and
employee benefits 89.0 89.0
(b) Contractual services 5.0 5.0
(c) Other 27.3 27.3
(d) Other financing uses 25.5 25.5
Authorized FTE: 1.40 Permanent
(25) New Mexico state board of psychologist examiners:
The purpose of the psychologist examiners board program is to provide efficient licensing, compliance and regulatory services to protect the public by ensuring that licensed professionals are qualified to practice.
Appropriations:
(a) Personal services and
employee benefits 118.7 118.7
(b) Contractual services 20.0 20.0
(c) Other 38.1 38.1
(d) Other financing uses 36.0 36.0
Authorized FTE: 2.30 Permanent
(26) Real estate appraisers board:
The purpose of the real estate appraisers board program is to provide efficient licensing, compliance and regulatory services to protect the public by ensuring that licensed professionals are qualified to practice.
Appropriations:
(a) Personal services and
employee benefits 110.2 110.2
(b) Contractual services 11.5 11.5
(c) Other 30.6 30.6
(d) Other financing uses 28.0 28.0
Authorized FTE: 2.10 Permanent
(27) New Mexico real estate commission:
The purpose of the real estate commission program is to provide efficient licensing, compliance and regulatory services to protect the public by ensuring that licensed professionals are qualified to practice.
Appropriations:
(a) Personal services and
employee benefits 604.7 604.7
(b) Contractual services 251.5 251.5
(c) Other 244.8 244.8
(d) Other financing uses 364.2 364.2
Authorized FTE: 9.00 Permanent
(28) Advisory board of respiratory care practitioners:
The purpose of the respiratory care practitioners advisory board program is to provide efficient licensing, compliance and regulatory services to protect the public by ensuring that licensed professionals are qualified to practice.
Appropriations:
(a) Personal services and
employee benefits 51.3 51.3
(b) Other 5.8 5.8
(c) Other financing uses 11.2 11.2
(29) Board of social work examiners:
The purpose of the social work examiners board program is to provide efficient licensing, compliance and regulatory services to protect the public by ensuring that licensed professionals are qualified to practice.
Appropriations:
(a) Personal services and
employee benefits 241.5 241.5
(b) Contractual services 7.3 7.3
(c) Other 69.1 69.1
(d) Other financing uses 52.4 52.4
Authorized FTE: 5.00 Permanent
(30) Speech language pathology, audiology and hearing aid dispensing practices board:
The purpose of the speech language pathology, audiology and hearing aid dispensing practices board program is to provide efficient licensing, compliance and regulatory services to protect the public by ensuring that licensed professionals are qualified to practice.
Appropriations:
(a) Personal services and
employee benefits 119.0 119.0
(b) Contractual services 7.7 7.7
(c) Other 19.2 19.2
(d) Other financing uses 24.9 24.9
Authorized FTE: 2.00 Permanent
(31) Board of thanatopractice:
The purpose of the thanatopractice board program is to provide efficient licensing, compliance and regulatory services to protect the public by ensuring that licensed professionals are qualified to practice.
Appropriations:
(a) Personal services and
employee benefits 82.7 82.7
(b) Contractual services 7.9 7.9
(c) Other 33.4 33.4
(d) Other financing uses 19.7 19.7
Authorized FTE: 1.80 Permanent
(32) Naprapathic practice board:
The purpose of the naprapathic practice board program is to provide efficient licensing, compliance and regulatory services to protect the public by ensuring that licensed professionals are qualified to practice.
Appropriations:
(a) Other 5.4 5.4
(33) Animal sheltering services board:
The purpose of the animal sheltering board program is to provide efficient licensing, compliance and regulatory services to protect the public by ensuring that licensed professionals are qualified to practice.
Appropriations:
(a) Personal services and
employee benefits 58.8 58.8
(b) Contractual services 26.2 26.2
(c) Other 6.1 6.1
Authorized FTE: 2.00 Permanent
(34) Signed language interpreting practices board:
The purpose of the signed language interpreting practices board program is to provide efficient licensing, compliance and regulatory services to protect the public by ensuring that licensed professionals are qualified to practice.
Appropriations:
(a) Personal services and
employee benefits 49.6 42.9 92.5
(b) Contractual services 8.0 8.0
(c) Other 39.0 39.0
(d) Other financing uses 20.9 20.9
Authorized FTE: 1.40 Permanent
Subtotal [14,373.9] [8,899.2] [1,794.9] [107.0] 25,175.0
PUBLIC REGULATION COMMISSION:
(1) Policy and regulation:
The purpose of the policy and regulation program is to fulfill the constitutional and legislative mandates regarding regulated industries through rulemaking, adjudications and policy initiatives to ensure the provisions of adequate and reliable services at fair, just and reasonable rates so that the interests of the consumers and regulated industries are balanced to promote and protect the public interest.
Appropriations:
(a) Personal services and
employee benefits 6,161.0 479.0 6,640.0
(b) Contractual services 205.3 205.3
(c) Other 745.2 745.2
Authorized FTE: 83.70 Permanent
The internal service funds/interagency transfers appropriation to the policy and regulation program of the public regulation commission in the personal services and employee benefits category includes one hundred fourteen thousand one hundred dollars ($114,100) from the pipeline safety fund, two hundred nineteen thousand nine hundred dollars ($219,900) from the insurance operations fund, seventy thousand dollars ($70,000) from the patient's compensation fund, twenty-five thousand dollars ($25,000) from the fire protection fund and fifty thousand dollars ($50,000) from the public regulation commission reproduction fund.
Performance measures:
(a) Efficiency: Average number of days for a rate case to reach final order <210
(b) Outcome: Comparison of average commercial electric rates between
major New Mexico utilities and selected utilities in
regional western states +/-4%
(c) Explanatory: The amount of kilowatt hours of renewable energy provided
annually by New Mexico's electric utilities, measured as a
percent of total retail kilowatt hours sold by New Mexico's
electric utilities to New Mexico's retail electric utility
customers 6%
(d) Explanatory: Comparison of average residential electric rates between
major New Mexico utilities and selected utilities in
regional western states +/-5%
(2) Insurance policy:
The purpose of the insurance policy program is to assure easy public access to reliable insurance products that meet consumers' needs and are underwritten by dependable, reputable, financially sound companies that charge fair rates and are represented by trustworthy, qualified agents, while promoting a positive competitive business climate.
Appropriations:
(a) Personal services and
employee benefits 5,797.1 5,797.1
(b) Contractual services 327.5 327.5
(c) Other 658.5 658.5
Authorized FTE: 86.00 Permanent
The internal service funds/interagency transfers appropriations to the insurance policy program of the public regulation commission include forty-two thousand eight hundred dollars ($42,800) from the title insurance maintenance assessment fund, one hundred three thousand six hundred dollars ($103,600) from the insurance fraud fund, two hundred forty-two thousand dollars ($242,000) from the patient’s compensation fund, and five million sixteen thousand five hundred dollars ($5,016,500) from the insurance operations fund.
The internal service funds/interagency transfers appropriations to the insurance policy program of the public regulation commission include one million sixty-two thousand six hundred dollars ($1,062,600) for the insurance fraud bureau from the insurance fraud fund.
The internal service funds/interagency transfers appropriations to the insurance policy program of the public regulation commission include three hundred fifteen thousand six hundred dollars ($315,600) for the title insurance bureau from the title insurance maintenance assessment fund.
Performance measures:
(a) Output: Percent of internal and external insurance-related
grievances closed within one hundred eighty days of filing 97%
(b) Efficiency: Percent of insurance fraud bureau complaints processed and
recommended for either further administrative action or
closure within sixty days 86%
(3) Public safety:
The purpose of the public safety program is to provide services and resources to the appropriate entities to enhance their ability to protect the public from fire and pipeline hazards and other risk as assigned to the public regulation commission.
Appropriations:
(a) Personal services and
employee benefits 3,255.5 354.4 3,609.9
(b) Contractual services 345.0 14.0 359.0
(c) Other 1,597.7 205.1 1,802.8
Authorized FTE: 53.30 Permanent; 1.00 Term
The internal service funds/interagency transfers appropriations to the public safety program of the public regulation commission include two million five hundred thirty-six thousand eight hundred dollars ($2,536,800) for the office of the state fire marshal from the fire protection fund.
The internal service funds/interagency transfers appropriations to the public safety program of the public regulation commission include one million six hundred seventy thousand dollars ($1,670,000) for the firefighter training academy from the fire protection fund.
The internal service funds/interagency transfers appropriations to the public safety program of the public regulation commission include nine hundred thirty thousand dollars ($930,000) for the pipeline safety bureau from the pipeline safety fund.
Performance measures:
(a) Output: Number of personnel completing training through the state
firefighter training academy 4,050
(b) Outcome: Percent of fire departments' insurance service office
ratings of nine or ten that have been reviewed by survey or
audit 96%
(c) Outcome: Percent of statewide fire districts with insurance office
ratings of eight or better 65%
(4) Program support:
The purpose of program support is to provide administrative support and direction to ensure consistency, compliance, financial integrity and fulfillment of the agency mission.
Appropriations:
(a) Personal services and
employee benefits 2,317.0 667.6 2,984.6
(b) Contractual services 94.5 94.5
(c) Other 436.9 436.9
Authorized FTE: 49.00 Permanent
The internal service funds/interagency transfers appropriations to program support of the public regulation commission include ninety-three thousand four hundred dollars ($93,400) from the insurance fraud fund, three hundred thirty-six thousand dollars ($336,000) from the fire protection fund, forty-four thousand dollars ($44,000) from the title insurance maintenance assessment fund, sixty-five thousand dollars ($65,000) from the public regulation commission reproduction fund, ninety-nine thousand two hundred dollars ($99,200) from the patient's compensation fund and thirty thousand dollars ($30,000) from the insurance operations fund.
(5) Patient’s compensation fund:
(a) Personal services and
employee benefits 62.9 62.9
(b) Contractual services 435.0 435.0
(c) Other 10,050.0 10,050.0
(d) Other financing uses 281.3 281.3
Subtotal [9,959.9] [10,829.2] [13,127.9] [573.5] 34,490.5
MEDICAL BOARD:
(1) Licensing and certification:
The purpose of the licensing and certification program is to provide regulation and licensure to healthcare providers regulated by the New Mexico medical board and to ensure competent and ethical medical care to consumers.
Appropriations:
(a) Personal services and
employee benefits 1,043.5 1,043.5
(b) Contractual services 311.5 311.5
(c) Other 298.7 298.7
Authorized FTE: 14.00 Permanent
Performance measures:
(a) Output: Number of tri-annual physician licenses issued or renewed 3,100
(b) Output: Number of biennial physician assistant licenses issued or
renewed 230
(c) Outcome: Number of days to issue a physician license 80
Subtotal [1,653.7] 1,653.7
BOARD OF NURSING:
(1) Licensing and certification:
The purpose of the licensing and certification program is to provide regulations to nurses, hemodialysis technicians, medication aides and their education and training programs so they provide competent and professional healthcare services to consumers.
Appropriations:
(a) Personal services and
employee benefits 1,163.3 1,163.3
(b) Contractual services 222.9 222.9
(c) Other 981.6 981.6
Authorized FTE: 19.00 Permanent
Performance measures:
(a) Quality: Number of licenses issued 14,000
(b) Efficiency: Number of months to resolution of disciplinary matter 6
(c) Efficiency: Number of days to issue a nurse license 14
Subtotal [2,367.8] 2,367.8
NEW MEXICO STATE FAIR:
The purpose of the state fair program is to promote the New Mexico state fair as a year-round operation with venues, events and facilities that provide for greater use of the assets of the agency.
Appropriations:
(a) Personal services and
employee benefits 90.0 6,394.9 6,484.9
(b) Contractual services 215.0 3,418.1 3,633.1
(c) Other 90.0 2,980.5 695.0 3,765.5
Authorized FTE: 73.00 Permanent
The internal service funds/interagency transfers appropriation to the New Mexico state fair in the other category includes six hundred ninety-five thousand dollars ($695,000) from parimutuel revenues for debt service on negotiable bonds issued for capital improvements.
The general fund appropriations to the New Mexico state fair include three hundred ninety-five thousand dollars ($395,000) for the operation of the African-American performing arts center and exhibit hall at the New Mexico state fair.
Performance measures:
(a) Outcome: Percent of surveyed attendees at the annual state fair
event rating their experience as satisfactory or better 90%
(b) Output: Number of paid attendees at annual state fair event 500,000
(c) Output: Percent of surveyed attendees at the annual state fair
event indicating the state fair has improved 45%
(d) Output: Number of total attendees at annual state fair event 650,000
Subtotal [395.0] [12,793.5] [695.0] 13,883.5
STATE BOARD OF LICENSURE FOR PROFESSIONAL
ENGINEERS AND PROFESSIONAL SURVEYORS:
(1) Regulation and licensing:
The purpose of the regulation and licensing program is to regulate the practices of engineering and surveying in the state as they relate to the welfare of the public in safeguarding life, health and property and to provide consumers with licensed professional engineers and licensed professional surveyors.
Appropriations:
(a) Personal services and
employee benefits 511.1 511.1
(b) Contractual services 64.6 64.6
(c) Other 222.6 222.6
Authorized FTE: 7.00 Permanent
Performance measures:
(a) Output: Number of licenses or certifications issued 800
Subtotal [798.3] 798.3
GAMING CONTROL BOARD:
(1) Gaming control:
The purpose of the gaming control board program is to provide strictly regulated gaming activities and to promote responsible gaming to the citizens of New Mexico so they can attain a strong level of confidence in the board's administration of gambling laws and assurance that the state has competitive gaming that is free from criminal and corruptive elements and influences.
Appropriations:
(a) Personal services and
employee benefits 4,049.9 4,049.9
(b) Contractual services 731.9 731.9
(c) Other 1,067.2 1,067.2
Authorized FTE: 63.00 Permanent; .50 Temporary
Performance measures:
(a) Quality: Percent of time central monitoring system is operational 100%
(b) Output: Percent variance identified between actual tribal quarterly
payments to the state and the audited revenue sharing as
calculated by the gaming control board for the current
calendar year <10%
(c) Outcome: Ratio of gaming revenue generated to general funds expended 28:1
Subtotal [5,849.0] 5,849.0
STATE RACING COMMISSION:
(1) Horseracing regulation:
The purpose of the horse racing regulation program is to provide regulation in an equitable manner to New Mexico’s parimutuel horse racing industry and to protect the interest of wagering patrons and the state of New Mexico in a manner that promotes a climate of economic prosperity for horsemen, horse owners and racetrack management.
Appropriations:
(a) Personal services and
employee benefits 1,227.9 1,227.9
(b) Contractual services 749.5 749.5
(c) Other 202.0 202.0
Authorized FTE: 17.30 Permanent; .60 Term; 1.80 Temporary
Performance measures:
(a) Outcome: Percent of equine samples testing positive for illegal
substances 0.8%
(b) Output: Total amount collected from parimutuel revenues, in millions $0.9
Subtotal [2,179.4] 2,179.4
BOARD OF VETERINARY MEDICINE:
(1) Veterinary licensing and regulatory:
The purpose of the veterinary licensing and regulatory program is to regulate the profession of veterinary medicine in accordance with the Veterinary Practice Act and to promote continuous improvement in veterinary practices and management in order to protect the public.
Appropriations:
(a) Personal services and
employee benefits 149.4 149.4
(b) Contractual services 127.0 127.0
(c) Other 53.5 53.5
Authorized FTE: 3.00 Permanent
Performance measures:
(a) Output: Number of veterinarian licenses issued annually 31
Subtotal [329.9] 329.9
CUMBRES AND TOLTEC SCENIC RAILROAD COMMISSION:
The purpose of the Cumbres and Toltec scenic railroad commission is to provide railroad excursions through, into and over the scenic San Juan mountains.
Appropriations:
(a) Personal services and
employee benefits 55.0 64.1 119.1
(b) Contractual services 7.0 3,553.3 3,560.3
(c) Other 32.2 40.0 72.2
Authorized FTE: 2.90 Permanent
Any revenues generated by the Cumbres and Toltec scenic railroad commission in fiscal year 2011, such as ticket sales, are appropriated to the Cumbres and Toltec scenic railroad commission for use toward operating expenses of the railroad.
Subtotal [94.2] [3,657.4] 3,751.6
OFFICE OF MILITARY BASE PLANNING AND SUPPORT:
The purpose of the office of military base planning and support is to provide advice to the governor and lieutenant governor on New Mexico's four military installations, to work with community support groups, to ensure that state initiatives are complementary of community actions and to identify and address appropriate state-level issues that will contribute to the long-term viability of New Mexico military installations.
Appropriations:
(a) Personal services and
employee benefits 110.4 110.4
(b) Contractual services 8.5 8.5
(c) Other 18.5 18.5
Subtotal [137.4] 137.4
SPACEPORT AUTHORITY:
The purpose of the spaceport authority is to finance, design, develop, construct, equip and safely operate spaceport America and thereby generate significant high technology economic development throughout the state.
Appropriations:
(a) Personal services and
employee benefits 789.9 789.9
(b) Contractual services 194.1 194.1
(c) Other 190.5 190.5
Authorized FTE: 9.00 Permanent
Performance measures:
(a) Outcome: Annual aerospace jobs created due to spaceport authority
efforts 200
Subtotal [1,174.5] 1,174.5
TOTAL COMMERCE AND INDUSTRY 51,809.6 46,185.4 16,690.0 680.5 115,365.5
E. AGRICULTURE, ENERGY AND NATURAL RESOURCES
CULTURAL AFFAIRS DEPARTMENT:
(1) Museums and monuments:
The purpose of the museums and monuments program is to develop and enhance the quality of state museums and monuments by providing the highest standards in exhibitions, performances and programs showcasing the arts, history and science of New Mexico and cultural traditions worldwide.
Appropriations:
(a) Personal services and
employee benefits 15,421.6 2,452.7 91.9 17,966.2
(b) Contractual services 518.5 537.7 190.0 1,246.2
(c) Other 4,445.9 1,379.7 15.0 5,840.6
Authorized FTE: 322.00 Permanent; 39.00 Term
The general fund appropriations to the museums and monuments program of the cultural affairs department includes thirty thousand dollars ($30,000) for the Taylor Reynolds Barela Mesilla state monument. Performance measures:
(a) Output: Attendance to museum and monument exhibitions,
performances, films and other presenting programs 845,000
(b) Output: Number of participants to off-site educational, outreach
and special events related to museum missions 185,000
(c) Output: Number of participants at on-site educational, outreach and
special events related to museum missions 320,000
(2) Preservation:
The purpose of the preservation program is to identify, study and protect New Mexico's unique cultural resources, including its archaeological sites, architectural and engineering achievements, cultural landscapes and diverse heritage.
Appropriations:
(a) Personal services and
employee benefits 737.3 1,479.7 1,211.9 816.9 4,245.8
(b) Contractual services 12.0 14.9 182.9 60.0 269.8
(c) Other 106.1 179.4 163.3 75.7 524.5
Authorized FTE: 31.00 Permanent; 29.50 Term; 6.00 Temporary
The internal service funds/interagency transfers appropriations to the preservation program of the cultural affairs department include one million dollars ($1,000,000) from the department of transportation for archaeological studies related to highway projects.
Performance measures:
(a) Output: Number of participants in educational, outreach and special
events related to preservation mission 15,000
(b) Output: Annually completed number of historic structures preserved,
using preservation tax credits 48
(c) Output: Dollar value of construction underway on historic buildings
using state and federal tax credits, in millions $5
(3) Library services:
The purpose of the library services program is to empower libraries to support the educational, economic and health goals of their communities and to deliver direct library and information services to those who need them.
Appropriations:
(a) Personal services and
employee benefits 2,071.1 720.8 2,791.9
(b) Contractual services 750.6 46.8 425.0 1,222.4
(c) Other 1,149.7 35.0 636.2 1,820.9
Authorized FTE: 39.00 Permanent; 13.00 Term
Performance measures:
(a) Output: Total number of library materials catalogued in systemwide
access to libraries in state agencies and keystone library
automation system online databases, available through the
internet 900,000
(b) Output: Number of participants in educational, outreach and special
events related to library mission 19,500
(4) Arts:
The purpose of the arts program is to preserve, enhance and develop the arts in New Mexico through partnerships, public awareness and education.
Appropriations:
(a) Personal services and
employee benefits 861.6 145.1 1,006.7
(b) Contractual services 860.3 406.9 1,267.2
(c) Other 129.6 1.1 130.7
Authorized FTE: 11.50 Permanent; 4.50 Term
Performance measures:
(a) Output: Number of clients provided professional development
training in arts industry 3,450
(b) Output: Attendance at programs provided by arts organizations
statewide, funded by New Mexico arts from recurring
appropriations 1,200,000
(c) Output: Number of musicians, music groups and businesses supporting
the music industry who have registered on nmmusic.org
website 1,250
(d) Output: Number of participants in educational and outreach programs
and workshops, including participants from rural areas 3,000
(5) Program support:
The purpose of program support is to deliver effective, efficient, high-quality services in concert with the core agenda of the governor.
Appropriations:
(a) Personal services and
employee benefits 2,987.8 112.0 3,099.8
(b) Contractual services 660.6 26.9 687.5
(c) Other 162.5 117.6 280.1
Authorized FTE: 42.70 Permanent; 2.00 Temporary
Any unexpended balances in the cultural affairs department remaining at the end of fiscal year 2011 from appropriations made from the general fund shall not revert.
The general fund appropriation to program support of the cultural affairs department in the contractual services category includes two hundred sixty-five thousand dollars ($265,000) for the New Mexico centennial.
Performance measures:
(a) Outcome: Percent of performance targets in the General Appropriation
Act, met (excluding this measure) 80%
(b) Output: Percent of department supervisory and managerial staff that
completes targeted professional development training 5%
Subtotal [30,875.2] [6,382.4] [1,763.1] [3,379.6] 42,400.3
NEW MEXICO LIVESTOCK BOARD:
(1) Livestock inspection:
The purpose of the livestock inspection program is to protect the livestock industry from loss of livestock by theft or straying and to help control the spread of dangerous diseases of livestock.
Appropriations:
(a) Personal services and
employee benefits 586.9 3,414.2 4,001.1
(b) Contractual services 151.7 151.7
(c) Other 860.6 860.6
Authorized FTE: 67.00 Permanent
Performance measures:
(a) Efficiency: Average percentage of investigation findings completed
within one month 60%
(b) Output: Number of road stops per month 75
(c) Outcome: Number of livestock thefts reported per one thousand head
inspected 1
(d) Outcome: Number of disease cases per one thousand head inspected .05
(2) Administration:
The purpose of the administration program is to provide administrative and logistical services to employees.
Appropriations:
(a) Personal services and
employee benefits 82.9 531.3 614.2
(b) Contractual services 37.4 37.4
(c) Other 106.0 106.0
Authorized FTE: 8.00 Permanent
Subtotal [669.8] [5,101.2] 5,771.0
DEPARTMENT OF GAME AND FISH:
(1) Sport hunting and fishing:
The purpose of the sport hunting and fishing program is to provide a statewide system for hunting activities as well as self-sustaining and hatchery-supported fisheries taking into account hunter safety, quality hunts, high demand areas, guides and outfitters, quotas and assuring that local and financial interests receive consideration.
Appropriations:
(a) Personal services and
employee benefits 8,135.3 5,201.5 13,336.8
(b) Contractual services 895.4 495.3 1,390.7
(c) Other 4,100.1 1,996.3 6,096.4
(d) Other financing uses 124.4 372.9 497.3
Authorized FTE: 197.00 Permanent; 2.00 Term; 1.50 Temporary
Performance measures:
(a) Outcome: Number of days of elk hunting opportunity provided to New
Mexico resident hunters on an annual basis 165,000
(b) Outcome: Percent of public hunting licenses drawn by New Mexico
resident hunters 80%
(c) Output: Annual output of fish from the department's hatchery
system, in pounds 455,000
(d) Outcome: Percent of anglers satisfied with opportunity and success 80%
(e) Output: Acres of accessible sportsperson opportunity through the
open gate program 60,000
(2) Conservation services:
The purpose of the conservation services program is to provide information and technical guidance to any person wishing to conserve and enhance wildlife habitat and recover indigenous species of threatened and endangered wildlife.
Appropriations:
(a) Personal services and
employee benefits 1,614.9 1,000.8 2,615.7
(b) Contractual services 1,174.3 689.6 1,863.9
(c) Other 2,097.3 1,231.8 3,329.1
Authorized FTE: 32.00 Permanent; 8.00 Term; .50 Temporary
Performance measures:
(a) Outcome: Number of acres of wildlife habitat conserved, enhanced or
positively affected statewide 100,000
(b) Output: Number of recreational days of access provided by the
gaining access into nature project 10,000
(c) Output: Number of state threatened and endangered species studied
and conserved through recovery planning and the
comprehensive wildlife conservation strategy for New Mexico 35
(3) Wildlife depredation and nuisance abatement:
The purpose of the wildlife depredation and nuisance abatement program is to provide complaint administration and intervention processes to private landowners, leaseholders and other New Mexicans so they may be relieved of and precluded from property damage, annoyances or risks to public safety caused by protected wildlife.
Appropriations:
(a) Personal services and
employee benefits 285.8 285.8
(b) Contractual services 130.7 130.7
(c) Other 639.3 639.3
Authorized FTE: 4.00 Permanent
Performance measures:
(a) Outcome: Percent of depredation complaints resolved within the
mandated one-year timeframe 95%
(4) Program support:
The purpose of program support is to provide an adequate and flexible system of direction, oversight, accountability and support to all divisions so they may successfully attain planned outcomes for all department programs.
Appropriations:
(a) Personal services and
employee benefits 4,220.3 162.5 4,382.8
(b) Contractual services 695.7 695.7
(c) Other 3,061.7 143.0 3,204.7
Authorized FTE: 60.00 Permanent
Subtotal [27,175.2] [11,293.7] 38,468.9
ENERGY, MINERALS AND NATURAL RESOURCES DEPARTMENT:
(1) Renewable energy and energy efficiency:
The purpose of the renewable energy and energy efficiency program is to develop and implement clean energy programs in order to decrease per capita energy consumption, use New Mexico's substantial renewable energy resources, minimize local, regional and global air emissions, lessen dependence on foreign oil and reduce in-state water demands associated with fossil-fueled electrical generation.
Appropriations:
(a) Personal services and
employee benefits 999.2 178.6 1,177.8
(b) Contractual services 7.8 5.0 12.8
(c) Other 52.9 10.8 63.7
Authorized FTE: 13.00 Permanent; 2.00 Term
Performance measures:
(a) Outcome: Percent reduction in energy use in public facilities
receiving energy efficiency retrofit projects through the
Energy Efficiency and Renewable Energy Bonding Act, the
Public Facility Energy Efficiency and Water Conservation
Act or the clean energy projects program 10%
(b) Output: Number of inventoried clean energy projects evaluated
annually 50
(c) Outcome: Percent of retail electricity sales from investor-owned
utilities in New Mexico from renewable energy sources 10%
(2) Healthy forests:
The purpose of the healthy forests program is to promote the health of New Mexico's forest lands by managing wildfires, mitigating urban-interface fire threats and providing stewardship of private and state forest lands and associated watersheds.
Appropriations:
(a) Personal services and
employee benefits 2,986.8 168.1 1,255.7 4,410.6
(b) Contractual services 123.2 2.0 569.9 695.1
(c) Other 420.1 373.1 2,922.1 3,715.3
Authorized FTE: 58.00 Permanent; 11.00 Term
Performance measures:
(a) Output: Number of nonfederal wildland firefighters provided
professional and technical incident command system training 500
(b) Outcome: Percent of at-risk communities participating in
collaborative wildfire protection planning 25%
(c) Output: Number of acres restored in New Mexico's forests and
watersheds 8,000
(3) State parks:
The purpose of the state parks program is to create the best recreational opportunities possible in state parks by preserving cultural and natural resources, continuously improving facilities and providing quality, fun activities and to do it all efficiently.
Appropriations:
(a) Personal services and
employee benefits 9,172.8 3,296.8 609.0 13,078.6
(b) Contractual services 210.4 169.7 3,800.3 4,180.4
(c) Other 1,217.8 6,007.7 2,617.0 3,669.7 13,512.2
(d) Other financing uses 2,465.8 2,465.8
Authorized FTE: 233.00 Permanent; 6.00 Term; 48.00 Temporary
Performance measures:
(a) Explanatory: Self-generated revenue per visitor, in dollars $0.87
(b) Output: Number of interpretive programs available to park visitors 2,600
(c) Explanatory: Number of visitors to state parks 4,000,000
(4) Mine reclamation:
The purpose of the mine reclamation program is to implement the state laws that regulate the operation and reclamation of hard rock and coal mining facilities and to reclaim abandoned mine sites.
Appropriations:
(a) Personal services and
employee benefits 508.8 655.2 1,723.8 2,887.8
(b) Contractual services 45.3 32.7 3,728.3 3,806.3
(c) Other 25.3 111.3 349.5 486.1
Authorized FTE: 17.00 Permanent; 15.00 Term
Performance measures:
(a) Output: Percent of abandoned uranium mines with current site
assessments 50%
(b) Outcome: Percent of permitted mines with approved reclamation plans
and adequate financial assurance posted to cover the cost
of reclamation 100%
(5) Oil and gas conservation:
The purpose of the oil and gas conservation program is to assure the conservation and responsible development of oil and gas resources through professional, dynamic regulation.
Appropriations:
(a) Personal services and
employee benefits 3,361.6 300.0 250.0 215.2 4,126.8
(b) Contractual services 86.9 4,170.0 71.5 4,328.4
(c) Other 583.7 65.3 119.9 20.0 788.9
(d) Other financing uses 115.0 115.0
Authorized FTE: 57.00 Permanent; 5.00 Term
Performance measures:
(a) Output: Number of inspections of oil and gas wells and associated
facilities 23,500
(b) Outcome: Percent increase in the amount of water diverted from
disposal for other uses 10%
(6) Program leadership and support:
The purpose of program leadership and support is to provide leadership, set policy and provide support for every division in achieving their goals.
Appropriations:
(a) Personal services and
employee benefits 3,119.0 213.8 458.4 3,791.2
(b) Contractual services 19.8 19.8
(c) Other 271.4 271.4
(d) Other financing uses 1,487.4 1,487.4
Authorized FTE: 42.00 Permanent; 3.00 Term
Subtotal [22,921.6] [17,817.7] [3,466.6] [21,215.5] 65,421.4
YOUTH CONSERVATION CORPS:
The purpose of the youth conservation corps program is to provide funding for the employment of New Mexicans between the ages of fourteen and twenty-five to work on projects that will improve New Mexico's natural, cultural, historical and agricultural resources.
Appropriations:
(a) Personal services and
employee benefits 158.1 158.1
(b) Contractual services 2,986.4 2,986.4
(c) Other 52.8 52.8
(d) Other financing uses 350.0 350.0
Authorized FTE: 2.00 Permanent
Performance measures:
(a) Output: Number of youth employed annually 800
(b) Outcome: Percent of projects completed within one year 95%
Subtotal [3,547.3] 3,547.3
INTERTRIBAL CEREMONIAL OFFICE:
The purpose of the intertribal ceremonial office is to aid in the planning, coordination and development of an intertribal ceremonial event in coordination with the Native American population in order to host a successful event.
Appropriations:
(a) Contractual services 88.1 88.1
(a) Output: Number of intertribal ceremonial tickets sold 7,000
Subtotal [88.1] 88.1
COMMISSIONER OF PUBLIC LANDS:
(1) Land trust stewardship:
The purpose of the land trust stewardship program is to generate sustainable revenue from state trust lands to support public education and other beneficiary institutions and to build partnerships with all New Mexicans to conserve, protect and maintain the highest level of stewardship for these lands so that they may be a significant legacy for generations to come.
Appropriations:
(a) Personal services and
employee benefits 10,430.0 10,430.0
(b) Contractual services 676.7 676.7
(c) Other 1,849.4 1,849.4
(d) Other financing uses 546.1 546.1
Authorized FTE: 153.00 Permanent
The commissioner of public lands is authorized to hold in suspense amounts received pursuant to agreements entered into for the sale of state royalty interests that, as a result of the sale, became eligible for tax credits under Section 29 of the Internal Revenue Code, above those amounts required by law to be transferred to the land grant permanent fund. The commissioner may expend as much of the money so held in suspense, as well as additional money held in escrow accounts resulting from the sales and money held in fund balance, as is necessary to repurchase the royalty interests pursuant to the agreements.
Performance measures:
(a) Output: Total trust revenue generated, in millions $299.7
(b) Outcome: Bonus income per leased acre from oil and gas activities $200
(c) Outcome: Dollars generated through oil, natural gas and mineral
audit activities, in millions $1.5
(d) Output: Average income per acre from oil, natural gas and mineral
activities $150
(e) Output: Average income per acre from agricultural leasing activities $0.63
(f) Output: Average income per acre from commercial leasing activities $6.15
(g) Output: Percent of total trust revenue generated allocated to
beneficiaries 95%
Subtotal [13,502.2] 13,502.2
STATE ENGINEER:
(1) Water resource allocation:
The purpose of the water resource allocation program is to provide for efficient use of the available surface and underground waters of the state to any person so they can maintain their quality of life and to provide safety inspections of all nonfederal dams within the state and to owners and operators of such dams so they can operate the dams safely.
Appropriations:
(a) Personal services and
employee benefits 10,383.1 444.3 10,827.4
(b) Contractual services 132.7 1.3 564.5 698.5
(c) Other 234.3 117.7 1,203.2 1,555.2
Authorized FTE: 177.00 Permanent
The internal service funds/interagency transfers appropriations to the water resource allocation program of the state engineer include one hundred forty-seven thousand six hundred dollars ($147,600) from the improvement of Rio Grande income fund and one million six hundred twenty thousand one hundred dollars ($1,620,100) from the New Mexico irrigation works construction fund.
Performance measures:
(a) Output: Average number of unprotested new and pending applications
processed per month 65
(b) Explanatory: Number of unprotested and unaggrieved water right
applications backlogged 597
(c) Outcome: Number of transactions abstracted annually into the water
administration technical engineering resource system
database 22,000
(d) Outcome: Number of dams inspected per year to establish baseline 110
(2) Interstate stream compact compliance and water development:
The purpose of the interstate stream compact compliance and water development program is to provide resolution of federal and interstate water issues and to develop water resources and stream systems for the people of New Mexico so they can have maximum sustained beneficial use of available water resources.
Appropriations:
(a) Personal services and
employee benefits 2,733.6 775.3 159.1 215.6 3,883.6
(b) Contractual services 5,428.0 5,428.0
(c) Other 45.0 3,537.1 61.4 3,643.5
Authorized FTE: 48.00 Permanent
The internal service funds/interagency transfers appropriations to the interstate stream compact compliance and water development program of the state engineer include one million six hundred seventy-nine thousand one hundred dollars ($1,679,100) from the improvement of Rio Grande income fund and seven million two hundred sixty-two thousand eight hundred dollars ($7,262,800) from the irrigation works construction fund.
The other state funds appropriations to the interstate stream compact compliance and water development program of the state engineer include seven hundred thousand three hundred dollars ($700,300) from revenue received under the emergency drought water agreement and the conservation water agreement.
Revenue from the sale of water to United States government agencies by New Mexico for the emergency drought water agreement dated April 2003, which expires February 28, 2013, and from contractual reimbursements associated with state engineer use of the revenue is appropriated to the state engineer for the conservation and recovery of the listed species in the middle Rio Grande basin, including the optimizing of middle Rio Grande conservancy district operations.
Revenue from the sale of water to United States government agencies by New Mexico resulting from litigation settlement between New Mexico and the United States implemented by the conservation water agreement dated June 29, 2001, and from contractual reimbursements associated with state engineer use of the revenue is appropriated to the state engineer for use as required by the conservation water agreement.
The internal service funds/interagency transfers appropriations to the interstate stream compact compliance and water development program of the state engineer include one hundred thousand dollars ($100,000) from the game protection fund for Ute dam operation. Any unexpended balances remaining at the end of fiscal year 2011 from this appropriation shall revert to the game protection fund.
The appropriations to the interstate stream compact compliance and water development program of the state engineer include one million nine hundred thousand dollars ($1,900,000) to (a) match seventeen and one-half percent of the cost of work undertaken by the United States army corps of engineers pursuant to the federal Water Resources Development Act of 1986, provided that no amount of this appropriation shall be expended for any project unless the appropriate acequia system or community ditch has agreed to provide seven and one-half percent of the cost from any source other than the irrigation works construction fund or improvement of Rio Grande income fund and provided that no more than two hundred fifty thousand dollars ($250,000) shall be allocated to one acequia per fiscal year; and (b) for the construction, improvement, repair and protection from floods of dams, reservoirs, ditches, flumes and appurtenances of community ditches in the state through the interstate stream commission 80/20 program, provided that not more than one hundred twenty thousand dollars ($120,000) of this appropriation shall be used for any one community ditch and that the state funds three hundred thousand dollars ($300,000) for engineering services for approved acequia projects.
The interstate stream commission’s authority to make loans for irrigation improvements includes five hundred thousand dollars ($500,000) for loans to acequia, irrigation and conservancy districts. The interstate stream commission’s authority also includes five hundred thousand dollars ($500,000) for loans to irrigation districts, conservancy districts and soil and water conservation districts for re-loan to farmers for implementation of water conservation improvements.
The interstate stream commission’s authority to make loans from the New Mexico irrigation works construction fund includes two million dollars ($2,000,000) to irrigation districts, acequias, conservancy districts and soil and water conservation districts for purchase and installation of meters and measuring equipment. The maximum loan term is five years.
The internal service funds/interagency transfers appropriation to the interstate stream compact compliance and water development program of the state engineer in the other category include eighty-two thousand three hundred dollars ($82,300) from the game protection fund for Eagle Nest dam operation. Any unexpended balances remaining at the end of fiscal year 2011 from this appropriation shall revert to the game protection fund.
Performance measures:
(a) Outcome: Cumulative state-line delivery credit per the Pecos river
compact and amended decree at the end of calendar year, in
acre feet (final accounting will be available at end of
fiscal year) 0
(b) Outcome: Rio Grande river compact accumulated delivery credit or
deficit at end of calendar year, in acre feet 0
(3) Litigation and adjudication:
The purpose of the litigation and adjudication program is to obtain a judicial determination and definition of water rights within each stream system and underground basin to effectively perform water rights administration and meet interstate stream obligations.
Appropriations:
(a) Personal services and
employee benefits 1,389.8 3,487.4 4,877.2
(b) Contractual services 1,466.5 1,466.5
(c) Other 359.1 359.1
Authorized FTE: 71.00 Permanent
The internal service funds/interagency transfers appropriations to the litigation and adjudication program of the state engineer include one million nine hundred thirteen thousand dollars ($1,913,000) from the New Mexico irrigation works construction fund and three million four hundred thousand dollars ($3,400,000) from the water project fund pursuant to Section 72-4A-9 NMSA 1978.
Performance measures:
(a) Outcome: Number of offers to defendants in adjudications 1,000
(b) Outcome: Percent of all water rights that have judicial
determinations 45%
(4) Program support:
The purpose of program support is to provide necessary administrative support to the agency programs so they may be successful in reaching their goals and objectives.
Appropriations:
(a) Personal services and
employee benefits 3,499.8 97.9 3,597.7
(b) Contractual services 167.5 167.5
(c) Other 491.5 491.5
Authorized FTE: 45.50 Permanent
The internal service funds/interagency transfers appropriations to program support of the state engineer include seven hundred fifty-six thousand nine hundred dollars ($756,900) from the New Mexico irrigation works construction fund.
(5) New Mexico irrigation works construction fund:
(a) Other financing uses 11,519.5 11,519.5
(6) Improvement of Rio Grande income fund:
(a) Other financing uses 1,826.7 1,826.7
Subtotal [18,373.3] [14,729.8] [16,961.8] [277.0] 50,341.9
ORGANIC COMMODITY COMMISSION:
(1) New Mexico organic:
The purpose of the New Mexico organic program is to provide consumers of organic products in New Mexico with credible assurance about the veracity of organic claims made and to enhance the development of local economies tied to agriculture, through rigorous regulatory oversight of the organic industry in New Mexico and through ongoing educational and market assistance projects.
Appropriations:
(a) Personal services and
employee benefits 25.0 70.9 95.9
(b) Contractual services 108.7 108.7
(c) Other 101.6 101.6
Authorized FTE: 5.00 Permanent
Performance measures:
(a) Outcome: Percent increase in New Mexico organic market as measured
by clients' gross sales of organic products 10%
(b) Output: Percent of organic farms inspected annually 100%
Subtotal [25.0] [281.2] 306.2
TOTAL AGRICULTURE, ENERGY AND
NATURAL RESOURCES 72,953.0 88,537.0 22,191.5 36,165.8 219,847.3
F. HEALTH, HOSPITALS AND HUMAN SERVICES
COMMISSION ON THE STATUS OF WOMEN:
(1) Status of women:
The purpose of the commission on the status of women program is to provide information, public events, leadership, support services and career development to individuals, agencies and women's organizations so they can improve the economic, health and social status of women in New Mexico.
Appropriations:
(a) Personal services and
employee benefits 527.3 392.0 919.3
(b) Contractual services 44.0 781.6 825.6
(c) Other 173.4 60.0 266.4 499.8
Authorized FTE: 8.00 Permanent; 7.00 Term
The internal service funds/interagency transfers appropriations to the status of women program of the commission on the status of women include one million four hundred forty thousand dollars ($1,440,000) for the teamworks program directed toward workforce development for adult women on temporary assistance for needy families from the federal block grant to New Mexico.
The other state funds appropriation to the status of women program of the commission on the status of women in the other category includes ten thousand dollars ($10,000) from the women in transition fund to host conferences and seminars and associated expenses and fifty thousand dollars ($50,000) from the commission on the status of women conference fund to host the governor's award for outstanding New Mexico women, the pioneer award, the trailblazer award and various conference booths.
Revenue collected from ticket sales in excess of expenses for conference, awards, seminars and summits shall not revert.
Performance measures:
(a) Outcome: Percent of 12-month job retention of teamworks clients 60%
(b) Output: Number of one-to-one coaching hours performed 200
Subtotal [744.7] [60.0] [1,440.0] 2,244.7
OFFICE OF AFRICAN AMERICAN AFFAIRS:
(1) Public awareness:
The purpose of the public awareness program is to provide information and advocacy services to all New Mexicans and to empower African-Americans of New Mexico to improve their quality of life.
Appropriations:
(a) Personal services and
employee benefits 356.5 356.5
(b) Contractual services 209.7 209.7
(c) Other 179.4 179.4
Authorized FTE: 5.00 Permanent
Subtotal [745.6] 745.6
COMMISSION FOR DEAF AND HARD-OF-HEARING PERSONS:
(1) Deaf and hard-of-hearing:
The purpose of the deaf and hard-of-hearing program is to serve as a dynamic resource that will enhance the quality of life for deaf and hard-of-hearing citizens of New Mexico by being the recognized advocate on important issues impacting the deaf and hard-of-hearing community; the proactive provider of innovative programs and services; and the statewide umbrella and information clearinghouse for interested individuals, organizations, agencies and institutions.
Appropriations:
(a) Personal services and
employee benefits 971.1 971.1
(b) Contractual services 119.5 1,727.8 1,847.3
(c) Other 292.8 292.8
(d) Other financing uses 576.8 576.8
Authorized FTE: 15.00 Permanent
The internal service funds/interagency transfers appropriation to the deaf and hard-of-hearing program of the commission for deaf and hard-of-hearing persons in the other financing uses category includes four hundred sixty-six thousand dollars ($466,000) to transfer to the rehabilitation services program of the division of vocational rehabilitation to match with federal funds to provide deaf and hard-of-hearing rehabilitation services.
The internal service funds/interagency transfers appropriation to the deaf and hard-of-hearing program of the commission for deaf and hard-of-hearing persons in the other financing uses category includes one hundred ten thousand eight hundred dollars ($110,800) to transfer to the signed language interpreting practices board program of the regulation and licensing department.
Performance measures:
(a) Output: Number of information referrals and outreach contacts 10,000
(b) Output: Number of accessible technology equipment distributions 920
(c) Output: Number of clients provided assistance to reduce or
eliminate communication barriers 1,300
Subtotal [119.5] [3,568.5] 3,688.0
MARTIN LUTHER KING, JR. COMMISSION:
The purpose of the Martin Luther King, Jr. commission is to promote Martin Luther King, Jr.'s nonviolent principles and philosophy to the people of New Mexico through remembrance, celebration and action so that everyone gets involved in making a difference toward the improvement of interracial cooperation and reduction of youth violence in our communities.
Appropriations:
(a) Personal services and
employee benefits 189.5 189.5
(b) Contractual services 42.0 42.0
(c) Other 133.3 133.3
Authorized FTE: 3.00 Permanent
Subtotal [364.8] 364.8
COMMISSION FOR THE BLIND:
(1) Blind services:
The purpose of the blind services program is to assist blind or visually impaired citizens of New Mexico to achieve economic and social equality so they can have independence based on their personal interests and abilities.
Appropriations:
(a) Personal services and
employee benefits 1,204.6 242.5 3,210.8 4,657.9
(b) Contractual services 53.5 10.8 142.8 207.1
(c) Other 753.7 151.8 2,009.0 2,914.5
Authorized FTE: 92.50 Permanent; 1.00 Term
Any unexpended balances in the blind services program of the commission for the blind remaining at the end of fiscal year 2011 from appropriations made from the general fund shall not revert.
Performance measures:
(a) Output: Number of quality employment opportunities obtained for
blind or visually impaired consumers 45
(b) Output: Number of blind or visually impaired consumers trained in
the skills of blindness to enable them to live
independently in their homes and communities 600
(c) Outcome: Average employment wage for the blind or visually impaired
person $15
(d) Output: Number of employment opportunities provided for blind
business entrepreneurs in different vending and food
facilities through the business enterprise program 32
Subtotal [2,011.8] [405.1] [5,362.6] 7,779.5
INDIAN AFFAIRS DEPARTMENT:
(1) Indian affairs:
The purpose of the Indian affairs program is to coordinate intergovernmental and interagency programs concerning tribal governments and the state.
Appropriations:
(a) Personal services and
employee benefits 1,224.5 1,224.5
(b) Contractual services 750.0 750.0
(c) Other 1,189.9 293.8 1,483.7
Authorized FTE: 15.00 Permanent
The other state funds appropriation to the Indian affairs program of the Indian affairs department in the other category includes two hundred ninety-three thousand eight hundred dollars ($293,800) from the tobacco settlement program fund for tobacco cessation and prevention programs for Native American communities throughout the state.
Performance measures:
(a) Output: Number of capital projects over fifty thousand dollars
($50,000) completed and closed 75
(b) Output: Number of capital outlay projects under fifty thousand
dollars ($50,000) completed and closed 80
Subtotal [3,164.4] [293.8] 3,458.2
AGING AND LONG-TERM SERVICES DEPARTMENT:
(1) Consumer and elder rights:
The purpose of the consumer and elder rights program is to provide current information, assistance, counseling, education and support to older individuals and persons with disabilities, residents of long-term care facilities and their families and caregivers that allow them to protect their rights and make informed choices about quality service.
Appropriations:
(a) Personal services and
employee benefits 676.0 54.7 744.2 1,474.9
(b) Contractual services 23.8 59.5 29.8 113.1
(c) Other 140.5 50.7 246.0 437.2
Authorized FTE: 18.50 Permanent; 7.00 Term
Performance measures:
(a) Output: Number of ombudsman complaints resolved 5,000
(b) Output: Percent of people accessing consumer and elder rights
programs in need of two or more daily living services who
receive information, referral and assistance 25%
(c) Output: Number of persons accessing the aging and long-term
services department's resource center 20,000
(d) Outcome: Percent of resident-requested transitions from nursing
homes to home- and community-based services that are
completed to the satisfaction of the resident within nine
months from the request 100%
(2) Aging network:
The purpose of the aging network is to provide supportive social and nutrition services for older individuals and persons with disabilities so they can remain independent and involved in their communities and to provide training, education and work experience to older individuals so they can enter or re-enter the workforce and receive appropriate income and benefits.
Appropriations:
(a) Personal services and
employee benefits 88.4 33.6 122.0
(b) Contractual services 100.0 5.0 105.0
(c) Other 26,253.1 34.0 350.0 8,096.8 34,733.9
(d) Other financing uses 187.6 187.6
Authorized FTE: 1.00 Permanent; .50 Term
The general fund appropriation to the aging network program of the aging and long-term services department in the other category to supplement funding from the federal Older Americans Act shall be contracted to the designated area agencies on aging.
The general fund appropriation to the aging network program of the aging and long-term services department in the other category includes one hundred thousand dollars ($100,000) for senior programs in Rio Arriba county.
The internal service funds/interagency transfers appropriation to the aging network program of the aging and long-term services department in the other category includes three hundred fifty thousand dollars ($350,000) for the gold mentor program.
Any unexpended balances remaining at the end of fiscal year 2011 in other state funds from conference registration fees shall not revert.
Performance measures:
(a) Outcome: Percent of individuals exiting from the federal older
worker program who obtain unsubsidized employment 18.5%
(b) Outcome: Percent of temporary assistance for needy families clients
placed in meaningful employment 36%
(c) Output: Number of persons receiving aging network community services 75,000
(d) Outcome: Number of persons whose food insecurity is alleviated by
meals received through the aging network 25,000
(3) Long-term services:
The purpose of the long-term services program is to administer home- and community-based long-term service programs that support individuals in the least restrictive environment possible.
Appropriations:
(a) Personal services and
employee benefits 1,788.2 1,625.0 111.6 3,524.8
(b) Contractual services 179.5 1,749.7 58.8 1,988.0
(c) Other 371.3 242.6 14.6 628.5
(d) Other financing uses 2,050.0 2,050.0
Authorized FTE: 54.00 Permanent; 5.00 Term
Performance measures:
(a) Outcome: Percent of total personal care option cases that are
consumer-directed 10.8%
(b) Outcome: Percent of disabled and elderly coordinated long-term
services waiver (formerly medicaid waiver) clients who
receive services within ninety days of eligibility
determination 90%
(c) Outcome: Average number of months that individuals are on the
coordinated long-term services c waiver (formerly disabled
and elderly waiver) registry prior to receiving an
allocation for services 60
(d) Outcome: Average annual cost per client in the coordinated long-term
services program $18,000
(e) Output: Number of individuals on the self-directed mi via waiver 800
(f) Output: Number of consumers who transition from nursing facilities
placement to community-based services 135
(4) Adult protective services:
The purpose of the adult protective services program is to investigate allegations of abuse, neglect and exploitation of seniors and adults with disabilities and provide in-home support services to adults at high risk of repeat neglect.
Appropriations:
(a) Personal services and
employee benefits 7,675.8 7,675.8
(b) Contractual services 915.2 2,498.6 3,413.8
(c) Other 2,135.4 2,135.4
Authorized FTE: 139.00 Permanent
Performance measures:
(a) Output: Number of adults receiving adult protective services
investigations of abuse, neglect or exploitation 6,250
(b) Outcome: Number of incapacitated adults who receive in-home services
or interventions through adult protective services as a
result of an investigation of abuse, neglect or exploitation 800
(c) Outcome: Percent of adult protective services investigations
requiring emergency or priority response within twenty-four
hours or less 10.5%
(5) Program support:
The purpose of program support is to provide clerical, record keeping and administrative support in the areas of personnel, budget, procurement and contracting to agency staff, outside contractors and external control agencies to implement and manage programs.
Appropriations:
(a) Personal services and
employee benefits 3,628.6 565.3 4,193.9
(b) Contractual services 141.5 15.6 157.1
(c) Other 363.3 63.8 427.1
Authorized FTE: 55.00 Permanent; 1.00 Term
Performance measures:
(a) Output: Percent of contractors assessed with no significant findings 100%
Subtotal [46,718.2] [72.6] [6,630.8] [9,946.5] 63,368.1
HUMAN SERVICES DEPARTMENT:
(1) Medical assistance:
The purpose of the medical assistance program is to provide the necessary resources and information to enable low-income individuals to obtain either free or low-cost health care.
Appropriations:
(a) Personal services and
employee benefits 5,179.8 5,888.2 11,068.0
(b) Contractual services 7,355.9 385.9 110.2 24,338.9 32,190.9
(c) Other 514,676.4 43,750.2 125,241.8 2,830,348.9 3,514,017.3
(d) Other financing uses 12,559.0 24,985.0 86.0 27,202.2 64,832.2
Authorized FTE: 149.50 Permanent; 11.00 Term
The other state funds appropriations to the medical assistance program of the human services department include one million five hundred thousand dollars ($1,500,000) from the tobacco settlement program fund for the breast and cervical cancer treatment program and seven million six hundred fifty-five thousand four hundred dollars ($7,655,400) from the tobacco settlement program fund for other medicaid programs.
The other state funds appropriations to the medical assistance program of the human services department include twenty-two million two hundred eighty thousand dollars ($22,280,000) from the tobacco settlement program fund, contingent on enactment of House Bill 79 or similar legislation of the second session of the forty-ninth legislature to distribute one hundred percent of the tobacco settlement payment to the tobacco settlement program fund.
Performance measures:
(a) Outcome: Percent of age-appropriate women enrolled in medicaid
managed care receiving cervical cancer screenings as
measured by healthcare effectiveness data and information
set 72%
(b) Outcome: Number of children and youth receiving services in the
medicaid school-based services program 16,500
(c) Output: Number of adults enrolled in state coverage insurance 40,000
(d) Outcome: Percent of children in medicaid managed care receiving
early and periodic screening, diagnosis and treatment
services as measured by healthcare effectiveness data and
information set 70%
(e) Outcome: Percent of children enrolled in medicaid managed care who
have a dental exam as measured by healthcare effectiveness
data and information set 65%
(f) Outcome: Percent of age-appropriate women enrolled in medicaid
managed care receiving breast cancer screenings as measured
by healthcare effectiveness data and information set 55%
(2) Medicaid behavioral health:
The purpose of the medicaid behavioral health program is to provide the necessary resources and information to enable low-income individuals to obtain either free or low-cost health care.
Appropriations:
(a) Other 61,416.5 245,784.3 307,200.8
(3) Income support:
The purpose of the income support program is to provide cash assistance and supportive services to eligible low-income families so they can achieve self-sufficiency.
Appropriations:
(a) Personal services and
employee benefits 22,568.2 1,347.6 27,526.8 51,442.6
(b) Contractual services 2,630.7 96.8 20,656.5 23,384.0
(c) Other 17,824.7 3,193.2 581,386.3 602,404.2
(d) Other financing uses 44,679.3 44,679.3
Authorized FTE: 1,049.00 Permanent; 34.00 Term; 50.00 Temporary
The federal funds appropriations to the income support program of the human services department include twelve million six hundred forty-five thousand nine hundred dollars ($12,645,900) from the federal temporary assistance for needy families block grant for administration of the New Mexico Works Act.
The appropriations to the income support program of the human services department include one million five hundred ninety thousand dollars ($1,590,000) from the general fund and eighty-four million two hundred thirteen thousand six hundred dollars ($84,213,600) from the federal temporary assistance for needy families block grant to provide cash assistance grants to participants as defined in the New Mexico Works Act, including clothing allowances, one-time diversion payments and state-funded payments to aliens.
The federal funds appropriations to the income support program of the human services department include six hundred thousand dollars ($600,000) from the federal temporary assistance for needy families block grant to provide wage subsidies for participants.
The federal funds appropriations to the income support program of the human services department include thirteen million three hundred seventy thousand dollars ($13,370,000) from the federal temporary assistance for needy families block grant for support services, including seven hundred thousand dollars ($700,000) for employment-related costs, six hundred seventy thousand dollars ($670,000) for transportation services and twelve million dollars ($12,000,000) for job training and placement.
The federal funds appropriations to the income support program of the human services department include forty-four million one hundred nineteen thousand three hundred dollars ($44,119,300) from the temporary assistance for needy families block grant for transfers to other agencies, including thirty-nine million nineteen thousand three hundred dollars ($39,019,300) to the children, youth and families department for childcare programs, two million dollars ($2,000,000) to the children, youth and families department for domestic violence programs, one million dollars ($1,000,000) to the children, youth and families department for pre-kindergarten programs, one million five hundred thousand dollars ($1,500,000) to the public education department for pre-kindergarten programs, two hundred fifty thousand dollars ($250,000) to the public education department for the graduation reality and dual-role skills program and three hundred fifty thousand dollars ($350,000) to the aging and long-term care services department for the gold mentor program.
The appropriations to the income support program of the human services department include six million seven hundred two thousand seven hundred dollars ($6,702,700) from the general fund and two million eight hundred one thousand dollars ($2,801,000) from other state funds for general assistance. Unexpended balances of the other state funds appropriation derived from reimbursements received from the social security administration for the general assistance program shall not revert.
The general fund appropriations to the income support program of the human services department include two hundred eighteen thousand dollars ($218,000) for the Navajo sovereign temporary assistance for needy families program.
The general fund appropriations to the income support program of the human services department include thirty-two thousand dollars ($32,000) for the Zuni sovereign temporary assistance for needy families program.
The human services department shall provide the department of finance and administration and the legislative finance committee quarterly reports on the expenditures of the federal temporary assistance for needy families block grant and the state maintenance-of-effort expenditures.
Performance measures:
(a) Outcome: Percent of temporary assistance for needy families clients
who receive a job 60%
(b) Outcome: Percent of parent participants who meet temporary
assistance for needy families federally required work
participation requirements 50%
(c) Outcome: Percent of temporary assistance for needy families
participants who retain a job for six or more months 60%
(d) Outcome: Percent of temporary assistance for needy families
two-parent recipients meeting federally required work
participation requirements 90%
(e) Outcome: Percent of children eligible for supplemental nutrition
assistance program participating in the program 75%
(f) Outcome: Percent of expedited supplemental nutrition assistance
program cases meeting federally required measure of
timeliness within seven days 98%
(g) Outcome: Percent of regular supplemental nutrition assistance
program cases meeting the federally required measure of
timeliness within thirty days 98%
(h) Outcome: Percent of eligible individuals receiving supplemental
nutrition assistance program benefits 69%
(4) Behavioral health services:
The purpose of the behavioral health services program is to lead and oversee the provision of an integrated and comprehensive behavioral health prevention and treatment system so that the program fosters recovery and supports the health and resilience of all New Mexicans.
Appropriations:
(a) Personal services and
employee benefits 1,759.0 107.0 1,866.0
(b) Contractual services 41,213.3 9,193.9 50,407.2
(c) Other 319.7 21.0 29.0 369.7
(d) Other financing uses 279.4 1,512.8 1,792.2
Authorized FTE: 26.00 Permanent
Performance measures:
(a) Outcome: Percent of readmissions to same level of care or higher for
children or youth discharged from residential treatment
centers and inpatient care 8%
(b) Outcome: Youth suicide rate among fifteen to nineteen year olds
served by the statewide entity 3
(c) Output: Number of individuals served annually in substance abuse,
mental health programs or both administered through the
behavioral health purchasing collaborative statewide entity
contract 75,000
(d) Outcome: Percent of people receiving substance abuse treatments who
demonstrate improvement in the alcohol domain on the
addiction severity index 80%
(e) Outcome: Percent of people receiving substance abuse treatments who
demonstrate improvement in the drug domain on the addiction
severity index 75%
(5) Child support enforcement:
The purpose of the child support enforcement program is to provide location, establishment and collection services for custodial parents and their children; to ensure that all court orders for support payments are being met to maximize child support collections; and to reduce public assistance rolls.
Appropriations:
(a) Personal services and
employee benefits 5,455.1 2,976.2 12,860.0 21,291.3
(b) Contractual services 1,835.8 1,001.5 4,327.7 7,165.0
(c) Other 1,386.7 756.5 3,269.0 5,412.2
Authorized FTE: 400.00 Permanent
Performance measures:
(a) Outcome: Amount of child support collected, in millions $110.1
(b) Outcome: Percent of current support owed that is collected 60%
(c) Outcome: Percent of cases with support orders 70%
(6) Program support:
The purpose of program support is to provide overall leadership, direction and administrative support to each agency program and to assist it in achieving its programmatic goals.
Appropriations:
(a) Personal services and
employee benefits 4,057.2 3,079.2 10,754.5 17,890.9
(b) Contractual services 4,279.0 129.5 7,155.3 11,563.8
(c) Other 4,995.2 680.1 9,063.3 14,738.6
Authorized FTE: 252.50 Permanent
Subtotal [709,791.6] [82,402.7] [125,438.0][3,866,083.9] 4,783,716.2
WORKFORCE SOLUTIONS DEPARTMENT:
(1) Workforce transition services:
The purpose of the workforce transition program is to administer an array of demand-driven workforce development services to prepare New Mexicans to meet the needs of business.
(a) Personal services and
employee benefits 1,537.6 700.0 11,763.5 14,001.1
(b) Contractual services 0.3 850.8 851.1
(c) Other 218.1 616.5 2,052.8 2,887.4
(d) Other financing uses 791.9 791.9
Authorized FTE: 285.00 Permanent; 22.50 Term
The federal funds appropriation to the workforce transition services program of the workforce solutions department includes one million dollars ($1,000,000) for operational and administrative expenses associated with the employment security program, contingent upon receipt of federal Reed Act funds available through the Assistance for Unemployed Workers and Struggling Families Act, Title II of Division B of Public Law 111-5, enacted February 17, 2009, and the department providing a revised expenditure plan for approval by the New Mexico office of recovery and reinvestment and the United States department of labor.
Performance measures:
(a) Outcome: Percent of adult participants receiving workforce
development services through the public workforce system
who are employed in the first quarter after the exit quarter 86%
(b) Outcome: Percent of Workforce Investment Act dislocated workers
receiving workforce development services who are employed
in the first quarter after the exit quarter 88%
(c) Outcome: Percentage of youth participants who are in employment or
enrolled in postsecondary education or advanced training in
the first quarter after the exit quarter 71%
(d) Output: Percent of eligible unemployment insurance claims issued a
determination within twenty-one days from the date of claim 80%
(e) Output: Percent of adult Workforce Investment Act participants
employed in both the second and third quarter following the
exit quarter 72%
(f) Output: Percent of Workforce Investment Act dislocated worker
participants employed in both the second and third quarter
following the exit quarter 90%
(g) Output: Average unemployment insurance call center wait time to
reach an agent, in minutes <5
(2) Labor relations division:
The purpose of the labor relations program is to provide employment rights information and other work-site-based assistance to employers and employees.
(a) Personal services and
employee benefits 1,200.0 51.4 691.5 243.9 2,186.8
(b) Contractual services 8.0 3.5 11.5
(c) Other 192.3 1,025.8 2.6 1,220.7
(d) Other financing uses 1,077.2 1,077.2
Authorized FTE: 38.00 Permanent
The internal service funds/interagency transfers appropriations to the labor relations program of the workforce solutions department include six hundred ninety-one thousand five hundred dollars ($691,500) from fund balances in the workers' compensation administration fund.
Performance measures:
(a) Outcome: Number of backlogged human rights commission hearings
pending each quarter 0
(b) Outcome: Percent of wage claims investigated and resolved within one
hundred twenty days 96%
(c) Outcome: Percent of discrimination cases referred to alternative
dispute resolution that were settled 78%
(d) Output: Number of targeted public works inspections completed 1,800
(3) Workforce technology division:
The purpose of the workforce technology program is to provide and maintain customer-focused, effective and innovative information technology services for the department and its service providers.
(a) Personal services and
employee benefits 869.2 1,974.0 2,843.2
(b) Contractual services 230.1 75.0 507.1 812.2
(c) Other 243.2 695.5 938.7
(d) Other financing uses 35.6 35.6
Authorized FTE: 41.00 Permanent
(4) Business services division:
The purpose of the business services program is to provide standardized business solution strategies and labor market information through New Mexico public workforce system that is responsive to the needs of New Mexico businesses.
(a) Personal services and
employee benefits 3.2 1,661.2 1,664.4
(b) Contractual services 283.6 283.6
(c) Other 3,018.0 3,018.0
Authorized FTE: 30.00 Permanent
Performance measures:
(a) Outcome: Percent of employers sampled reporting customer satisfaction 90%
(b) Output: Number of personal contacts made by field office personnel
with New Mexico businesses to inform them of available
services or provide actual services 30,000
(5) Program support:
The purpose of program support is to provide overall leadership, direction and administrative support to each agency program to achieve organizational goals and objectives.
(a) Personal services and
employee benefits 333.9 26.4 1,067.6 4,799.9 6,227.8
(b) Contractual services 175.8 999.2 1,175.0
(c) Other 230.3 12,708.2 12,938.5
(d) Other financing uses 1,042.4 1,042.4
Authorized FTE: 89.00 Permanent; 4.00 Term
Subtotal [5,011.7] [4,618.6] [3,663.8] [40,713.0] 54,007.1
WORKERS’ COMPENSATION ADMINISTRATION:
(1) Workers’ compensation administration:
The purpose of the workers' compensation administration program is to assure the quick and efficient delivery of indemnity and medical benefits to injured and disabled workers at a reasonable cost to employers.
(a) Personal services and
employee benefits 8,038.1 8,038.1
(b) Contractual services 348.7 348.7
(c) Other 1,360.1 1,360.1
(d) Other financing uses 691.5 691.5
Authorized FTE: 130.00 Permanent
Performance measures:
(a) Output: Number of first reports of injury processed 38,400
(b) Outcome: Percent of formal claims resolved without trial 85%
(c) Outcome: Rate of serious injuries and illnesses caused by workplace
conditions per one hundred workers .620
(d) Outcome: Percent of employers referred for investigation that are
determined to be in compliance with insurance requirements
of the Workers' Compensation Act 65%
(2) Uninsured employers’ fund:
(a) Contractual services 100.0 100.0
(b) Other 1,069.1 1,069.1
Subtotal [11,607.5] 11,607.5
DIVISION OF VOCATIONAL REHABILITATION:
(1) Rehabilitation services:
The purpose of the rehabilitation services program is to promote opportunities for people with disabilities to become more independent and productive by empowering individuals with disabilities so that they may maximize their employment, economic self-sufficiency, independence and inclusion and integration into society.
Appropriations:
(a) Personal services and
employee benefits 2,650.0 17.1 759.7 10,071.4 13,498.2
(b) Contractual services 157.9 33.1 49.5 613.6 854.1
(c) Other 1,632.7 32.8 644.6 12,787.6 15,097.7
Authorized FTE: 190.00 Permanent; 19.00 Term
The internal service funds/interagency transfers appropriation to the rehabilitation services program of the division of vocational rehabilitation in the other category includes four hundred sixty-six thousand dollars ($466,000) to match with federal funds to support and enhance deaf and hard-of-hearing rehabilitation services.
Any unexpended balances in the division of vocational rehabilitation remaining at the end of fiscal year 2011 from appropriations made from the general fund shall not revert.
Performance measures:
(a) Outcome: Number of persons achieving suitable employment for a
minimum of ninety days 1,700
(b) Outcome: Percent of persons achieving suitable employment outcomes
of all cases closed after receiving planned services 60%
(c) Outcome: Percent of persons achieving suitable employment outcomes
who are competitively employed or self-employed 95%
(d) Outcome: Percent of persons with significant disabilities achieving
suitable employment outcomes who are competitively employed
or self-employed, earning at least minimum wage 95%
(2) Independent living services:
The purpose of the independent living services program is to increase access for individuals with disabilities to technologies and services needed for various applications in learning, working and home management.
(a) Other 1,288.5 250.0 1,538.5
(a) Output: Number of independent living plans developed 700
(b) Output: Number of individuals served for independent living 900
(3) Disability determination:
The purpose of the disability determination program is to produce accurate and timely eligibility determinations to social security disability applicants so that they may receive benefits.
Appropriations:
(a) Personal services and
employee benefits 6,248.2 6,248.2
(b) Contractual services 244.0 244.0
(c) Other 7,885.9 7,885.9
Authorized FTE: 90.00 Permanent
Performance measures:
(a) Efficiency: Number of days for completing an initial disability claim 80
(b) Quality: Percent of disability determinations completed accurately 98.5%
Subtotal [5,729.1] [83.0] [1,453.8] [38,100.7] 45,366.6
GOVERNOR’S COMMISSION ON DISABILITY:
(1) Information and advocacy:
The purpose of the governor's commission on disability is to promote policies and programs that focus on common issues faced by New Mexicans with disabilities, regardless of type of disability, age or other factors. The commission educates state administrators, legislators and the public on the issues facing New Mexicans with disabilities, especially as they relate to Americans with Disabilities Act directives, building codes, disability technologies and disability culture, so they can improve the quality of life of New Mexicans with disabilities.
Appropriations:
(a) Personal services and
employee benefits 736.4 13.0 749.4
(b) Contractual services 276.1 30.6 306.7
(c) Other 119.7 14.9 134.6
Authorized FTE: 10.00 Permanent
The general fund appropriation to the information and advocacy program of the governor's commission on disability in the contractual services category includes an additional one hundred thousand dollars ($100,000) for deaf-blind support service provider programs.
Performance measures:
(a) Output: Number of meetings held to develop collaborative
partnerships with other state agencies and private
disability agencies to ensure that quality of life issues
for New Mexicans with disabilities are being addressed 150
(b) Outcome: Number of presentations and events in which agency
participates and contributes 50
Subtotal [1,132.2] [58.5] 1,190.7
DEVELOPMENTAL DISABILITIES PLANNING COUNCIL:
(1) Consumer services:
The purpose of the consumer services program is to provide training, information and referral for individuals with disabilities and their family members so that they can live more independent and self-directed lives.
Appropriations:
(a) Personal services and
employee benefits 84.2 84.2
(b) Contractual services 5.5 5.5
(c) Other 140.4 75.0 215.4
Authorized FTE: 2.00 Permanent
Performance measures:
(a) Output: Number of client contacts to assist on health, housing,
transportation, education, child care, medicaid services
and other programs 5,000
(b) Outcome: Percent of participants satisfied with trainings and
delivery of services, as evidenced by satisfactory survey
ratings 90%
(2) Developmental disabilities planning council:
The purpose of the developmental disabilities planning council program is to provide and produce opportunities for persons with disabilities so that they may realize their dreams and potentials and become integrated members of society.
Appropriations:
(a) Personal services and employee benefits343.2149.2492.4
(b) Contractual services 4.5 307.3 311.8
(c) Other 124.4 54.0 178.4
Authorized FTE: 6.50 Permanent; 1.00 Term
Performance measures:
(a) Output: Number of persons with developmental disabilities, their
family members or guardians and others involved in services
for persons with developmental disabilities served by the
agency in the federally mandated areas 4,500
(b) Output: Number of monitoring site visits conducted 40
(3) Brain injury advisory council:
The purpose of the brain injury advisory council program is to provide guidance on the utilization and implementation of programs provided through the aging and long-term services department’s brain injury services fund so that they may align service delivery with needs identified by the brain injury community.
Appropriations:
(a) Personal services and
employee benefits 65.6 65.6
(b) Contractual services 6.9 6.9
(c) Other 24.5 24.5
Authorized FTE: 1.00 Permanent
(4) Office of guardianship:
The purpose of the office of guardianship is to enter into, monitor and enforce guardianship contracts for income-eligible persons and help to file, investigate and resolve complaints about guardianship services provided by contractors in order to maintain the dignity, safety and security of the indigent and incapacitated adults of the state.
Appropriations:
(a) Personal services and
employee benefits 354.5 354.5
(b) Contractual services 2,997.9 2,997.9
(c) Other 75.8 75.8
Authorized FTE: 5.50 Permanent
Performance measures:
(a) Outcome: Percent of protected persons properly served with the least
restrictive means, as evidenced by an annual technical
compliance audit 95%
Subtotal [4,227.4] [75.0] [510.5] 4,812.9
MINERS’ HOSPITAL OF NEW MEXICO:
(1) Healthcare:
The purpose of the healthcare program is to provide quality acute care, long-term care, and related health services to the beneficiaries of the miners' trust fund of New Mexico and the people of the region so they can maintain optimal health and quality of life.
Appropriations:
(a) Personal services and
employee benefits 12,046.3 266.6 12,312.9
(b) Contractual services 4,646.1 4,646.1
(c) Other 6,009.9 55.2 6,065.1
(d) Other financing uses 5,094.1 5,094.1
Authorized FTE: 211.50 Permanent; 13.50 Term
The internal service funds/interagency transfers appropriation to the healthcare program of miners' hospital of New Mexico in the other financing uses category includes five million ninety-four thousand one hundred dollars ($5,094,100) from the miners' trust fund.
Performance measures:
(a) Outcome: Percent of budgeted revenue collected 100%
(b) Outcome: Infection rates following treatment per one thousand
patient days <2%
(c) Outcome: Patient fall rates per one thousand patient days 0.5%
Subtotal [22,702.3] [5,094.1] [321.8] 28,118.2
DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH:
(1) Public health:
The purpose of the public health program is to provide a coordinated system of community-based public health services focusing on disease prevention and health promotion in order to improve health status, reduce disparities and ensure timely access to quality, culturally competent health care.
Appropriations:
(a) Personal services and
employee benefits 31,517.6 2,880.4 168.0 21,523.4 56,089.4
(b) Contractual services 19,408.8 2,065.0 12,686.1 10,199.3 44,359.2
(c) Other 18,496.7 25,832.1 2,646.2 48,447.3 95,422.3
(d) Other financing uses 600.0 600.0
Authorized FTE: 349.50 Permanent; 641.50 Term; 1.00 Temporary
The other state funds appropriations to the public health program of the department of health include six million six hundred ninety-five thousand three hundred dollars ($6,695,300) from the tobacco settlement program fund for smoking cessation and prevention programs, eight hundred eighty-one thousand four hundred dollars ($881,400) from the tobacco settlement program fund for diabetes prevention and control services, three hundred forty-five thousand two hundred dollars ($345,200) from the tobacco settlement program fund for HIV/AIDS prevention, services and medicine and one hundred forty-six thousand nine hundred dollars ($146,900) from the tobacco settlement program fund for breast and cervical cancer screening.
The general fund appropriation to the public health program of the department of health in the contractual services category includes an additional sixty-five thousand dollars ($65,000) for operational support of women's health services in Santa Fe county.
The general fund appropriation to the public health program of the department of health in the contractual services category includes an additional one hundred fifteen thousand dollars ($115,000) for rural primary health services.
Any unexpended balances in the public health program of the department of health in the contractual services category from appropriations made from the county-supported medicaid fund for the support of primary health care services related to the Rural Primary Health Care Act remaining at the end of fiscal year 2011 shall not revert.
Performance measures:
(a) Outcome: Percent of adults who use tobacco 19%
(b) Explanatory: Number of packs of cigarettes sold per New Mexican 53.6
(c) Outcome: National ranking of New Mexico children who are fully
immunized 30th
(d) Output: Percent of preschoolers fully immunized 82%
(e) Outcome: National ranking of New Mexico teen birth rate per one
thousand for girls ages fifteen to seventeen 48th
(2) Epidemiology and response:
The purpose of the epidemiology and response program is to monitor health, provide health information, prevent disease and injury, promote health and healthy behaviors, respond to public health events, prepare for health emergencies and provide emergency medical and vital registration services to New Mexicans.
Appropriations:
(a) Personal services and
employee benefits 4,338.9 985.4 222.3 7,808.1 13,354.7
(b) Contractual services 877.4 249.7 35.0 4,840.8 6,002.9
(c) Other 4,002.4 100.2 39.4 3,326.8 7,468.8
Authorized FTE: 49.00 Permanent; 152.00 Term
Performance measures:
(a) Output: Number of designated trauma centers in the state 10
(b) Output: Number of health emergency exercises conducted to assess
and improve local capability 60
(3) Laboratory services:
The purpose of the laboratory services program is to provide laboratory analysis and scientific expertise for policy development for tax-supported public health, environment and toxicology programs in the state of New Mexico to provide timely identification of threats to the health of New Mexicans.
Appropriations:
(a) Personal services and
employee benefits 4,800.2 1,500.0 1,078.3 7,378.5
(b) Contractual services 599.1 645.6 1,244.7
(c) Other 1,367.4 877.7 661.7 2,906.8
Authorized FTE: 84.00 Permanent; 49.00 Term
Performance measures:
(a) Outcome: Percent of public health threat samples for communicable
diseases and other threatening illnesses that are analyzed
within specified turnaround times 98%
(b) Efficiency: Percent of blood alcohol tests from
driving-while-intoxicated cases that are analyzed and
reported within ten business days 75%
(4) Facilities management:
The purpose of the facilities management program is to provide oversight for department of health facilities that provide health and behavioral healthcare services, including mental health, substance abuse, nursing home and rehabilitation programs in both facilities and community-based settings and serve as the safety net for the citizens of New Mexico.
Appropriations:
(a) Personal services and
employee benefits 49,867.8 61,511.8 88.8 111,468.4
(b) Contractual services 3,146.6 2,934.3 556.2 6,637.1
(c) Other 8,092.7 12,493.3 159.8 142.3 20,888.1
Authorized FTE: 2,279.00 Permanent; 23.00 Temporary
Performance measures:
(a) Outcome: Number of substantiated cases of abuse, neglect and
exploitation per one hundred residents in agency-operated
long-term care programs confirmed by the division of health
improvement 0
(b) Output: Percent of operational capacity beds filled at all agency
facilities 90%
(c) Efficiency: Percent of billed third-party revenues collected at all
agency facilities 75%
(5) Developmental disabilities support:
The purpose of the developmental disabilities support program is to administer a statewide system of community-based services and support to improve the quality of life and increase the independence and interdependence of individuals with developmental disabilities and children with or at risk for developmental delay or disability and their families.
Appropriations:
(a) Personal services and
employee benefits 4,058.8 6,911.1 489.5 11,459.4
(b) Contractual services 14,895.2 1,400.0 1,034.1 1,061.2 18,390.5
(c) Other 18,341.9 681.6 1,021.0 20,044.5
(d) Other financing uses 62,950.0 62,950.0
Authorized FTE: 69.00 Permanent; 102.00 Term; 1.00 Temporary
The general fund appropriations to the developmental disabilities support program of the department of health in the contractual services category include one hundred thousand dollars ($100,000) for payments due to the plaintiffs' attorneys, their consultants and expert witnesses, and other related court costs as a result of the Jackson v. Ft. Stanton lawsuit and related actions. There are no other appropriations for this purpose in the General Appropriation Act of 2010 and the department shall not expend any other appropriation for this purpose. During fiscal year 2011, the department has no authority to request a budget adjustment for the purpose of increasing payments to those attorneys, consultants and expert witnesses and other related court costs. Any amounts budgeted by the department of health for attorneys, consultants, witnesses and related costs as a result of this lawsuit above the amount appropriated in this paragraph shall be expended for the purpose of reducing the number of individuals on the developmental disabilities medicaid waiver waiting list.
The general fund appropriations to the developmental disabilities support program of the department of health in the contractual services category include sixty-five thousand dollars ($65,000) for an autism summer camp in Bernalillo county.
The general fund appropriation to the developmental disabilities support program of the department of health in the other financing uses category includes sixty-two million nine hundred fifty thousand dollars ($62,950,000) for medicaid waiver services in local communities: two million three hundred ninety-four thousand eight hundred dollars ($2,394,800) for medically fragile services and sixty million five hundred fifty-five thousand two hundred dollars ($60,555,200) for services to the developmentally disabled which includes two million two hundred fifty thousand dollars ($2,250,000) that shall only be used to enroll new clients from the developmental disabilities medicaid waiver waiting list.
(6) Health certification, licensing and oversight:
The purpose of the health certification, licensing and oversight program is to provide health facility licensing and certification surveys, community-based oversight and contract compliance surveys, and a statewide incident management system so that people in New Mexico have access to quality health care and that vulnerable populations are safe from abuse, neglect and exploitation.
Appropriations:
(a) Personal services and
employee benefits 3,452.3 1,095.8 2,814.4 1,335.9 8,698.4
(b) Contractual services 534.1 4.0 15.1 553.2
(c) Other 854.4 1,292.5 712.6 314.0 3,173.5
(d) Other financing uses 140.0 140.0
Authorized FTE: 48.00 Permanent; 110.00 Term
The other state funds appropriation to the health certification, licensing and oversight program of the department of health is contingent on the program increasing licensing fees to the statutory authorized levels.
Performance measures:
(a) Output: Percent of required compliance surveys completed for adult
residential care and adult daycare facilities 95%
(b) Output: Percent of developmental disabilities, family infant
toddler, medically fragile and behavioral health providers
receiving a survey by the quality management bureau 75%
(7) Administration:
The purpose of the administration program is to provide leadership, policy development, information technology, administrative and legal support to the department of health so it achieves a high level of accountability and excellence in services provided to the people of New Mexico.
Appropriations:
(a) Personal services and
employee benefits 5,677.8 85.0 1,130.0 3,703.9 10,596.7
(b) Contractual services 2,240.6 186.1 280.0 2,706.7
(c) Other 4,802.8 177.9 187.3 5,168.0
Authorized FTE: 139.00 Permanent; 3.00 Term; 1.00 Temporary
The general fund appropriations of forty-one million seven hundred one thousand eight hundred dollars ($41,701,800) to the department of health in the contractual services category in all programs are contingent on the department of health including performance measures in its outcome-based contracts to increase oversight and accountability.
Performance measures:
(a) Output: Number of patient encounters provided through telehealth
sites statewide 4,500
Subtotal [264,923.5] [116,092.8] [30,175.9] [106,509.6] 517,701.8
DEPARTMENT OF ENVIRONMENT:
(1) Environmental health:
The purpose of the environmental health program is to protect public health and the environment through specific programs that provide regulatory oversight over food service and food processing facilities, regulation of on-site treatment and disposal of liquid wastes, regulation of public swimming pools and baths, regulation of medical radiation and radiological technologist certification, application of the mosquito abatement regulation, oversight of waste isolation pilot plant transportation and education and public outreach about radon in homes and public buildings.
Appropriations:
(a) Personal services and
employee benefits 5,052.4 3,174.1 143.3 8,369.8
(b) Contractual services 15.9 67.5 90.0 173.4
(c) Other 881.6 855.8 41.4 1,778.8
Authorized FTE: 109.00 Permanent; 23.00 Term
Performance measures:
(a) Output: Percent of new septic tanks inspections completed 90%
(b) Outcome: Percent of high-risk food-related violations corrected
within the timeframes noted on the inspection report issued
to permit commercial food establishments 100%
(c) Output: Percent of annual permitted commercial food establishment
inspections completed 90%
(d) Output: Percent of radiation-producing machine inspections
completed within the timeframes identified in radiation
control bureau policies 85%
(2) Water quality:
The purpose of the water quality program is to protect the quality of New Mexico’s ground- and surface-water resources to ensure clean and safe water supplies are available now and in the future to support domestic, agricultural, economic and recreational activities and provide healthy habitat for fish, plants and wildlife and to ensure that hazardous waste generation, storage, treatment and disposal are conducted in a manner protective of public health and environmental quality.
Appropriations:
(a) Personal services and
employee benefits 2,393.7 4,903.2 6,901.8 14,198.7
(b) Contractual services 1,455.0 3,531.9 4,986.9
(c) Other 291.8 863.8 946.3 2,101.9
Authorized FTE: 46.00 Permanent; 147.50 Term
Performance measures:
(a) Outcome: Percent of permitted facilities where monitoring results
demonstrate compliance with groundwater standards 75%
(b) Efficiency: Percent of department of energy generator site audits for
the waste isolation pilot project on which agency action
will be taken within forty-five days 80%
(c) Output: Percent of large quantity hazardous waste generators
inspected 20%
(d) Explanatory: Stream miles and acreage of lakes monitored annually to
determine if surface water quality is impaired 125/40K
(3) Environmental protection:
The purpose of the environmental protection program is to prevent releases of petroleum products into the environment, ensure solid waste is handled and disposed without harming natural resources, ensure New Mexicans breathe healthy air and ensure every employee safe and healthful working conditions.
Appropriations:
(a) Personal services and
employee benefits 2,036.4 8,945.4 2,860.7 13,842.5
(b) Contractual services 87.5 460.4 280.3 828.2
(c) Other 433.2 1,672.5 395.7 2,501.4
Authorized FTE: 70.00 Permanent; 126.50 Term
Performance measures:
(a) Outcome: Number of days per year in which the air quality index
exceeds one hundred, exclusive of natural events such as
high winds and wildfires ≤8
(b) Outcome: Percent of facilities taking corrective action to mitigate
air quality violations discovered as a result of inspections 100%
(c) Outcome: Percent of serious worker health and safety violations
corrected within the timeframes designated on issued
citations from the consultation and compliance sections 96%
(d) Outcome: Percent of underground storage tank facilities in
significant operational compliance with release prevention
and release detection requirements of the petroleum storage
tanks regulations 90%
(e) Outcome: Percent of active solid waste facilities and infectious
waste generators inspected that were found to be in
substantial compliance with the New Mexico solid waste rules 75%
(4) Water and wastewater infrastructure development:
The purpose of the water and wastewater infrastructure development program is to provide leadership for an interagency effort to develop a water and wastewater infrastructure evaluation plan and recommendations for efficient and effective use of water and wastewater loan funds and to ensure compliance with the Safe Drinking Water Act.
Appropriations:
(a) Personal services and
employee benefits 340.7 4,158.0 1,270.6 5,769.3
(b) Contractual services 7.1 2,560.3 46.0 2,613.4
(c) Other 54.6 659.5 208.6 922.7
Authorized FTE: 30.00 Permanent; 49.00 Term
Performance measures:
(a) Explanatory: Dollar amount of new projects funded from the clean water
state revolving fund program and the rural infrastructure
revolving loan program, in millions TBD
(b) Efficiency: Percent of public drinking water systems inspected within
one week of confirmation of system problems that might
acutely impact public health 100%
(c) Outcome: Percent of environmental protection agency clean water
state revolving loan fund capitalization grant and matching
state funds committed to New Mexico communities for
wastewater infrastructure development in the state fiscal
year following receipt of an environmental protection
agency award 75%
(5) Program support:
The purpose of program support is to provide overall leadership, administrative, legal and information management support to programs to operate in the most knowledgeable, efficient and cost-effective manner so the public can receive the information it needs to hold the department accountable.
Appropriations:
(a) Personal services and
employee benefits 2,533.1 2.0 2,278.8 1,763.1 6,577.0
(b) Contractual services 197.0 95.0 98.4 268.1 658.5
(c) Other 509.2 3.0 342.0 272.7 1,126.9
Authorized FTE: 48.00 Permanent; 31.00 Term
Performance measures:
(a) Output: Percent of prior-year significant audit findings resolved 100%
(b) Output: Percent of enforcement actions brought within one year of
inspection or documentation of violation 90%
(6) Special revenue funds:
(a) Personal services and
employee benefits 449.5 449.5
(b) Contractual services 3,240.0 3,240.0
(c) Other 7,133.7 7,133.7
(d) Other financing uses 29,657.7 29,657.7
Authorized FTE: 5.00 Permanent
Subtotal [14,834.2] [40,580.9] [32,494.7] [19,020.5] 106,930.3
OFFICE OF THE NATURAL RESOURCES TRUSTEE:
(1) Natural resource damage assessment and restoration:
The purpose of the natural resources trustee program is to restore or replace natural resources injured or lost due to releases of hazardous substances or oil into the environment.
Appropriations:
(a) Personal services and
employee benefits 251.1 251.1
(b) Contractual services 6.3 2,000.0 2,006.3
(c) Other 47.9 47.9
Authorized FTE: 3.80 Permanent
Performance measures:
(a) Outcome: Number of acres of habitat restoration 500
(b) Outcome: Number of acre-feet of water conserved through restoration 500
Subtotal [305.3] [2,000.0] 2,305.3
NEW MEXICO HEALTH POLICY COMMISSION:
(1) Health information and policy analysis:
The purpose of the health information and policy analysis program is to provide relevant and current health-related data, health research, information and comprehensive analysis to consumers, state health agencies, the executive, the legislature and the private health sector so they can obtain or provide improved health access in New Mexico.
Appropriations:
(a) Personal services and
employee benefits 151.7 151.7
(b) Other 5.0 5.0
Authorized FTE: 9.00 Permanent
Performance measures:
(a) Outcome: Number of health-related bills analyzed during the
legislative session 100
Subtotal [151.7] [5.0] 156.7
VETERANS’ SERVICES DEPARTMENT:
(1) Veterans’ services:
The purpose of the veterans' services program is to carry out the mandates of the New Mexico state legislature and the governor to provide information and assistance to veterans and their eligible dependents to obtain benefits to which they are entitled in order to improve their quality of life.
Appropriations:
(a) Personal services and
employee benefits 1,915.1 132.0 2,047.1
(b) Contractual services 821.3 821.3
(c) Other 301.5 40.0 34.0 375.5
Authorized FTE: 38.00 Permanent; 4.00 Term
Performance measures:
(a) Output: Number of veterans served by veterans' services department
field offices 35,000
(b) Output: Number of homeless veterans provided overnight shelter for
a period of two weeks or more 300
(c) Output: Compensation received by New Mexico veterans as a result of
the department's contracts with veterans' organizations, in
millions $100
(d) Output: Number of property tax waiver and exemption certificates
issued to New Mexico veterans 8,500
Subtotal [3,037.9] [40.0] [166.0] 3,243.9
CHILDREN, YOUTH AND FAMILIES DEPARTMENT:
(1) Juvenile justice facilities:
The purpose of the juvenile justice facilities program is to provide rehabilitative services to youth committed to the department, including but not limited to medical, educational, mental health and other services that will support their rehabilitation.
Appropriations:
(a) Personal services and
employee benefits 28,584.6 1,532.2 1,310.6 31,427.4
(b) Contractual services 5,827.4 77.0 5,904.4
(c) Other 4,679.2 23.0 192.3 4,894.5
Authorized FTE: 565.50 Permanent
Performance measures:
(a) Outcome: Percent of incidents in juvenile justice services
facilities requiring use of force resulting in injury 3%
(b) Outcome: Percent of clients recommitted to a children, youth and
families department facility within two years of discharge
from facilities 10%
(c) Outcome: Percent of juvenile justice division facility clients age
eighteen and older who enter adult corrections within two
years after discharge from a juvenile justice facility 6%
(d) Output: Percent of possible education credits earned by clients in
juvenile justice division facilities 47%
(2) Protective services:
The purpose of the protective services program is to receive and investigate referrals of child abuse and neglect and provide family preservation and treatment and legal services to vulnerable children and their families to ensure their safety and well-being.
Appropriations:
(a) Personal services and
employee benefits 27,779.4 4.3 722.9 19,611.7 48,118.3
(b) Contractual services 2,452.4 8,930.2 11,382.6
(c) Other 28,754.8 1,869.5 21,367.0 51,991.3
(d) Other financing uses 240.0 240.0
Authorized FTE: 842.00 Permanent; 6.00 Term
Performance measures:
(a) Outcome: Percent of children who are not the subject of
substantiated maltreatment within six months of a prior
determination 93%
(b) Outcome: Percent of children reunified with their natural families
in less than twelve months of entry into care 69.9%
(c) Output: Percent of children who are not the subject of
substantiated maltreatment while in foster care 99.68%
(3) Early childhood services:
The purpose of the early childhood services program is to provide quality child care, nutrition services, early childhood education and training to enhance the physical, social and emotional growth and development of children.
Appropriations:
(a) Personal services and
employee benefits 2,594.0 541.0 4,037.7 7,172.7
(b) Contractual services 12,594.2 1,000.0 2,868.3 16,462.5
(c) Other 16,866.5 1,280.4 39,034.6 72,888.3 130,069.8
Authorized FTE: 104.50 Permanent; 50.00 Term
The internal service funds/interagency transfers appropriations to the early childhood services program of the children, youth and families department include thirty-nine million nineteen thousand three hundred dollars ($39,019,300) for childcare programs and one million dollars ($1,000,000) for pre-kindergarten programs from the temporary assistance for needy families block grant to New Mexico.
The general fund and internal service funds/interagency transfers appropriations to the early childhood services program of the children, youth and families department include seven million eight hundred twenty-five thousand eight hundred dollars ($7,825,800) for direct services and eight hundred sixty-nine thousand five hundred dollars ($869,500) for administrative and program support in the pre-kindergarten program.
The federal funds appropriations to the early childhood services program of the children, youth and families department include thirty-seven million two hundred twenty-six thousand six hundred dollars ($37,226,600) for childcare programs from the child care and development block grant to New Mexico.
Performance measures:
(a) Outcome: Percent of children receiving state subsidy in stars/aim
high programs level two through five or with national
accreditation 69%
(b) Output: Percent of families participating in home-visiting programs
with a completed family plan 75%
(c) Output: Percent of family providers participating in the child- and
adult-care food program 95%
(4) Youth and family services:
The purpose of the youth and family services program is to develop and provide needed quality prevention, intervention and after-care services to youth and families in their communities.
Appropriations:
(a) Personal services and
employee benefits 21,776.8 228.7 267.6 22,273.1
(b) Contractual services 24,386.6 1,892.4 2,423.5 4,121.4 32,823.9
(c) Other 2,724.1 129.5 2,853.6
Authorized FTE: 376.10 Permanent; 12.00 Term
The internal service funds/interagency transfers appropriations to the youth and family services program of the children, youth and families department include two million dollars ($2,000,000) for domestic violence programs from the temporary assistance for needy families block grant to New Mexico.
Notwithstanding the provisions of Section 31-12-12 NMSA 1978, the other state funds appropriations to the youth and family services program of the children, youth and families department include one million dollars ($1,000,000) from the domestic violence offender treatment or intervention fund for domestic violence programs.
Performance measures:
(a) Outcome: Percent of adult victims or survivors receiving domestic
violence services who have an individualized safety plan 70%
(b) Outcome: Percent of domestic violence offenders who complete a
batterer's intervention program 70%
(c) Outcome: Percent of clients who complete formal probation 90%
(d) Output: Percent of clients readjudicated within two years of
previous adjudication 5.8%
(5) Program support:
The purpose of program support is to provide the direct services divisions with functional and administrative support so they may provide client services consistent with the department's mission and also support the development and professionalism of employees.
Appropriations:
(a) Personal services and
employee benefits 7,686.4 3,587.8 11,274.2
(b) Contractual services 982.0 31.2 545.5 1,558.7
(c) Other 3,369.8 105.1 1,636.8 5,111.7
Authorized FTE: 160.00 Permanent; 4.00 Term
Performance measures:
(a) Outcome: Percent vacancy rate for youth care specialists 8%
Subtotal [191,058.2] [6,601.8] [45,666.9] [140,231.8] 383,558.7
TOTAL HEALTH, HOSPITALS AND HUMAN
SERVICES 1,253,952.3 287,685.6 255,760.0 4,226,966.9 6,024,364.8
G. PUBLIC SAFETY
DEPARTMENT OF MILITARY AFFAIRS:
(1) National guard support:
The purpose of the national guard support program is to provide administrative, fiscal, personnel, facility construction and maintenance support to the New Mexico national guard in maintaining a high degree of readiness to respond to state and federal missions and to supply an experienced force to protect the public, provide direction for youth and improve the quality of life for New Mexicans.
Appropriations:
(a) Personal services and
employee benefits 3,211.4 168.9 4,770.5 8,150.8
(b) Contractual services 393.7 3,509.3 3,903.0
(c) Other 3,270.7 58.9 3,662.7 6,992.3
Authorized FTE: 32.00 Permanent; 116.00 Term
The general fund appropriation to the national guard support program of the department of military affairs in the other category includes fifty thousand dollars ($50,000) for the employer support of guard and reserve program. The funds shall be allocated to the department in equal installments of twelve thousand five hundred dollars ($12,500) on July 1, 2010, September 1, 2010, November 1, 2010, and February 1, 2011, provided that after the first allocation, the department of finance and administration shall not make a subsequent allocation unless the employer support of guard and reserve program fully accounts to the department of finance and administration for all expenditures of the previous installment so the program never has authority to expend more than twelve thousand five hundred dollars ($12,500).
Performance measures:
(a) Outcome: Rate of attrition of the New Mexico army national guard 16%
(b) Outcome: Percent of strength of the New Mexico national guard 91%
(c) Outcome: Percent of cadets successfully graduating from the youth
challenge academy 91%
(d) Output: Number of New Mexico youth challenge academy cadets who
earn their high school equivalency annually 97
Subtotal [6,875.8] [227.8] [11,942.5] 19,046.1
PAROLE BOARD:
(1) Adult parole:
The purpose of the adult parole program is to provide and establish parole conditions and guidelines for inmates and parolees so they may reintegrate back into the community as law-abiding citizens.
Appropriations:
(a) Personal services and
employee benefits 326.5 326.5
(b) Contractual services 17.5 17.5
(c) Other 133.4 133.4
Authorized FTE: 6.00 Permanent
Performance measures:
(a) Efficiency: Percent of revocation hearings held within thirty days of a
parolee's return to the corrections department 95%
(b) Outcome: Percent of parole certificates issued within ten days of
hearing or ten days of receiving relevant information needed 95%
Subtotal [477.4] 477.4
JUVENILE PUBLIC SAFETY ADVISORY BOARD:
The purpose of the juvenile public safety advisory board is to monitor each youth's rehabilitative process through therapy and support services to assure that there is a low risk for reoffending or re-victimizing the community.
Appropriations:
(a) Other 25.0 25.0
Subtotal [25.0] 25.0
CORRECTIONS DEPARTMENT:
(1) Inmate management and control:
The purpose of the inmate management and control program is to incarcerate in a humane, professionally sound manner offenders sentenced to prison and to provide safe and secure prison operations. This includes quality hiring and in-service training of correctional officers, protecting the public from escape risks and protecting prison staff, contractors and inmates from violence exposure to the extent possible within budgetary resources.
Appropriations:
(a) Personal services and
employee benefits 98,840.5 9,606.9 130.1 108,577.5
(b) Contractual services 47,500.6 58.4 30.0 76.0 47,665.0
(c) Other 87,309.0 6,428.8 42.1 900.0 94,679.9
Authorized FTE: 1,921.50 Permanent; 34.00 Term
Performance measures:
(a) Outcome: Recidivism rate of success for offenders after release
program by thirty-six months 35%
(b) Outcome: Percent of female offenders successfully released in
accordance with their scheduled release dates 90%
(c) Outcome: Percent turnover of correctional officers 13%
(d) Output: Graduation rate of correctional officer cadets from the
corrections department training academy 90%
(e) Output: Percent of eligible inmates who earn a general equivalency
diploma 78%
(f) Output: Percent of participating inmates completing adult basic
education 32%
(g) Outcome: Percent of male offenders successfully released in
accordance with their scheduled release dates 90%
(h) Efficiency: Daily cost per inmate, in dollars, for prior fiscal year $87
(i) Output: Percent of inmates testing positive for drug use (including
inmates refusing to be tested) in a random monthly drug test ≤2%
(j) Output: Number of inmate-on-inmate assaults with serious injury 23
(k) Output: Number of inmate-on-staff assaults with serious injury 6
(l) Output: Number of escapes from a publicly run corrections
department facility 0
(m) Output: Number of escapes from a secure non-New Mexico corrections
department facility 0
(n) Outcome: Percent of standard healthcare requirements met by medical
contract vendor 87%
(o) Outcome: Percent of eligible sex offenders within three years of
release who are receiving treatment 65%
(2) Corrections industries:
The purpose of the corrections industries program is to provide training and work experience opportunities for inmates in order to instill a quality work ethic and to prepare them to perform effectively in an employment position and to reduce idle time of inmates while in prison.
Appropriations:
(a) Personal services and
employee benefits 2,106.5 2,106.5
(b) Contractual services 20.7 20.7
(c) Other 2,615.3 2,615.3
(d) Other financing uses 500.0 500.0
Authorized FTE: 32.00 Permanent; 3.00 Term
The other state funds appropriations to the corrections industries program of the corrections department include five hundred thousand dollars ($500,000) for transfer to the community corrections/vendor-run program of the corrections department.
Performance measures:
(a) Outcome: Profit and loss ratio break even
(b) Outcome: Percent of eligible inmates employed 11%
(3) Community offender management:
The purpose of the community offender management program is to provide programming and supervision to offenders on probation and parole, with emphasis on high-risk offenders, to better ensure the probability of them becoming law-abiding citizens to protect the public from undue risk and to provide intermediate sanctions and post-incarceration support services as a cost-effective alternative to incarceration.
Appropriations:
(a) Personal services and
employee benefits 18,402.0 1,190.0 19,592.0
(b) Contractual services 39.6 39.6
(c) Other 10,196.7 1,060.0 11,256.7
Authorized FTE: 387.00 Permanent
No more than five hundred thousand dollars ($500,000) of the general fund appropriations to the community offender management program of the corrections department shall be used for detention costs for parole violators.
Performance measures:
(a) Outcome: Percent turnover of probation and parole officers 20%
(b) Outcome: Percent of out-of-office contacts per month with offenders
on high and extreme supervision on standard caseloads 90%
(4) Community corrections/vendor-run:
The purpose of the community corrections/vendor-run program is to provide selected offenders on probation and parole with residential and nonresidential service settings and to provide intermediate sanctions and post-incarceration support services as a cost-effective alternative to incarceration without undue risk to the public.
Appropriations:
(a) Personal services and
employee benefits 768.6 768.6
(b) Contractual services 25.0 25.0
(c) Other 3,016.0 42.1 500.0 3,558.1
Authorized FTE: 17.00 Permanent
The appropriations for the community corrections/vendor-run program of the corrections department are appropriated to the community corrections grant fund.
The internal service funds/interagency transfers appropriation to the community corrections/vendor-run program of the corrections department in the other category includes five hundred thousand dollars ($500,000) transferred from the corrections industries program of the corrections department.
Performance measures:
(a) Output: Percent of male offenders who complete the residential
treatment center program 75%
(b) Output: Percent of female offenders who complete the residential
treatment center program 75%
(c) Output: Percent of female offenders who complete the halfway house
program 75%
(5) Program support:
The purpose of program support is to provide quality administrative support and oversight to the department operating units to ensure a clean audit, effective budget, personnel management and cost-effective management information system services.
Appropriations:
(a) Personal services and
employee benefits 6,026.5 90.0 249.8 6,366.3
(b) Contractual services 504.3 504.3
(c) Other 1,571.8 12.5 1,584.3
Authorized FTE: 90.00 Permanent
Performance measures:
(a) Outcome: Percent of prisoners reincarcerated back into the
corrections department system within thirty-six months due
to new charges or pending charges 40%
(b) Outcome: Percent of all prisoners reincarcerated back into the
corrections department within thirty-six months 47%
(c) Outcome: Percent of sex offenders reincarcerated back into the
corrections department within thirty-six months 40%
Subtotal [274,200.6] [23,731.2] [952.0] [976.0] 299,859.8
CRIME VICTIMS REPARATION COMMISSION:
(1) Victim compensation:
The purpose of the victim compensation program is to provide financial assistance and information to victims of violent crime in New Mexico so they can receive services to restore their lives.
Appropriations:
(a) Personal services and
employee benefits 934.2 934.2
(b) Contractual services 235.0 235.0
(c) Other 783.8 616.7 1,400.5
Authorized FTE: 16.00 Permanent
Performance measures:
(a) Output: Number of formal regional trainings conducted annually 8
(b) Output: Number of formal internal staff trainings conducted annually 6
(c) Efficiency: Average number of days to process applications 119
(2) Federal grant administration:
The purpose of the federal grant administration program is to provide funding and training to nonprofit victim providers and public agencies so they can provide services to victims of crime.
Appropriations:
(a) Personal services and
employee benefits 273.5 273.5
(b) Contractual services 28.0 28.0
(c) Other 3,646.0 3,646.0
(d) Other financing uses 700.0 700.0
Performance measures:
(a) Efficiency: Percent of sub-recipients that receive compliance
monitoring via desk audits 85%
(b) Efficiency: Percent of site visits conducted 50%
(c) Output: Number of training workshops conducted for sub-recipients 14
Subtotal [1,953.0] [616.7] [4,647.5] 7,217.2
DEPARTMENT OF PUBLIC SAFETY:
(1) Law enforcement:
The purpose of the law enforcement program is to provide the highest quality of law enforcement services to the public and ensure a safer state.
Appropriations:
(a) Personal services and
employee benefits 54,349.8 958.3 2,424.0 1,794.0 59,526.1
(b) Contractual services 1,133.2 208.9 104.0 376.5 1,822.6
(c) Other 11,406.7 3,660.7 795.4 1,268.9 17,131.7
Authorized FTE: 766.00 Permanent; 4.00 Term; 24.20 Temporary
Performance measures:
(a) Explanatory: Number of fatal crashes in New Mexico per year 400
(b) Output: Number of driving-while-intoxicated arrests by department
of public safety commissioned personnel in New Mexico 3,200
(c) Output: Number of drug arrests by department of public safety
commissioned personnel in New Mexico 1,000
(d) Output: Number of driving-while-intoxicated crashes investigated by
department of public safety commissioned personnel 200
(e) Output: Number of administrative citations issued to licensed
liquor establishments for the illegal sales or service of
alcohol to minors and intoxicated persons by the special
investigation division 200
(f) Output: Number of criminal cases investigated by department of
public safety commissioned personnel in New Mexico 15,000
(g) Output: Number of criminal citations or arrests for the illegal
sales or service of alcohol to minors and intoxicated
persons by the special investigation division 150
(2) Motor transportation:
The purpose of the motor transportation program is to provide the highest quality of commercial motor vehicle enforcement services to the public and ensure a safer state.
Appropriations:
(a) Personal services and
employee benefits 7,012.1 25.0 5,783.1 3,136.6 15,956.8
(b) Contractual services 410.2 384.4 1,328.0 2,122.6
(c) Other 2,465.6 1,927.0 896.1 5,288.7
Authorized FTE: 218.50 Permanent; 55.00 Term
The internal service funds/interagency transfers appropriations to the motor transportation program of the department of public safety include six million nine hundred forty thousand dollars ($6,940,000) from the state road fund.
Any unexpended balances in the department of public safety remaining at the end of fiscal year 2011 made from appropriations from the state road fund shall revert to the state road fund.
Performance measures:
(a) Output: Number of narcotic seizures by the motor transportation
police division 52
(b) Output: Number of commercial motor vehicle safety inspections by
the motor transportation police division 91,680
(c) Output: Number of citations issued by motor transportation police
division officers to commercial motor carrier vehicles
subject to, and not in compliance with, the requirements of
the Weight Distance Tax Act 384
(d) Output: Number of motor carrier safety audits completed 200
(3) Program support:
The purpose of program support is to provide quality protection for the citizens of New Mexico through the business of information technology, forensic science, criminal records and financial management and administrative support to the participants in the criminal justice community.
Appropriations:
(a) Personal services and
employee benefits 9,990.2 891.8 42.9 1,210.3 12,135.2
(b) Contractual services 412.1 331.6 13.7 218.4 975.8
(c) Other 3,779.5 981.6 17.1 6,143.2 10,921.4
Authorized FTE: 149.00 Permanent; 42.00 Term
Performance measures:
(a) Outcome: Percent of prior-year audit findings resolved 100%
(b) Output: Number of unfilled forensic scientist vacancies in the
chemistry unit 4
(c) Output: Number of unfilled forensic scientist vacancies in the
latent prints unit 1
(d) Outcome: Percent of forensic cases completed within thirty working
days 70%
Subtotal [90,959.4] [7,057.9] [11,491.6] [16,372.0] 125,880.9
HOMELAND SECURITY AND EMERGENCY MANAGEMENT DEPARTMENT:
(1) Homeland security and emergency management program:
The purpose of the homeland security and emergency management program is to provide for and coordinate an integrated, statewide, comprehensive emergency management system for New Mexico including all agencies, branches and levels of government for the citizens of New Mexico.
Appropriations:
(a) Personal services and
employee benefits 1,467.2 106.8 2,822.1 4,396.1
(b) Contractual services 56.0 1,347.2 1,403.2
(c) Other 1,303.3 10.0 101.4 27,055.2 28,469.9
Authorized FTE: 20.00 Permanent; 52.00 Term
Performance measures:
(a) Outcome: Number of exercises conducted annually in compliance with
federal guidelines 34
(b) Outcome: Number of program and administrative team compliance visits
conducted each year on all grants 38
Subtotal [2,826.5] [10.0] [208.2] [31,224.5] 34,269.2
TOTAL PUBLIC SAFETY 377,317.7 31,643.6 12,651.8 65,162.5 486,775.6
H. TRANSPORTATION
DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION:
(1) Programs and infrastructure:
The purpose of the programs and infrastructure program is to provide improvements and additions to the state's highway infrastructure to serve the interest of the general public. These improvements include those activities directly related to highway planning, design and construction necessary for a complete system of highways in the state.
Appropriations:
(a) Personal services and
employee benefits 18,257.3 9,757.8 28,015.1
(b) Contractual services 63,118.9 204,748.3 267,867.2
(c) Other 59,891.2 146,251.6 206,142.8
Authorized FTE: 368.00 Permanent; 37.00 Term
The other state funds appropriations to the program and infrastructure program of the department of transportation include thirteen million four hundred eight thousand seven hundred dollars ($13,408,700) for maintenance, reconstruction and related construction costs of state-managed highways that do not qualify for federal funding.
Performance measures:
(a) Explanatory: Annual number of riders on park and ride ≥225,000
(b) Outcome: Annual number of riders on the rail runner corridor, in
millions ≥1.5
(c) Outcome: Total number of traffic fatalities ≤405
(d) Outcome: Number of alcohol-related traffic fatalities <155
(e) Outcome: Number of non-alcohol-related traffic fatalities <260
(f) Output: Number of crashes in established safety corridors ≤790
(g) Explanatory: Percent of projects in production let as scheduled ≥75%
(h) Outcome: Percent of airport runways in satisfactory or better
condition >70%
(i) Quality: Ride quality index for new construction ≥4
(2) Transportation and highway operations:
The purpose of the transportation and highway operations program is to maintain and provide improvements to the state's highway infrastructure to serve the interest of the general public. These improvements include those activities directly related to preserving roadway integrity and maintaining open highway access throughout the state system.
Appropriations:
(a) Personal services and
employee benefits 95,597.1 4,181.0 99,778.1
(b) Contractual services 26,743.3 319.0 27,062.3
(c) Other 86,625.7 86,625.7
Authorized FTE: 1,827.00 Permanent; 15.70 Term
Performance measures:
(a) Output: Number of statewide pavement preservation lane miles ≥4,000
(b) Outcome: Percent of non-interstate lane miles rated good ≥88%
(c) Output: Amount of litter collected from department roads, in tons ≥16,000
(d) Outcome: Percent of interstate lane miles rated good ≥97%
(e) Quality: Customer satisfaction levels at rest areas ≥98%
(3) Program support:
The purpose of program support is to provide management and administration of financial and human resources, custody and maintenance of information and property and the management of construction and maintenance projects.
Appropriations:
(a) Personal services and
employee benefits 24,434.3 869.0 25,303.3
(b) Contractual services 4,910.5 442.3 5,352.8
(c) Other 15,976.5 115.2 16,091.7
(d) Other financing uses 6,938.0 6,938.0
Authorized FTE: 253.00 Permanent; 3.80 Term
Performance measures:
(a) Quality: Number of external audit findings ≤6
(b) Efficiency: Percent of invoices paid within thirty days ≥95%
(c) Outcome: Vacancy rate in all programs ≤13%
(d) Output: Percent of information technology projects on-time and
on-budget 100%
(e) Output: Number of employee injuries ≤100
Subtotal [402,492.8] [366,684.2] 769,177.0
TOTAL TRANSPORTATION 402,492.8 366,684.2 769,177.0
I. OTHER EDUCATION
PUBLIC EDUCATION DEPARTMENT:
The purpose of the public education department is to provide a public education to all students. The secretary of public education is responsible to the governor for the operation of the department. It is the secretary's duty to manage all operations of the department and to administer and enforce the laws with which the secretary or the department is charged. To do this, the department is focusing on leadership and support, productivity, building capacity, accountability, communication and fiscal responsibility.
Appropriations:
(a) Personal services and
employee benefits 12,236.0 826.9 83.4 7,514.0 20,660.3
(b) Contractual services 1,564.0 316.2 17,085.1 18,965.3
(c) Other 1,100.0 399.2 7.2 4,356.9 5,863.3
Authorized FTE: 208.20 Permanent; 102.00 Term; 4.60 Temporary
The general fund appropriation to the public education department in the personal services and employee benefits category includes five million six hundred seventy-five thousand four hundred dollars ($5,675,400) for the office of the deputy secretary for finance and administration, the office of the inspector general, the administrative services division, the program support and student transportation division, the capital outlay bureau and the school budget and finance analysis bureau.
The general fund appropriation to the public education department in the contractual services category includes one million one hundred forty-three thousand one hundred dollars ($1,143,100) for the office of the deputy secretary for finance and administration, the office of the inspector general, the administrative services division, the program support and student transportation division, the capital outlay bureau and the school budget and finance analysis bureau.
The general fund appropriation to the public education department in the other category includes one million one hundred thousand dollars ($1,100,000) for the office of the deputy secretary for finance and administration, the office of the inspector general, the administrative services division, the program support and student transportation division, the capital outlay bureau and the school budget and finance analysis bureau.
Performance measures:
(a) Outcome: Percent of No Child Left Behind Act adequate yearly
progress designations accurately reported by August 1 100%
(b) Outcome: Average processing time for school district budget
adjustment requests, in days 7
(c) Explanatory: Percent completion of the data warehouse project N/A
(d) Outcome: Percent of teachers passing all strands of professional
dossiers on the first submittal 85%
Subtotal [14,900.0] [1,542.3] [90.6] [28,956.0] 45,488.9
REGIONAL EDUCATION COOPERATIVES:
Appropriations:
(a) Northwest: 1,593.0 1,593.0
(b) Northeast: 2,415.4 2,415.4
(c) Lea county: 3,900.0 3,900.0
(d) Pecos valley: 1,321.5 1,371.8 2,693.3
(e) Southwest: 300.0 4,500.0 4,800.0
(f) Central: 2,000.0 2,000.0 4,000.0
(g) High plains: 3,357.5 2,854.8 6,212.3
(h) Clovis: 335.7 1,700.0 2,035.7
(i) Ruidoso: 4,000.0 4,800.0 8,800.0
Subtotal [11,314.7] [25,135.0] 36,449.7
PUBLIC EDUCATION DEPARTMENT SPECIAL APPROPRIATIONS:
(a) Breakfast for elementary
students 2,000.0 2,000.0
(b) Regional education
cooperatives operations 900.0 900.0
(c) Pre-kindergarten program 5,500.0 1,000.0 1,500.0 8,000.0
(d) Graduation reality and dual-
teen pregnancy prevention 250.0 250.0 500.0
(e) New Mexico cyber academy 712.0 712.0
(f) Kindergarten-three plus 5,500.0 5,500.0
(g) Advanced placement 563.0 563.0
(h) Summer reading, math and
science institutes 165.0 165.0
(i) Operating Budget and Management
System and Student, Teacher
Accountability and Reporting
System 800.0 800.0
The internal service funds/interagency transfers appropriation to the public education department includes one million five hundred thousand dollars ($1,500,000) for the pre-kindergarten program from the temporary assistance for needy families block grant to New Mexico.
The other state funds appropriation to the public education department includes one million dollars ($1,000,000) for the pre-kindergarten program from the public pre-kindergarten fund. Any unexpended balances from appropriations made from the public pre-kindergarten fund remaining at the end of fiscal year 2011 shall revert to the public pre-kindergarten fund.
The internal service funds/interagency transfers appropriation to the public education department include two hundred fifty thousand dollars ($250,000) for the graduation reality and dual-teen pregnancy prevention program from the temporary assistance for needy families block grant to New Mexico.
A regional educational cooperative may submit an application to the public education department for an allocation from the nine hundred thousand dollar ($900,000) appropriation. The public education department may allocate amounts to one or more regional cooperatives provided that the regional cooperative's application has adequately justified a need for the allocation, and the department finds that the cooperative has submitted timely quarterly financial reports, is in compliance with state and federal financial reporting requirements, and is otherwise financially stable.
Any unexpended balances in the special appropriations to the public education department remaining at the end of fiscal year 2011 from appropriations made from the general fund shall revert to the general fund.Subtotal [16,390.0] [1,000.0] [1,750.0] 19,140.0
PUBLIC SCHOOL FACILITIES AUTHORITY:
The purpose of the public school facilities oversight program is to oversee public school facilities in all eighty-nine school districts to ensure correct and prudent planning, building and maintenance using state funds and to ensure adequacy of all facilities in accordance with educational programs approved by the public education department.
(a) Personal services and
employee benefits 4,013.6 4,013.6
(b) Contractual services 235.1 235.1
(c) Other 1,598.3 1,598.3
Authorized FTE: 51.00 Permanent
Performance measures:
(a) Outcome: Percent of projects meeting all contingencies completed
within the specified period of awards 80%
(b) Efficiency: Percent compliance with prompt payment provision of the
Prompt Payment Act for all direct payments to vendors 100%
(c) Explanatory: Change in statewide public school facility condition index
measured on December 31 of prior calendar year compared
with prior year
Subtotal [5,847.0] 5,847.0
TOTAL OTHER EDUCATION 31,290.0 19,704.0 1,840.6 54,091.0 106,925.6
J. HIGHER EDUCATION
On approval of the higher education department, the state budget division of the department of finance and administration may approve increases in budgets of agencies, in this section, with the exception of the policy development and institutional financial oversight program of the higher education department, whose other state funds exceed amounts specified. In approving budget increases, the director of the state budget division shall advise the legislature through its officers and appropriate committees, in writing, of the justification for the approval.
The general fund appropriations for special project expansion and flexibility are to continue projects initiated by Chapter 34 of Laws 2005 and for other purposes.
Prior to approving institutional budgets for fiscal year 2011, the secretary of higher education shall ensure that each institution of higher education has prioritized budget reductions to implement productivity savings from institutional support and academic support. In conjunction with the submittal of institutional operating budgets for fiscal year 2011, the higher education institutions shall provide a detailed report documenting actual expenditures for instruction and general functions in fiscal year 2009, estimated expenditures for fiscal year 2010 and proposed expenditures for fiscal year 2011. The report shall include written justification for any circumstances in which the proportion of total instruction and general expenditures devoted to instruction in fiscal year 2011 is reduced from the prior fiscal year. The higher education department shall submit the report for each institution to the department of finance and administration and the legislative finance committee prior to July 1, 2010.
Notwithstanding the provisions of Section 21-1-33 NMSA 1978 or the provisions of the higher education department manual of financial reporting for public institutions in New Mexico, in fiscal year 2011, higher education institutions may budget and expend building renewal and replacement funds appropriated in the General Appropriation Act of 2010 as part of the institution’s instruction and general purposes appropriation for other purposes provided that the transfers will be used for instruction and general.
Except as otherwise provided, any unexpended balances remaining at the end of fiscal year 2011 shall not revert to the general fund.
HIGHER EDUCATION DEPARTMENT:
(1) Policy development and institutional financial oversight:
The purpose of the policy development and institutional financial oversight program is to provide a continuous process of statewide planning and oversight within the department's statutory authority for the state higher education system and to ensure both the efficient use of state resources and progress in implementing a statewide agenda.
Appropriations:
(a) Personal services and
employee benefits 2,771.8 170.0 785.5 3,727.3
(b) Contractual services 618.6 1,128.4 1,747.0
(c) Other 4,970.8 5.0 3,402.7 8,378.5
(d) Other financing uses 8,453.0 13,020.3 21,473.3
Authorized FTE: 32.50 Permanent; 18.50 Term
Any unexpended balances in the policy development and institutional financial oversight program of the higher education department remaining at the end of fiscal year 2011 from appropriations made from the general fund shall revert to the general fund.
The higher education department in collaboration with the New Mexico institutions of higher education shall review the methodology for calculating mill levy credits in the higher education funding formula for the purpose of developing the fiscal year 2012 higher education funding request. The higher education department shall make recommendations to the governor and the legislature no later than September 1, 2010.
The federal funds appropriations to the policy development and institutional financial oversight program of the higher education department in the other financing uses category includes ten million nine hundred thirty-seven thousand five hundred dollars ($10,937,500) from the American Recovery and Reinvesment Act for distribution through the higher education funding formula to institutions of higher education in instruction and general.
Performance measures:
(a) Outcome: Percent of adult basic education students who set and
attain the goal of obtaining employment 58%
(b) Efficiency: Percent of properly completed capital infrastructure draws
released to the state board of finance within thirty days
of receipt from the institutions 95%
(c) Efficiency: Percent of properly completed financial aid allocations and
draw-downs processed within thirty days 90%
(2) Student financial aid:
The purpose of the student financial aid program is to provide access, affordability and opportunities for success in higher education to students and their families so that all New Mexicans may benefit from postsecondary education and training beyond high school.
Appropriations:
(a) Other 10,683.5 989.8 2,393.0 814.5 14,880.8
(b) Other financing uses 13,068.6 11,123.0 41,909.7 66,101.3
Notwithstanding the provisions of Sections 21-21L-1 through 21-21L-8 NMSA 1978, the other state funds appropriations to the student financial aid program of the higher education department include two million three hundred two thousand seven hundred dollars ($2,302,700) from the college affordability endowment fund for student financial aid programs.
Performance measures:
(a) Output: Number of lottery success recipients enrolled in or
graduated from college after the ninth semester 3,300
(b) Outcome: Percent of students meeting eligibility criteria for state
loan programs who continue to be enrolled by the sixth
semester 82%
(c) Outcome: Percent of students meeting eligibility criteria for
work-study programs who continue to be enrolled by the
sixth semester 75%
(d) Outcome: Percent of students meeting eligibility criteria for
merit-based programs who continue to be enrolled by the
sixth semester 68%
(e) Outcome: Percent of students meeting eligibility criteria for
need-based programs who continue to be enrolled by the
sixth semester 66%
Subtotal [40,566.3] [12,287.8] [44,302.7] [19,151.4] 116,308.2
UNIVERSITY OF NEW MEXICO:
(1) Main campus:
The purpose of the instruction and general program is to provide education services designated to meet the intellectual, educational and quality of life goals associated with the ability to enter the workforce, compete and advance in the new economy and contribute to social advancement through informed citizenship.
Appropriations:
(a) Instruction and general
purposes 175,497.7 156,506.0 6,167.0 338,170.7
(b) Athletics 2,469.7 28,069.0 21.0 30,559.7
(c) Educational television 1,131.1 263.0 945.0 2,339.1
(d) Other 194,740.0 109,227.0 303,967.0
(a) Outcome: Percent of full-time, degree-seeking, first-time freshmen
retained to second year 77.2%
(b) Outcome: Amount of external dollars for research and public service,
in millions $122
(c) Output: Number of undergraduate transfer students from two-year
colleges 1,690
(d) Outcome: Percent of full-time, degree-seeking, first-time freshmen
completing an academic program within six years 45.5%
(e) Outcome: Percent of enrolled Native American students among all
degree-seeking undergraduates as of fall census date 6.8%
(2) Gallup branch:
The purpose of the instruction and general program at New Mexico's community colleges is to provide credit and noncredit postsecondary education and training opportunities to New Mexicans so that they have the skills to be competitive in the new economy and are able to participate in lifelong learning activities.
Appropriations:
(a) Instruction and general
purposes 8,831.2 5,939.0 1,207.0 15,977.2
(b) Nurse expansion 32.8 32.8
(c) Other 1,640.0 213.0 1,853.0
(a) Outcome: Percent of new students taking nine or more credit hours
successful after three years 42%
(b) Outcome: Percent of graduates placed in jobs in New Mexico 60%
(c) Output: Number of students enrolled in the area vocational schools
program 420
(d) Outcome: Percent of first-time, full-time, degree-seeking students
enrolled in a given fall term who persist to the following
spring term 83%
(3) Los Alamos branch:
The purpose of the instruction and general program at New Mexico's community colleges is to provide credit and noncredit postsecondary education and training opportunities to New Mexicans so that they have the skills to be competitive in the new economy and are able to participate in lifelong learning activities.
Appropriations:
(a) Instruction and general
purposes 2,017.1 1,490.0 111.0 3,618.1
(b) Other 634.0 358.0 992.0
(a) Outcome: Percent of new students taking nine or more credit hours
successful after three years 57%
(b) Outcome: Percent of graduates placed in jobs in New Mexico 46%
(c) Outcome: Percent of Asian graduates 4.5%
(d) Output: Number of students enrolled in the small business
development center program 310
(e) Outcome: Percent of first-time, full-time, degree-seeking students
enrolled in a given fall term who persist to the following
spring term 77%
(4) Valencia branch:
The purpose of the instruction and general program at New Mexico's community colleges is to provide credit and noncredit postsecondary education and training opportunities to New Mexicans so that they have the skills to be competitive in the new economy and are able to participate in lifelong learning activities.
Appropriations:
(a) Instruction and general
purposes 5,310.3 4,070.0 3,364.0 12,744.3
(b) Other 1,762.0 209.0 1,971.0
(a) Outcome: Percent of new students taking nine or more credit hours
successful after three years 70%
(b) Outcome: Percent of graduates placed in jobs in New Mexico 69%
(c) Output: Number of students enrolled in the adult basic education
program 950
(d) Outcome: Percent of first-time, full-time, degree-seeking students
enrolled in a given fall term who persist to the following
spring term 80%
(5) Taos branch:
The purpose of the instruction and general program at New Mexico's community colleges is to provide credit and noncredit postsecondary education and training opportunities to New Mexicans so that they have the skills to be competitive in the new economy and are able to participate in lifelong learning activities.
Appropriations:
(a) Instruction and general
purposes 3,009.8 2,882.0 426.0 6,317.8
(b) Other 675.0 675.0
(a) Outcome: Percent of new students taking nine or more credit hours
successful after three years 59%
(b) Outcome: Percent of graduates placed in jobs in New Mexico 66%
(c) Output: Number of students enrolled in the concurrent enrollment
program 400
(d) Outcome: Percent of first-time, full-time, degree-seeking students
enrolled in a given fall term who persist to the following
spring term 70%
(6) Research and public service projects:
(a) Judicial selection 45.9 45.9
(b) Judicial education center 139.7 139.7
(c) Spanish resource center 81.5 81.5
(d) Southwest research center 1,310.6 1,310.6
(e) Substance abuse program 186.5 186.5
(f) Native American intervention 203.3 203.3
(g) Resource geographic
information system 77.3 77.3
(h) Natural heritage program 62.3 62.3
(i) Southwest Indian law
clinic 203.8 203.8
(j) Bureau of business and economic
research census/population
analysis 404.6 404.6
(k) New Mexico historical
review 54.0 54.0
(l) Ibero-American education
consortium 101.1 101.1
(m) Youth education recreation
program 117.7 117.7
(n) Advanced materials research 41.2 41.2
(o) Manufacturing engineering
program 402.5 402.5
(p) Hispanic student
center 121.4 121.4
(q) Wildlife law education 101.7 101.7
(r) Youth leadership development 59.5 59.5
(s) Morrissey hall research 46.9 46.9
(t) Africana studies faculty
initiative 80.0 80.0
(u) Disabled student services 233.9 233.9
(v) Minority graduate
recruitment and retention 134.0 134.0
(w) Graduate research
development fund 61.6 61.6
(x) Community-based education 521.2 521.2
(y) Corrine Wolfe children's law
center 203.0 203.0
(z) Mock trials program 95.3 95.3
(aa) Engaging Latino communities
for education 72.9 72.9
(bb) Pre-college minority student
math and science 225.0 225.0
(cc) Latin American student
recruitment 154.1 154.1
(dd) Saturday science and math
academy 49.7 49.7
(ee) Utton transboundary
resources center 349.6 349.6
(ff) Law college prep
mentoring program 145.2 145.2
(gg) Law library improvements 130.9 130.9
(hh) Navajo language research and
teaching 80.0 80.0
(ii) Biomedical engineering 195.2 195.2
(jj) Student athlete retention 190.0 190.0
(kk) Department of media arts 162.2 162.2
(ll) International education
initiatives 212.8 212.8
(mm) College mentoring program 109.2 109.2
(nn) Institute for aerospace
engineering 59.4 59.4
(oo) Alfonso Ortiz center 10.3 10.3
(pp) African American studies 22.5 22.5
(qq) African American student
services program 26.0 26.0
(rr) Morrisey hall and African
American performing arts 48.0 48.0
(ss) Land grant studies 63.2 63.2
(tt) Latin American studies recruit,
retain faculty and students 107.2 107.2
(uu) Latin American, Iberian institute
and Latin American studies 27.5 27.5
(vv) College prep mentoring 91.8 91.8
(ww) Arts laboratory 116.0 116.0
(xx) Small business innovation
and research outreach program 125.0 125.0
The purpose of the instruction and general program is to provide education services designated to meet the intellectual, educational and quality of life goals associated with the ability to enter the workforce, compete and advance in the new economy, and contribute to social advancement through informed citizenship.
Appropriations:
(a) Instruction and general
purposes 58,959.6 32,481.0 1,229.0 92,669.6
(b) Office of medical
investigator 4,159.5 2,169.0 6,328.5
(c) Children's psychiatric
hospital 7,138.0 13,888.0 21,026.0
(d) Hemophilia program 553.3 553.3
(e) Carrie Tingley hospital 5,152.0 11,311.0 16,463.0
(f) Out-of-county indigent
fund 1,160.4 1,160.4
(g) Newborn intensive care 3,490.7 2,777.0 6,267.7
(h) Pediatric oncology 1,046.8 360.0 1,406.8
(i) Young children's health
center 605.7 2,490.0 3,095.7
(j) Area health education
centers 45.0 45.0
(k) Locum tenens 697.3 1,564.0 2,261.3
(l) Poison control center 1,416.7 405.0 145.0 1,966.7
(m) Telemedicine 502.8 135.0 637.8
(n) Cancer center 2,834.7 6,201.0 8,781.0 17,816.7
(o) Lung and tobacco-related
illnesses 1,000.0 1,000.0
(p) Genomics, biocomputing and
environmental health research 1,605.0 1,605.0
(q) Los pasos program 45.0 45.0
(r) Trauma specialty education 360.0 360.0
(s) Pediatrics specialty
education 360.0 360.0
(t) Native American health
center 307.7 307.7
(u) Hepatitis community health
outcomes 949.0 5.0 954.0
(v) Nurse expansion 1,520.2 1,520.2
(w) Integrative medicine program 114.3 196.0 310.3
(x) Nurse advice line 30.3 30.3
(y) Other 313,570.0 80,459.0 394,029.0
The other state funds appropriations to the university of New Mexico health sciences center include four million seven hundred sixty-two thousand dollars ($4,762,000) from the tobacco settlement program fund: one million dollars ($1,000,000) for research and clinical care programs in lung and tobacco-related illnesses; eight hundred thirty-seven thousand dollars ($837,000) for instruction and general purposes; one million two hundred fifteen thousand dollars ($1,215,000) for research in genomics, biocomputing and environmental health; four hundred five thousand dollars ($405,000) for the poison control center; three hundred sixty thousand dollars ($360,000) for the pediatric oncology program; one hundred thirty-five thousand dollars ($135,000) for the telemedicine program; forty-five thosuand dollars ($45,000) for the los pasos program; forty-five thousand dollars ($45,000) for area health education centers; three hundred sixty thousand dollars ($360,000) for specialty education in trauma; and three hundred sixty thousand dollars ($360,000) for specialty education in pediatrics. These funds may not be used for any other purpose.
Performance measures:
(a) Output: University of New Mexico hospital inpatient readmission rate 4%
(b) Output: Number of university of New Mexico cancer research and
treatment center clinical trials 190
(c) Output: Number of post-baccalaureate degrees awarded 296
(d) Outcome: External dollars for research and public service, in
millions $278.1
(e) Outcome: Pass rates for step three of the United States medical
licensing exam on the first attempt 98%
Subtotal [296,802.9] [789,637.0] [212,862.0] 1,299,301.9
NEW MEXICO STATE UNIVERSITY:
(1) Main campus:
The purpose of the instruction and general program is to provide education services designed to meet the intellectual, educational and quality of life goals associated with the ability to enter the workforce, compete and advance in the new economy and contribute to social advancement through informed citizenship.
Appropriations:
(a) Instruction and general
purposes 113,636.0 86,257.0 8,888.0 208,781.0
(b) Athletics 3,390.1 7,381.0 55.0 10,826.1
(c) Educational television 1,050.7 923.0 1,973.7
(d) Other 78,924.0 104,342.0 183,266.0
(a) Outcome: Percent of full-time, degree-seeking, first-time freshmen
retained to second year 78%
(b) Outcome: External dollars for research and creative activity, in
millions $189.9
(c) Output: Number of teacher preparation programs available at New
Mexico community college sites 4
(d) Outcome: Percent of full-time, degree-seeking, first-time freshmen
completing an academic program within six years 45%
(e) Outcome: Number of undergraduate transfer students from two-year
colleges 750
(2) Alamogordo branch:
The purpose of the instruction and general program at New Mexico's community colleges is to provide credit and noncredit postsecondary education and training opportunities to New Mexicans so that they have the skills to be competitive in the new economy and are able to participate in lifelong learning activities.
Appropriations:
(a) Instruction and general
purposes 7,194.5 3,812.0 287.0 11,293.5
(b) Nurse expansion 27.6 27.6
(c) Other 788.0 2,578.0 3,366.0
(a) Outcome: Percent of graduates placed in jobs in New Mexico 69.5%
(b) Output: Number of students enrolled in the small business
development center program 725
(c) Outcome: Percent of first-time, full-time degree-seeking students
enrolled in a given fall term who persist to the following
spring term 79.5%
(3) Carlsbad branch:
The purpose of the instruction and general program at New Mexico's community colleges is to provide credit and noncredit postsecondary education and training opportunities to New Mexicans so that they have the skills to be competitive in the new economy and are able to participate in lifelong learning activities.
Appropriations:
(a) Instruction and general
purposes 4,296.2 4,541.0 282.0 9,119.2
(b) Nurse expansion 110.5 110.5
(c) Other 761.0 3,124.0 3,885.0
(a) Outcome: Percent of new students taking nine or more credit hours
successful after three years 65%
(b) Outcome: Percent of graduates placed in jobs in New Mexico 82%
(c) Output: Number of students enrolled in the contract training program 350
(4) Dona Ana branch:
The purpose of the instruction and general program at New Mexico's community colleges is to provide credit and noncredit postsecondary education and training opportunities to New Mexicans so that they have the skills to be competitive in the new economy and are able to participate in lifelong learning activities.
Appropriations:
(a) Instruction and general
purposes 20,120.5 13,437.0 1,945.0 35,502.5
(b) Nurse expansion 103.0 103.0
(c) Other 4,000.0 14,560.0 18,560.0
(a) Outcome: Percent of new students taking nine or more credit hours
successful after three years 46%
(b) Outcome: Percent of graduates placed in jobs in New Mexico 77%
(c) Output: Number of students enrolled in the adult basic education
program 5,000
(d) Outcome: Percent of first-time, full-time, degree-seeking students
enrolled in a given fall term who persist to the following
spring term 81%
(5) Grants branch:
The purpose of the instruction and general program at New Mexico's community colleges is to provide credit and noncredit postsecondary education and training opportunities to New Mexicans so that they have the skills to be competitive in the new economy and are able to participate in lifelong learning activities.
Appropriations:
(a) Instruction and general
purposes 3,455.6 1,592.0 110.0 5,157.6
(b) Other 525.0 1,131.0 1,656.0
(a) Outcome: Percent of new students taking nine or more credit hours
successful after three years 53%
(b) Outcome: Percent of graduates placed in jobs in New Mexico 76%
(c) Output: Number of students enrolled in the community services
program 550
(d) Outcome: Percent of first-time, full-time, degree-seeking students
enrolled in a given fall term who persist to the following
spring term 78%
(6) Department of agriculture:
Appropriations: 10,759.6 4,301.0 1,200.0 16,260.6
The general fund appropriation to the department of agriculture includes two hundred thirty thousand dollars ($230,000) for soil and water conservation district projects.
(7) Research and public service projects:
(a) Agricultural experiment
station 14,243.7 4,400.0 9,300.0 27,943.7
(b) Cooperative extension
service 11,806.3 12,200.0 23,600.0 47,606.3
(c) Water resource research 220.4 394.0 614.4
(d) Coordination of Mexico
programs 44.9 44.9
(e) Indian resources development 354.7 354.7
(f) Waste management
education program 241.4 130.0 1,800.0 2,171.4
(g) Campus security 39.8 39.8
(h) Carlsbad manufacturing
sector development program 262.9 293.0 555.9
(i) Manufacturing sector
development program 341.9 39.0 380.9
(j) Alliances for
underrepresented students 325.9 22.0 347.9
(k) Arrowhead center for
business development 115.3 50.0 1,277.0 1,442.3
(l) Viticulturist 194.1 194.1
(m) Aerospace engineering 327.8 327.8
(n) Nurse expansion 761.6 761.6
(o) New Mexico space consortium
grant 730.0 730.0
(p) Las Vegas schools agriculture
education program 45.5 45.5
(q) Tribal extension program 222.7 222.7
(r) Institute for international
relations 164.5 16.0 180.5
(s) Mental health nurse
practitioner 369.4 369.4
(t) College of agriculture
leadership program 58.2 58.2
(u) Space consortium and
outreach program 64.2 64.2
(v) Alliance teaching and
learning advancement 89.5 89.5
(w) College assistance migrant
program 160.7 160.7
(x) Chile industry 210.1 210.1
(y) Speech and hearing program 50.0 50.0
Subtotal [194,859.8] [224,493.0] [175,502.0] 594,854.8
NEW MEXICO HIGHLANDS UNIVERSITY:
(1) Main:
The purpose of the instruction and general program is to provide education services designed to meet the intellectual, educational and quality of life goals associated with the ability to enter the workforce, compete and advance in the new economy and contribute to social advancement through informed citizenship.
Appropriations:
(a) Instruction and general
purposes 26,217.8 9,938.0 421.0 36,576.8
(b) Athletics, wrestling and
rodeo 2,028.1 167.0 45.0 2,240.1
(c) Other 14,717.0 11,743.0 26,460.0
(a) Outcome: Percent of full-time, degree-seeking, first-time freshmen
retained to second year 53%
(b) Outcome: Percent of graduating seniors indicating "satisfied" or
"very satisfied" with the university on student
satisfaction survey 90%
(c) Outcome: Percent of total funds generated by grants and contracts 16%
(d) Output: Number of undergraduate transfer students from two-year
colleges 450
(e) Output: Percent of full-time, degree-seeking, first-time freshmen
completing an academic program within six years 20%
(2) Research and public service projects:
(a) Upward bound 60.0 60.0
(b) Advanced placement 250.8 250.8
(c) Native American recruitment
and retention 22.5 22.5
(d) Diverse populations study 129.3 3.0 132.3
(e) Spanish program 205.6 205.6
(f) Forest and watershed
institute 255.9 6.0 261.9
(g) Bilingual education material 50.7 50.7
(h) Ben Lujan leadership
institute 46.6 46.6
Subtotal [29,267.3] [24,831.0] [12,209.0] 66,307.3
WESTERN NEW MEXICO UNIVERSITY:
(1) Main:
The purpose of the instruction and general program is to provide education services designed to meet the intellectual, educational and quality of life goals associated with the ability to enter the workforce, compete and advance in the new economy and contribute to social advancement through informed citizenship.
Appropriations:
(a) Instruction and general
purposes 15,039.9 7,847.0 216.0 23,102.9
(b) Athletics 1,887.0 178.0 2,065.0
(c) Other 4,022.0 4,490.0 8,512.0
(a) Outcome: Percent of full-time, degree-seeking, first-time freshmen
retained to second year 53%
(b) Output: Number of graduates from the school of education 150
(c) Outcome: External dollars to be used for programs to promote student
success, in millions $3
(d) Output: Number of undergraduate transfer students from two-year
colleges 170
(e) Output: Percent of full-time, degree-seeking, first-time freshmen
completing an academic program within six years 22%
(2) Research and public service projects:
(a) Child development center 326.7 654.0 980.7
(b) Instructional television 90.5 90.5
(c) Web-based teacher licensure 172.9 172.9
(d) Nurse expansion 421.1 421.1
Subtotal [17,938.1] [12,701.0] [4,706.0] 35,345.1
EASTERN NEW MEXICO UNIVERSITY:
(1) Main campus:
The purpose of the instruction and general program is to provide education services designed to meet the intellectual, educational and quality of life goals associated with the ability to enter the workforce, compete and advance in the new economy and contribute to social advancement through informed citizenship.
Appropriations:
(a) Instruction and general
purposes 24,292.1 12,287.0 3,234.0 39,813.1
(b) Athletics 2,154.0 912.0 11.0 3,077.0
(c) Educational television 1,074.8 1,362.0 630.0 3,066.8
(d) Other 12,839.0 9,695.0 22,534.0
(a) Outcome: Percent of full-time, degree-seeking, first-time freshmen
retained to second year 61.5%
(b) Outcome: External dollars supporting research and student success,
in millions $8
(c) Output: Number of undergraduate transfer students from two-year
colleges 430
(d) Output: Percent of full-time, degree-seeking, first-time freshmen
completing an academic program within six years 34%
(2) Roswell branch:
The purpose of the instruction and general program at New Mexico's community colleges is to provide credit and noncredit postsecondary education and training opportunities to New Mexicans so that they have the skills to be competitive in the new economy and are able to participate in lifelong learning activities.
Appropriations:
(a) Instruction and general
purposes 12,576.0 6,832.0 3,754.0 23,162.0
(b) Nurse expansion 69.1 69.1
(c) Other 4,276.0 6,044.0 10,320.0
(a) Outcome: Percent of new students taking nine or more credit hours
successful after three years 49%
(b) Outcome: Percent of graduates placed in jobs in New Mexico 68%
(c) Efficiency: Percent of programs having stable or increasing enrollments 55%
(d) Outcome: Percent of first-time, full-time, degree-seeking students
enrolled in a given fall term who persist to the following
spring term 75.9%
(3) Ruidoso branch:
The purpose of the instruction and general program at New Mexico's community colleges is to provide credit and noncredit postsecondary education and training opportunities to New Mexicans so that they have the skills to be competitive in the new economy and are able to participate in lifelong learning activities.
Appropriations:
(a) Instruction and general
purposes 2,066.6 1,740.0 236.0 4,042.6
(b) Adult basic education-
Ruidoso 44.7 53.0 97.7
(c) Other 438.0 681.0 1,119.0
(a) Outcome: Percent of new students taking nine or more credit hours
successful after three years 54%
(b) Efficiency: Percent of programs having stable or increasing enrollments 75%
(c) Outcome: Percent of first-time, full-time, degree-seeking students
enrolled in a given fall term who persist to the following
spring term 64%
(4) Research and public service projects:
(a) Blackwater Draw site and
museum 88.7 11.0 99.7
(b) Student success programs 473.7 473.7
(c) Nurse expansion 38.5 38.5
(d) At-risk student tutoring 87.2 87.2
(e) Allied health 190.2 190.2
Subtotal [43,155.6] [40,750.0] [24,285.0] 108,190.6
NEW MEXICO INSTITUTE OF MINING AND TECHNOLOGY:
(1) Main:
The purpose of the instruction and general program is to provide education services designed to meet the intellectual, educational and quality of life goals associated with the ability to enter the workforce, compete and advance in the new economy and contribute to social advancement through informed citizenship.
Appropriations:
(a) Instruction and general
purposes 26,664.1 12,001.0 38,665.1
(b) Athletics 223.3 9.0 232.3
(c) Other 15,481.0 12,946.0 28,427.0
The general fund appropriation to the New Mexico institute of mining and technology for the bureau of mines includes one hundred thousand dollars ($100,000) from federal Mineral Lands Leasing Act receipts.
Performance measures:
(a) Outcome: Percent of full-time, degree-seeking, first-time freshmen
retained to second year 75%
(b) Output: Number of students registered in master of science teaching
program 170
(c) Outcome: External dollars for research and creative activity, in
millions $85
(d) Output: Number of undergraduate transfer students from two-year
colleges 40
(e) Output: Percent of full-time, degree-seeking, first-time freshmen
completing an academic program within six years 50%
(2) Research and public service projects:
(a) Minority engineering, math
and science 140.3 1,101.0 1,241.3
(b) Bureau of mines 3,804.7 281.0 4,085.7
(c) Petroleum recovery research
center 2,150.5 3,000.0 5,150.5
(d) Bureau of mines inspection 282.5 282.5
(e) Energetic materials research
center 778.0 8,530.0 38,900.0 48,208.0
(f) Science and engineering fair 299.2 299.2
(g) Institute for complex
additive systems analysis 898.0 20,000.0 20,898.0
(h) Cave and karst research 461.7 461.7
(i) Geophysical research center 900.5 9,014.0 9,914.5
(j) Homeland security center 624.0 624.0
(k) Aquifer mapping 233.0 233.0
(l) Southeast New Mexico center
for energy studies 93.7 14.0 107.7
Subtotal [37,553.5] [49,431.0] [71,846.0] 158,830.5
NORTHERN NEW MEXICO COLLEGE:
(1) Main:
The purpose of the instruction and general program at New Mexico's community colleges is to provide credit and noncredit postsecondary education and training opportunities to New Mexicans so that they have the skills to be competitive in the new economy and are able to participate in lifelong learning activities.
Appropriations:
(a) Instruction and general
purposes 10,271.4 4,253.0 4,264.0 18,788.4
(b) Athletics 216.0 84.0 300.0
(c) Other 2,573.0 3,134.0 5,707.0
(a) Outcome: Percent of new students taking nine or more credit hours
successful after three years 70%
(b) Outcome: Percent of graduates placed in jobs in New Mexico 73%
(c) Output: Number of students enrolled in the adult basic education
program 450
(d) Outcome: Percent of first-time, full-time, degree-seeking students
enrolled in a given fall term who persist to the following
spring term 81%
(2) Research and public service projects:
(a) Special projects expansion
and flexibility 253.1 253.1
(b) Northern pueblos institute 89.2 89.2
(c) Faculty salary adjustments 106.4 106.4
Subtotal [10,936.1] [6,910.0] [7,398.0] 25,244.1
SANTA FE COMMUNITY COLLEGE:
(1) Main:
The purpose of the instruction and general program at New Mexico's community colleges is to provide credit and noncredit postsecondary education and training opportunities to New Mexicans so that they have the skills to be competitive in the new economy and are able to participate in lifelong learning activities.
Appropriations:
(a) Instruction and general
purposes 8,658.0 21,466.0 3,655.0 33,779.0
(b) Other 5,154.0 3,456.0 8,610.0
(a) Outcome: Percent of new students taking nine or more credit hours
successful after three years 54%
(b) Outcome: Percent of graduates placed in jobs in New Mexico 79%
(c) Output: Number of students enrolled in the contract training program 3,350
(2) Research and public service projects:
(a) Small business development
centers 4,605.9 1,080.0 5,685.9
(b) Nurse expansion 84.9 84.9
Subtotal [13,348.8] [26,620.0] [8,191.0] 48,159.8
CENTRAL NEW MEXICO COMMUNITY COLLEGE:
The purpose of the instruction and general program at New Mexico's community colleges is to provide credit and noncredit postsecondary education and training opportunities to New Mexicans so that they have the skills to be competitive in the new economy and are able to participate in lifelong learning activities.
Appropriations:
(a) Instruction and general
purposes 49,564.0 63,603.6 5,409.0 118,576.6
(b) Other 8,636.7 37,182.0 45,818.7
(a) Outcome: Percent of new students taking nine or more credit hours
successful after three years 52%
(b) Outcome: Percent of graduates placed in jobs in New Mexico 82%
(c) Output: Number of students enrolled in distance education programs 6,500
(d) Outcome: Percent of first-time, full-time, degree-seeking students
enrolled in a given fall term who persist to the following
spring term 81%
(2) Research and public service projects:
(a) Tax help New Mexico 162.1 162.1
Subtotal [49,726.1] [72,240.3] [42,591.0] 164,557.4
LUNA COMMUNITY COLLEGE:
The purpose of the instruction and general program at New Mexico's community colleges is to provide credit and noncredit postsecondary education and training opportunities to New Mexicans so that they have the skills to be competitive in the new economy and are able to participate in lifelong learning activities.
Appropriations:
(a) Instruction and general
purposes 7,495.6 3,540.0 1,212.0 12,247.6
(b) Athletics 178.0 178.0
(c) Special projects expansion
and flexibility 93.8 93.8
(d) Nurse expansion 33.1 33.1
(e) Student service and economic
development programs 265.0 265.0
(f) Other 2,134.0 1,941.0 4,075.0
(a) Outcome: Percent of new students taking nine or more credit hours
successful after three years 57%
(b) Outcome: Percent of graduates placed in jobs in New Mexico 90%
(c) Output: Number of students enrolled in the small business
development center program 400
(d) Outcome: Percent of first-time, full-time, degree-seeking students
enrolled in a given fall term who persist to the following
spring term 80%
Subtotal [8,065.5] [5,674.0] [3,153.0] 16,892.5
MESALANDS COMMUNITY COLLEGE:
The purpose of the instruction and general program at New Mexico's community colleges is to provide credit and noncredit postsecondary education and training opportunities to New Mexicans so that they have the skills to be competitive in the new economy and are able to participate in lifelong learning activities.
Appropriations:
(a) Instruction and general
purposes 4,261.7 1,326.0 1,050.0 6,637.7
(b) Athletics 65.5 65.5
(c) Special projects expansion
and flexibility 43.5 43.5
(d) Other 1,198.0 1,393.0 2,591.0
(a) Outcome: Percent of new students taking nine or more credit hours
successful after three years 51.7%
(b) Outcome: Percent of graduates placed in jobs in New Mexico 58.6%
(c) Output: Number of students enrolled in the small business
development center program 66
(d) Outcome: Percent of first-time, full-time, degree-seeking students
enrolled in a given fall term who persist to the following
spring term 64.7%
Subtotal [4,370.7] [2,524.0] [2,443.0] 9,337.7
NEW MEXICO JUNIOR COLLEGE:
The purpose of the instruction and general program at New Mexico's community colleges is to provide credit and noncredit postsecondary education and training opportunities to New Mexicans so that they have the skills to be competitive in the new economy and are able to participate in lifelong learning activities.
Appropriations:
(a) Instruction and general
purposes 6,043.2 13,468.0 1,196.0 20,707.2
(b) Athletics 279.4 279.4
(c) Other 2,987.0 3,713.0 6,700.0
(a) Outcome: Percent of new students taking nine or more credit hours
successful after three years 60%
(b) Outcome: Percent of graduates placed in jobs in New Mexico 75%
(c) Output: Number of students enrolled in distance education program 15,000
(d) Outcome: Percent of first-time, full-time, degree-seeking students
enrolled in a given fall term who persist to the following
spring term 73.5%
(2) Research and public service projects:
(a) Nurse expansion 151.5 151.5
(b) Lea county distance
education consortium 34.2 34.2
(c) Oil and gas training center 63.4 63.4
Subtotal [6,571.7] [16,455.0] [4,909.0] 27,935.7
SAN JUAN COLLEGE:
(1) Main campus:
The purpose of the instruction and general program at New Mexico's community colleges is to provide credit and noncredit postsecondary education and training opportunities to New Mexicans so that they have the skills to be competitive in the new economy and are able to participate in lifelong learning activities.
Appropriations:
(a) Instruction and general
purposes 22,073.5 28,276.0 1,967.0 52,316.5
(b) Other 8,513.0 12,448.0 20,961.0
(a) Outcome: Percent of new students taking nine or more credit hours
successful after three years 64%
(b) Outcome: Percent of graduates placed in jobs in New Mexico 67%
(c) Output: Number of students enrolled in the service learning program 650
(d) Efficiency: Percent of programs having stable or increasing enrollments 65%
(e) Outcome: Percent of first-time, full-time, degree-seeking students
enrolled in a given fall term who persist to the following
spring term 76%
(2) Research and public service projects:
(a) Dental hygiene program 190.6 190.6
(b) Indigent youth program 47.4 47.4
(c) Nurse expansion 337.7 337.7
Subtotal [22,649.2] [36,789.0] [14,415.0] 73,853.2
CLOVIS COMMUNITY COLLEGE:
The purpose of the instruction and general program at New Mexico's community colleges is to provide credit and noncredit postsecondary education and training opportunities to New Mexicans so that they have the skills to be competitive in the new economy and are able to participate in lifelong learning activities.
Appropriations:
(a) Instruction and general
purposes 8,934.9 3,726.0 664.0 13,324.9
(b) Nurse expansion 65.9 65.9
(c) Other 3,687.0 8,481.0 12,168.0
(a) Outcome: Percent of new students taking nine or more credit hours
successful after three years 71%
(b) Outcome: Percent of graduates placed in jobs in New Mexico 72%
(c) Output: Number of students enrolled in the concurrent enrollment
program 650
(d) Outcome: Percent of first-time, full-time, degree-seeking students
enrolled in a given fall term who persist to the following
spring term 79%
Subtotal [9,000.8] [7,413.0] [9,145.0] 25,558.8
NEW MEXICO MILITARY INSTITUTE:
The purpose of the New Mexico military institute program is to provide a college-preparatory instruction for students in a residential, military environment culminating in a high school diploma or associates degree.
Appropriations:
(a) Instruction and general
purposes 799.6 20,560.9 123.0 21,483.5
(b) Athletics 299.4 61.7 361.1
(c) Knowles legislative
scholarship program 867.2 867.2
(d) Other 4,816.7 4,816.7
(a) Output: Percent of full-time-equivalent capacity enrolled each fall
term 96%
(b) Outcome: American college testing composite scores for graduating
high school seniors 22.1
(c) Efficiency: Percent of legislative scholarships (Knowles) awarded 100%
Subtotal [1,966.2] [25,439.3] [123.0] 27,528.5
NEW MEXICO SCHOOL FOR THE BLIND AND VISUALLY IMPAIRED:
The purpose of the New Mexico school for the blind and visually impaired program is to provide the training, support and resources necessary to prepare blind and visually impaired children of New Mexico to participate fully in their families, communities and the workforce and to lead independent, productive lives.
Appropriations:
(a) Instruction and general
purposes 308.8 11,057.2 609.9 11,975.9
(b) Early childhood center 400.0 60.0 460.0
(c) Low vision clinic programs 19.0 19.0
(a) Quality: Percent of parents' rating of overall quality of services
as good or excellent based on annual survey 91%
(b) Output: Number of students receiving direct services through a full
continuum of services 1,278
Subtotal [727.8] [11,117.2] [609.9] 12,454.9
NEW MEXICO SCHOOL FOR THE DEAF:
The purpose of the New Mexico school for the deaf program is to provide a school-based comprehensive, fully-accessible and language-rich learning environment for its students who are deaf and hard-of-hearing and to work collaboratively with families, agencies and communities throughout the state to meet the unique communication, language and learning needs of children and youth who are deaf and hard-of-hearing.
Appropriations:
(a) Instruction and general
purposes 3,520.3 10,808.0 14,328.3
(b) Statewide outreach services 253.7 253.7
(a) Outcome: Percent of students in kindergarten through grade twelve
demonstrating academic improvement across curriculum domains 75%
(b) Outcome: Rate of transition to postsecondary education,
vocational-technical training schools, junior colleges,
work training or employment for graduates based on a
three-year rolling average 93%
(c) Outcome: Percent of parents satisfied with educational services from
New Mexico school for the deaf 90%
Subtotal [3,774.0] [10,808.0] 14,582.0
TOTAL HIGHER EDUCATION 791,280.4 1,376,120.6 44,302.7 613,539.3 2,825,243.0
K. PUBLIC SCHOOL SUPPORT
Except as otherwise provided, unexpended balances of appropriations made in this subsection shall not revert at the end of fiscal year 2011.
PUBLIC SCHOOL SUPPORT:
(1) State equalization guarantee distribution:
The purpose of public school support is to carry out the mandate to establish and maintain a uniform system of free public schools sufficient for the education of, and open to, all the children of school age in the state.
Appropriations: 2,268,805.0 850.0 23,898.0 2,293,553.0
The rate of distribution of the state equalization guarantee distribution shall be based on a program unit value determined by the secretary of public education. The secretary of public education shall establish a preliminary unit value to establish budgets for the 2010-2011 school year and then, upon verification of the number of units statewide for fiscal year 2011 but no later than January 31, 2011, the secretary of public education may adjust the program unit value.
The secretary of public education, in collaboration with the department of finance and administration, office of education accountability, shall ensure all teachers have been evaluated under the tiered licensure evaluation system and have the professional competencies of the appropriate level. The secretary of public education shall withhold from the public school distribution funding for the minimum salary of any teacher who has not been evaluated.
The secretary of public education, in collaboration with the department of finance and administration, office of education accountability, shall ensure all principals and assistant school principals have been evaluated under the highly objective uniform statewide standard of evaluation and have the professional competencies to serve as a principal or assistant principal. The secretary of public education shall withhold from the public school distribution funding for the minimum salary of any principal or assistant principal who has not been evaluated.
After considering those elementary physical education programs eligible for state financial support and the amount of state funding available for elementary physical education, the secretary of public education shall annually determine the programs and the consequent number of students in elementary physical education that will be used to calculate the number of elementary physical education program units.
For the 2010-2011 school year, the state equalization guarantee distribution includes sufficient funding for school districts to implement a new formula-based program. Those districts shall use current year membership in the calculation of program units for the new formula-based program.
The general fund appropriation to the state equalization guarantee distribution reflects the deduction of federal revenue pursuant to Paragraph (2) of Subsection C of Section 22-8-25 NMSA 1978 that includes payments commonly known as “impact aid funds” pursuant to 20 USCA 7701 et seq., and formerly known as “PL874 funds”.
The general fund appropriation to the public school fund shall be reduced by the amounts transferred to the public school fund from the current school fund and from the federal Mineral Lands Leasing Act receipts otherwise unappropriated.
Any unexpended balances in the authorized distributions remaining at the end of fiscal year 2011 from appropriations made from the general fund shall revert to the general fund.
Performance measures:
(a) Outcome: Annual percent of core academic subjects taught by highly
qualified teachers, kindergarten through twelfth grade 100%
(b) Outcome: Percent of recent New Mexico high school graduates who take
remedial courses in higher education at two-year and
four-year schools 40%
(c) Outcome: Percent of fourth-grade students who achieve proficiency or
above on the standards-based assessment in reading 74%
(d) Outcome: Percent of fourth-grade students who achieve proficiency or
above on the standards-based assessment in mathematics 67%
(e) Outcome: Percent of eighth-grade students who achieve proficiency or
above on the standards-based assessment in reading 72%
(f) Outcome: Percent of eighth-grade students who achieve proficiency or
above on the standards-based assessment in mathematics 63%
(g) Quality: Current year's cohort graduation rate using four-year
cumulative method 80%
(h) Quality: Current year's cohort graduation rate using five-year
cumulative method 80%
(2) Transportation distribution:
Appropriations: 98,335.5 98,335.5
(3) Supplemental distribution:
Appropriations:
(a) Out-of-state tuition 346.0 346.0
(b) Emergency supplemental 2,000.0 2,000.0
Any unexpended balances in the supplemental distribution of the public education department remaining at the end of fiscal year 2011 from appropriations made from the general fund shall revert to the general fund.
Subtotal [2,369,486.5] [850.0] [23,898.0] 2,394,234.5
FEDERAL FLOW THROUGH:
Appropriations: 512,282.0 512,282.0
Subtotal [512,282.0] 512,282.0
INSTRUCTIONAL MATERIALS:
(1) Instructional material fund:
Appropriations: 15,175.4 15,175.4
The appropriation to the instructional material fund is made from the federal Minerals Land Leasing Act (30 USCA 181, et seq.) receipts.
(2) Dual credit instructional materials:
Appropriations: 1,000.0 1,000.0
Subtotal [16,175.4] 16,175.4
Appropriations: 2,000.0 2,000.0
The general fund appropriation to the public education department for the Indian Education Act includes four hundred thousand dollars ($400,000) for a non-profit organization that provides teaching support in schools with a high proportion of Native American students.
The general fund appropriation to the public education department for the Indian Education Act includes four hundred thousand dollars ($400,000) to provide a rural literacy initiative to support after-school and summer literacy block programs for students in kindergarten through eighth grade in schools with a high proportion of Native American students contingent on receipt of four hundred thousand dollars ($400,000) in matching funds from other than state sources no later than September 30, 2010.
Subtotal [2,000.0] 2,000.0
TOTAL PUBLIC SCHOOL SUPPORT 2,387,661.9 850.0 536,180.0 2,924,691.9
GRAND TOTAL FISCAL YEAR 2011
APPROPRIATIONS 5,353,881.3 3,006,851.9 885,292.5 5,919,427.4 15,165,453.1
Section 5. SPECIAL APPROPRIATIONS.--The following amounts are appropriated from the general fund or other funds as indicated for the purposes specified. Unless otherwise indicated, the appropriation may be expended in fiscal years 2010 and 2011. Unless otherwise indicated, any unexpended balances of the appropriations remaining at the end of fiscal year 2011 shall revert to the appropriate fund.
(1) ADMINISTRATIVE OFFICE OF THE DISTRICT ATTORNEYS:
Any unexpended balances remaining at the end of fiscal year 2010 or any year thereafter from revenues received by a district attorney or the administrative office of the district attorneys from the United States department of justice pursuant to the southwest border prosecution initiative shall not revert but shall remain with the recipient district attorney's office for expenditure in that or future fiscal years.
(2) DEPARTMENT OF FINANCE AND
ADMINISTRATION: 50.0 50.0
For the transition of the new administration in fiscal year 2011. Funds shall be released pursuant to state board of finance approval.
(3) SECRETARY OF STATE: 1,000.0 1,912.0 2,912.0
For the 2010 general election. Notwithstanding the provisions of Section 1-19A-10 NMSA 1978, the other state funds appropriation is from the public election fund.
(4) SECRETARY OF STATE: 500.0 217.7 717.7
For the 2010 primary election. Notwithstanding the provisions of Section 1-19A-10 NMSA 1978, the other state funds appropriation is from the public election fund.
(5) NEW MEXICO LIVESTOCK BOARD: 600.0 600.0
For livestock disease assessment, diagnosis, control and prevention.
(6) ENERGY, MINERALS AND NATURAL
RESOURCES DEPARTMENT: 750.0 750.0
For Pecos canyon state park and other state park facilities to support maintenance and infrastructure improvements that benefit anglers and hunters. The department of game and fish is authorized to transfer seven hundred fifty thousand dollars ($750,000) from the game protection fund to the energy, minerals and natural resources department.
(7) HUMAN SERVICES DEPARTMENT:
Any unexpended balances remaining at the end of fiscal year 2010 from reimbursements received from the social security administration to support the general assistance program shall not revert but may be expended by the human services department in fiscal year 2011 for payments to recipients in the general assistance program.
(8) HUMAN SERVICES DEPARTMENT: 4,000.0 4,000.0
For caseload growth in cash assistance in the temporary assistance for needy families program in fiscal year 2011. The appropriation is from the temporary assistance for needy families block grant to New Mexico.
(9) WORKFORCE SOLUTIONS DEPARTMENT: 25,015.1 25,015.1
For enhancements to the unemployment insurance program and to fund phased implementation of the unemployment insurance tax system for expenditure through fiscal year 2012, contingent on receipt of federal funds available through the Assistance for Unemployed Workers and Struggling Families Act, Title II of Division B of Public Law 111-5, enacted February 17, 2009, and the department providing an expenditure plan for review by the department of finance and administration and legislative finance committee and for approval by the New Mexico office of recovery and reinvestment and the information technology commission for funds being expended on information technology projects.
(10) WORKFORCE SOLUTIONS DEPARTMENT:
The period of time for expending the three million five hundred thousand dollars ($3,500,000) in unexpended federal funds available through the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act contained in Subsection 46 of Section 5 of Chapter 124 of Laws 2009 is extended through fiscal year 2011 to complete enhancements to the unemployment insurance claims and interactive voice response systems.
(11) WORKFORCE SOLUTIONS DEPARTMENT: 7,007.5 7,007.5
To the unemployment insurance program for improvements and administrative costs, contingent on receipt of federal funds available through the Assistance for Unemployed Workers and Struggling Families Act, Title II of Division B of Public Law 111-5, enacted February 17, 2009, and the department providing an expenditure plan for review by the department of finance administration and legislative finance committee and approval by the New Mexico office of recovery and reinvestment.
(12) WORKFORCE SOLUTIONS DEPARTMENT:
The period of time for expending the two million five hundred thousand dollars ($2,500,000) in unexpended federal funds available through the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act contained in Subsection 47 of Section 5 of Chapter 124 of Laws 2009 is extended through fiscal year 2011 to complete facility upgrades to department buildings statewide, including upgrades necessary to bring buildings into compliance with the Americans with Disabilities Act.
(13) CORRECTIONS DEPARTMENT: 800.0 800.0
For emergency repairs of state-owned correctional facilities. The appropriation is from the correction industries revolving fund, permanent fund or land grant income cash balances.
(14) DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION:
The other state funds and federal funds appropriations to the transportation and highway operations program of the department of transportation pertaining to prior fiscal years may be extended through fiscal year 2011, but not to exceed fifty million dollars ($50,000,000).
(15) DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION:
The other state funds and federal funds appropriations to the programs and infrastructure program of the department of transportation pertaining to prior fiscal years may be extended through fiscal year 2011, but not to exceed four hundred million dollars ($400,000,000).
(16) PUBLIC EDUCATION DEPARTMENT: 4,000.0 4,000.0
For emergency supplemental support in fiscal year 2011 to small rural school districts with a total membership of fewer than six hundred in their elementary, middle and high schools in financial need, but no money shall be distributed to any school district having cash and invested reserves, or other resources or any combination thereof, equaling five percent or more of the school district's operational budget. The general fund appropriation is from the separate account of the appropriation contingency fund dedicated for the purpose of implementing and maintaining educational reforms created in Section 12 of Chapter 114 of Laws 2004.
(17) PUBLIC EDUCATION DEPARTMENT: 6,000.0 6,000.0
For emergency support to school districts experiencing shortfalls. All requirements for distribution of
supplemental funds shall be in accordance with Section 22-8-30 NMSA 1978. The appropriation is from the separate account of the appropriation contingency fund dedicated for the purpose of implementing and maintaining educational reforms created in Section 12 of Chapter 114 of Laws 2004.
TOTAL SPECIAL APPROPRIATIONS 11,550.0 4,279.7 36,022.6 51,852.3
Section 6. SUPPLEMENTAL AND DEFICIENCY APPROPRIATIONS.--The following amounts are appropriated from the general fund, or other funds as indicated, for expenditure in fiscal year 2010 for the purposes specified. Disbursement of these amounts shall be subject to certification by the agency to the department of finance and administration and the legislative finance committee that no other funds are available in fiscal year 2010 for the purpose specified and approval by the department of finance and administration. Any unexpended balances remaining at the end of fiscal year 2010 shall revert to the appropriate fund.
(1) HUMAN SERVICES DEPARTMENT: 3,700.0 3,700.0
For caseload growth in the temporary assistance for needy families program. The appropriation is from the temporary assistance for needy families block grant to New Mexico.
(2) HUMAN SERVICES DEPARTMENT:
The four million dollars ($4,000,000) contained in Item 1 of Subsection A of Section 7 of Chapter 3 of Laws 2009 for the developmental disabilities medicaid waiver program shall not be expended for its original purpose but is reappropriated to cover a fiscal year 2010 shortfall in the medical assistance program for medicaid.
(3) HUMAN SERVICES DEPARTMENT:
The one million five hundred thousand dollars ($1,500,000) contained in Item 2 of Subsection A of Section
7 of Chapter 3 of Laws 2009 to enhance behavioral health services for individuals through age eighteen with behavioral health care needs who are enrolled in the medicaid program or the state children health insurance program shall not be expended for its original purpose but is reappropriated to cover a fiscal year 2010 shortfall in the medical assistance program for medicaid.
TOTAL SUPPLEMENTAL AND DEFICIENCY APPROPRIATIONS 3,700.0 3,700.0
Section 7. DATA PROCESSING APPROPRIATIONS.--The following amounts are appropriated from the computer systems enhancement fund, or other funds as indicated, for the purposes specified. Unless otherwise indicated, the appropriation may be expended in fiscal years 2010, 2011 and 2012. Unless otherwise indicated, any unexpended balances remaining at the end of fiscal year 2012 shall revert to the computer systems enhancement fund or other funds as indicated. For executive branch agencies, the department of finance and administration shall allocate amounts from the funds for the purposes specified upon receiving certification and supporting documentation from the state chief information officer that indicates compliance with the project certification process. The judicial information systems council shall certify compliance to the department of finance and administration for judicial branch projects. For executive branch agencies, all hardware and software purchases funded through appropriations made in Sections 4, 5, 6 and 7 of this act shall be procured using consolidated purchasing led by the state chief information officer and state purchasing division to achieve economies of scale and to provide the state with the best unit price.
(1) ADMINISTRATIVE OFFICE OF THE COURTS: 895.0 895.0
To continue the implementation of the statewide case management system with electronic filing and electronic filing interfaces. The appropriation is from an increase to the civil filing fee.
(2) ADMINISTRATIVE OFFICE OF THE COURTS:
The period of time for expending the two million dollars ($2,000,000) appropriated from the general fund contained in Subsection 2 of Section 7 of Chapter 3 of Laws 2008 to include the Bernalillo county metropolitan court in the implementation of the statewide integrated and consolidated case management system with electronic document management and electronic filing capabilities is extended through fiscal year 2012.
(3) TAXATION AND REVENUE DEPARTMENT: 8,300.0 8,300.0
To replace the 30-year-old common business-oriented language-based driver and vehicle systems. The appropriation is from cash balances and revenues.
(4) TAXATION AND REVENUE DEPARTMENT:
The period of time for expending the two million seven hundred fifty-two thousand five hundred dollars ($2,752,500) appropriated from the motor vehicle cash balances contained in Subsection 9 of Section 7 of Chapter 3 of Laws 2008 to implement point-of-sale at all motor vehicle offices is granted a final extension through fiscal year 2012.
(5) TAXATION AND REVENUE DEPARTMENT:
The period of time for expending the four million one hundred twenty thousand dollars ($4,120,000) appropriated from the general fund contained in Subsection 5 of Section 7 of Chapter 3 of Laws 2008 to begin the replacement of the common business oriented language-based motor vehicle and driver systems is granted a final extension through fiscal 2012.
(6) GENERAL SERVICES DEPARTMENT: 1,100.0 1,100.0
To complete electronic content management and electronic document imaging in the risk management division. Five hundred thousand dollars ($500,000) is from the workers’ compensation retention fund, five hundred thousand dollars ($500,000) is from the public liability fund and one hundred thousand dollars ($100,000) is from the public property reserve fund.
(7) DEPARTMENT OF INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY:
The four million eight hundred thousand dollars ($4,800,000) appropriated from the computer systems enhancement fund contained in Subsection 6 of Section 7 of Chapter 109 of Laws 2006 as extended by Subsection 11 of Section 7 of Chapter 28 of Laws 2007 as extended by Subsection 15 of Section 7 of Chapter 3 of Laws 2008 to continue telecommunication infrastructure in the southeast quadrant of New Mexico shall not be expended for its original purpose but is appropriated to expand telecommunication capabilities throughout the state, including the southeast quadrant, and to provide a match for federal broadband technology grants.
(8) STATE COMMISSION OF PUBLIC RECORDS:
The period of time for expending the one hundred fifty thousand dollars ($150,000) appropriated from the general fund contained in Subsection 16 of Section 7 of Chapter 3 of Laws 2008 to implement a commercial off-the-shelf centralized records repository system with assistance from the department of information technology is granted a final extension through fiscal year 2012.
(9) REGULATION AND LICENSING DEPARTMENT:
The period of time for expending the one hundred seventeen thousand four hundred dollars ($117,400) appropriated from the real estate commission fund contained in Subsection 15 of Section 7 of Chapter 28 of Laws of 2007 as extended by Subsection 20 of Section 7 of Chapter 3 of Laws 2008 to upgrade license 2000 for real estate commission needs is granted a final extension through fiscal year 2012.
(10) COMMISSIONER OF PUBLIC LANDS: 1,335.0 1,335.0
To procure and implement a land management system for management of public lands. The appropriation is from the state lands maintenance fund.
(11) COMMISSIONER OF PUBLIC LANDS:
The three hundred thirty-three thousand dollars ($333,000) from the state lands maintenance fund contained in Subsection 7 of Section 7 of Chapter 3 of Laws 2008 to begin replacement of the oil and natural gas accounting and reporting database with commercial off-the-shelf solutions shall not be expended for its original purpose but is appropriated to procure and implement a land management system.
(12) HUMAN SERVICES DEPARTMENT:
The period of time for expending the two million dollars ($2,000,000) appropriated from the computer systems enhancement fund contained in Subsection 19 of Section 7 of Chapter 28 of Laws 2007 as extended by Subsection 26 of Section 7 of Chapter 3 of Laws 2008 to consolidate the eligibility determination across state agencies, including screening, intake, application processing, assessment, scheduling and referrals is granted a final extension through fiscal year 2012.
(13) HUMAN SERVICES DEPARTMENT:
The period of time for expending the one million five hundred thousand dollars ($1,500,000) appropriated from the computer systems enhancement fund and the four million five hundred thousand dollars ($4,500,000) in federal funds contained in Subsection 21 of Section 7 of Chapter 28 of Laws 2007 as extended by Subsection 27 of Section 7 of Chapter 3 of Laws 2008 to continue the replacement of the income support division computer system is granted a final extension through fiscal year 2012.
(14) HUMAN SERVICES DEPARTMENT:
The one million nine hundred thousand dollars ($1,900,000) contained in Section 1 of Chapter 6 of Laws 2008 (2nd S.S.) for the low income home energy assistance program shall not be expended for its original purpose but is reappropriated to continue replacement of the income support division computer system.
(15) WORKFORCE SOLUTIONS DEPARTMENT:
The period of time for expending the three million five hundred thousand dollars ($3,500,000) from the Job Creation and Worker Assistance Act of 2002 and Section 903 of the Social Security Act, as amended, also known as the federal Reed Act, and made available to the New Mexico workforce solutions department in Subsection 21 of Section 7 of Chapter 33 of Laws 2005 as extended by Subsection 18 of Section 7 of Chapter 109 of Laws 2006 as extended by Subsection 23 of Section 7 of Chapter 28 of Laws 2007 as extended by Subsection 28 of Section 7 of Chapter 3 of Laws 2008 as extended by Subsection 9 of Section 7 of Chapter 124 of Laws 2009 to meet federal accounting and reporting requirements not addressed by the base component of the statewide human resources, accounting and management reporting system project is extended through fiscal year 2012.
(16) WORKFORCE SOLUTIONS DEPARTMENT:
The unexpended balance of the twelve million five hundred thousand dollars ($12,500,000) in unexpended federal Reed Act funds originally appropriated in Subsection 13 of Section 7 of Chapter 76 of Laws 2003 and changed or extended in Subsection 20 of Section 7 of Chapter 33 of Laws 2005, Subsection 19 of Section 7 of Chapter 109 of Laws 2006, Subsection 23 of Section 7 of Chapter 28 of Laws 2007 and Subsection 9 of Section 7 of Chapter 124 of Laws 2009 may be expended through fiscal year 2012 for the purpose of working toward the implementation of the unemployment insurance tax system. The appropriation is from federal Reed Act and federal Economic Security Recovery Act of 2001 funds.
(17) DEPARTMENT OF PUBLIC SAFETY:
The period of time for expending the three million dollars ($3,000,000) appropriated from the computer
systems enhancement fund contained in Subsection 30 of Section 7 of Chapter 28 of Laws 2007 as extended by Subsection 33 of Section 7 of Chapter 3 of Laws 2008 to replace the system that centrally captures criminal information, provides access to federal bureau of investigation files and provides law enforcement agencies with the ability to communicate with each other using a commercial off-the-shelf solution is granted a final extension through fiscal year 2012.
TOTAL DATA PROCESSING APPROPRIATIONS 11,630.0 11,630.0
Section 8. ADDITIONAL FISCAL YEAR 2010 BUDGET ADJUSTMENT AUTHORITY.--During fiscal year 2010, subject to review and approval by the department of finance and administration, pursuant to Sections 6-3-23 through 6-3-25 NMSA 1978, in addition to the budget adjustment authority in the General Appropriation Act of 2009:
A. each agency, except for the department of public safety, may request program transfers between the personal services and employee benefits category of one program to the personal services and employee benefits category of another program;
B. the judicial standards commission may request budget increases up to thirty thousand dollars ($30,000) from other state funds received from investigation and trial cost reimbursements from respondents;
C. the administrative office of the courts may request budget increases up to two hundred thousand dollars ($200,000) from internal service funds/interagency transfers from the supreme court automation fund and may request budget increases up to three hundred thousand dollars ($300,000) from internal service funds/interagency transfers from filing fees collected by the courts, may request budget increases up to two hundred thousand dollars ($200,000) from the magistrate and metropolitan court capital projects fund to secure, furnish and equip magistrate court facilities once the New Mexico finance authority determines the court facilities fund will have sufficient funds to pay the metropolitan court debt service;
D. the second judicial district court may request budget increases up to one hundred thousand dollars ($100,000) from other state funds received from arbitration and may request budget increases up to one hundred seventy-five thousand dollars ($175,000) from other state funds received from mediation revenues and supervised visitation fees;
E. the fourth judicial district court may request budget increases up to ten thousand dollars ($10,000) from other state funds from duplication fees;
F. the ninth judicial district court may request budget increases up to ten thousand dollars ($10,000) from other state funds from drug court filing fees;
G. the tenth judicial district court may request budget increases up to ten thousand dollars ($10,000) from other state funds from copy and tape duplication fees and may request budget increases up to ten thousand dollars ($10,000) from internal service funds/interagency transfers from the mediation fund;
H. the eleventh judicial district court may request budget increases up to twenty thousand dollars ($20,000) from other state funds for drug court mediation;
I. the Bernalillo county metropolitan court may request budget increases up to twenty-three thousand dollars ($23,000) from internal service funds/interagency transfers to transfer to the court facilities fund;
J. the second judicial district attorney may request budget increases up to one hundred ninety thousand dollars ($190,000) from internal service funds/interagency transfers and other state funds;
K. the medicaid fraud program of the attorney general may request budget increases up to two hundred thousand dollars ($200,000) from other state funds for court reporting services, witness fees, transcription fees and supplies related to active cases in medicaid fraud;
L. the legal services program of the attorney general may request budget increases up to one hundred fifty thousand dollars ($150,000) from other state funds for discovery costs for tobacco arbitration provided that the revenue expended shall be solely from settlements that authorize consumer issues;
M. the property tax program of the taxation and revenue department may request budget increases up to five hundred thousand dollars ($500,000) from other state funds to cover a shortfall in personal services and employee benefits, advertising delinquent tax sales and an unanticipated court settlement;
N. the economic development department may request program transfers up to two hundred fifty thousand dollars ($250,000) between programs within the personal services and employee benefits category;
O. the private investigations advisory board of the regulation and licensing department may request budget increases up to two hundred eighty-five thousand ($285,000) from other state funds for costs associated with background investigations;
P. the cultural affairs department may request budget increases up to one million five hundred thousand dollars ($1,500,000) from internal service funds/interagency transfers and other state funds;
Q. the income support program of the human services department may request budget increases up to five hundred seventy-five thousand dollars ($575,000) from other state funds for reimbursements received from the social security administration for payments to recipients in the general assistance program;
R. the department of health may request budget increases from fund balance for newborn screening, may request budget increases from fund balance for the Emergency Medical Services Fund Act and the public health program of the department of health may request budget increases up to one million seven hundred fifty thousand dollars ($1,750,000) from other state funds from formula rebate revenue for the women, infants and children program;
S. the health certification, licensing and oversight program of the department of health may request budget increases up to five hundred thousand dollars ($500,000) from internal service funds/interagency transfers from the human services department for receivership;
T. the juvenile justice facilities program of the children, youth and families department may request budget increases up to one million six hundred thousand dollars ($1,600,000) from other state funds from distributions from the land grant permanent and land income funds;
U. the department of military affairs may request program transfers up to five hundred thousand dollars ($500,000) between the national guard support program and the crisis response program;
V. the corrections department may request program transfers if the cumulative effect of a requested program transfer, together with all program transfers previously requested and approved pursuant to this subsection, will not increase or decrease the total annual appropriation to a program from the general fund by more than four percent;
W. the programs and infrastructure program of the department of transportation may request budget increases up to ten million dollars ($10,000,000) from other state funds to match with federal funds for construction costs;
X. the higher education department may request budget increases from internal service funds/interagency transfers from Wallace foundation grant revenue transferred from the department of finance and administration.
Section 9. CERTAIN FISCAL YEAR 2011 BUDGET ADJUSTMENTS AUTHORIZED.--
A. As used in this section and Section 8 of the General Appropriation Act of 2010:
(1) "budget category" means an item or an aggregation of related items that represents the object of an appropriation. Budget categories include personal services and employee benefits, contractual services, other and other financing uses;
(2) "budget increase" means an approved increase in expenditures by an agency from a specific source;
(3) "category transfer" means an approved transfer of funds from one budget category to another budget category, provided that a category transfer does not include a transfer of funds between divisions; and
(4) "program transfer" means an approved transfer of funds from one program of an agency to another program of that agency.
B. Pursuant to Sections 6-3-23 through 6-3-25 NMSA 1978, those budget adjustments specified in this section are authorized for fiscal year 2011.
C. In addition to the specific category transfers authorized in Subsection F of this section and unless a conflicting category transfer is authorized in Subsection E of this section, all agencies, including legislative agencies, may request category transfers among personal services and employee benefits, contractual services and other.
D. An agency specified in paragraph (4) of this subsection to which an appropriation for a capital outlay project has been made by an act of the second session of the forty-ninth legislature or a previous legislative session may, by agreement, transfer all or a portion of the appropriation to another agency specified in paragraph (4) of this subsection if the receiving agency is granted a budget adjustment for the transferred appropriation pursuant to Sections 6-3-23 through 6-3-25 NMSA 1978. The following provisions shall govern a budget adjustment request made pursuant to this subsection:
(1) a budget adjustment request shall only be approved pursuant to a certification from the transferring and receiving agencies and upon a finding by the department of finance and administration that:
(a) the receiving agency can more effectively or efficiently administer the appropriation, due to the receiving agency’s regulatory or programmatic responsibilities or other subject matter expertise;
(b) the receiving agency has received other appropriations for the same purpose or project and placing the related appropriations with a single agency will result in administrative efficiencies; or
(c) substantive law requires the receiving agency to own, control, operate or maintain property that is the subject of the appropriation;
(2) a budget adjustment authorized by this subsection is in addition to other budget adjustments authorized by law and is not subject to the limitation of Subsection E of this section or any similar provision;
(3) once implemented, the budget adjustment shall be effective for and during the fiscal years in which the transferred appropriation may be expended; and
(4) a budget adjustment may be requested pursuant to this subsection only if both the transferring agency and the receiving agency are among the following:
(a) the children, youth and families department;
(b) the corrections department;
(c) the local government division of the department of finance and
administration;
(d) the property control division of the general services department;
(e) the cultural affairs department;
(f) the department of health;
(g) the state fair commission;
(h) the public education department;
(i) indian affairs department;
(j) economic development department; or
(k) aging and long-term services department.
E. Unless a conflicting budget increase is authorized in Subsection F of this section, a program with internal service funds/interagency transfers appropriations or other state funds appropriations that collects money in excess of those appropriated may request budget increases in an amount not to exceed five percent of its internal service funds/interagency transfers or other state funds appropriation contained in Section 4 of the General Appropriation Act of 2010. To track the five percent transfer limitation, agencies shall report cumulative budget adjustment request totals on each budget request submitted. The department of finance and administration shall certify agency reporting of these cumulative totals.
F. In addition to the budget authority otherwise provided in the General Appropriation Act of 2010, the following agencies may request specified budget adjustments:
(1) the judicial standards commission may request budget increases up to thirty thousand dollars ($30,000) from other state funds from investigation and trial cost reimbursements from respondents;
(2) the administrative office of the courts may request budget increases up to two hundred thousand dollars ($200,000) from other state funds from the supreme court automation fund;
(3) the second judicial district court may request budget increases up to one hundred thousand dollars ($100,000) from other state funds and internal service funds/interagency transfers from arbitration revenues and may request budget increases up to one hundred seventy-five thousand dollars ($175,000) from other state funds and internal service funds/interagency transfers from mediation and supervised visitation fees;
(4) the Bernalillo county metropolitan court may request budget increases up to two hundred thousand dollars ($200,000) from internal service funds/interagency transfers and other state funds for pre- and post-adjudication services;
(5) the first judicial district attorney may request budget increases from internal service funds/interagency transfers and other state funds for funds received from any political subdivision of the state or from Indian tribes and may request budget increases up to one hundred twenty-five thousand dollars ($125,000) from internal service funds/interagency transfers to prosecute tax crimes statewide;
(6) the second judicial district attorney may request budget increases up to fifty thousand dollars ($50,000) from other state funds for attorney bar dues and may request budget increases up to six hundred thousand dollars ($600,000) from internal service funds/interagency transfers and other state funds for personal services and employee benefits and contractual services;
(7) the eleventh judicial district attorney-division I may request budget increases up to one hundred fifty thousand dollars ($150,000) from internal service funds/interagency transfers and other state funds;
(8) the eleventh judicial district attorney-division II may request budget increases up to four hundred thousand dollars ($400,000) from internal service funds/interagency transfers and other state funds received from any political subdivision of the state or from Indian tribes to assist in the prosecution of crimes within McKinley county;
(9) the thirteenth judicial district attorney may request budget increases from internal service funds/interagency transfers and other state funds for funds received from any political subdivision of the state or from Indian tribes;
(10) the administrative office of the district attorneys may request budget increases up to fifty thousand dollars ($50,000) from other state funds for costs associated with the district attorneys training conference and may request budget increases up to two thousand dollars ($2,000) from other state funds from miscellaneous revenue collected from nondistrict attorney employee registration fees to pay for conference-related expenses;
(11) the state investment council may request budget increases up to two million dollars ($2,000,000) from other state funds for investment manager fees and custody fees, provided that this amount may be exceeded if the department of finance and administration approves a certified request from the state investment council that additional increases from other state funds are required for increased investment manager fees and custody fees and may request transfers to any other category except that only five hundred thousand dollars ($500,000) of the money appropriated for investment manager fees in the contractual services category may be transferred;
(12) the public school insurance authority may request budget increases from internal service funds/interagency transfers, other state funds and fund balances for program support and the benefits and risk programs;
(13) the health care benefits administration program of the retiree health care authority may request budget increases from other state funds for the benefits program;
(14) the general services department may request budget increases from internal service funds/interagency transfers in an amount not to exceed fifteen percent of the appropriation for the risk management programs if it collects revenue in excess of appropriated levels;
(15) the educational retirement board may request budget increases from other state funds for investment manager fees, custody fees and investment-related legal fees, provided the department of finance and administration approves a certified request from the educational retirement board that additional increases from other state funds are required for increased investment manager fees, custody fees and investment-related legal fees, and may request category transfers, except that funds authorized for investment manager fees, custody services and investment-related legal fees within the contractual services category of the administrative services division of the educational retirement board shall not be transferred;
(16) the public defender department may request budget increases up to five hundred thousand dollars ($500,000) from internal service funds/interagency transfers and other state funds;
(17) the department of information technology may request budget increases up to one million dollars ($1,000,000) from fund balances for the telecommunication, information processing and statewide human resources, accounting and management reporting system;
(18) the public employees retirement association may request budget increases from other state funds for investment manager fees, custody fees and investment-related legal fees, provided that the department of finance and administration approves a certified request from the public employees retirement association that additional increases from other state funds are required for increased investment manager fees, custody fees and investment-related legal fees, may request category transfers, except that funds authorized for investment manager fees, custody fees and investment-related legal fees within the contractual services category of the administrative division of the public employees retirement association shall not be transferred, and may request budget increases from other state funds to meet emergencies or unexpected physical plant failures that might impact the health and safety of workers or visitors to the agency;
(19) the New Mexico magazine program of the tourism department may request budget increases up to two hundred thousand dollars ($200,000) from other state funds from earnings on sales and the tourism development program of the department of tourism may request budget increases up to thirty thousand dollars ($30,000) from internal service funds/interagency transfers from earnings from route 66 commemorative license plate sales to implement a joint powers agreement among the tourism department, department of transportation and the taxation and revenue department;
(20) the private investigations advisory board of the regulation and licensing department may request budget increases up to two hundred eighty-five thousand dollars ($285,000) from other state funds for background investigation costs;
(21) the public regulation commission may request budget increases for the office of the state fire marshal from the training academy use fee fund and the patient’s compensation program of the public regulation commission may request budget increases up to two million dollars ($2,000,000) from fund balances for patient’s compensation expenses;
(22) the New Mexico medical board may request budget increases up to fifty thousand dollars ($50,000) from other state funds for the administrative hearing and litigation process;
(23) the New Mexico state fair may request budget increases from unforeseen internal service funds/interagency transfers and other state funds;
(24) the preservation program of the cultural affairs department may request budget increases from internal service funds/interagency transfers and other state funds for archaeological services;
(25) the department of game and fish may request program transfers up to two hundred fifty thousand dollars ($250,000) between programs, may request budget adjustments specific to capital projects and may request operating transfers received from other agencies in excess of the five percent budget increase limitation and may request budget increases up to three hundred fifty thousand dollars ($350,000) from other state funds for costs associated with the planning, design and construction of breakwater barriers located on Elephant Butte reservoir;
(26) the energy, minerals and natural resources department may request program transfers up to five hundred thousand dollars ($500,000) between programs and may request budget increases from internal service funds/interagency transfers for capital projects, the oil and gas conservation program may request budget increases up to two hundred thousand dollars ($200,000) from internal service funds/interagency transfers for operational expenses, may request budget transfers to and from other financing uses to transfer funds to the department of environment for the underground injection program, may request budget increases from internal service funds/interagency transfers from funds received from the department of environment for the water quality program and may request budget increases from other state funds from the oil and gas reclamation fund to close abandoned wells, the healthy forests, state parks and renewable energy and energy efficiency programs may request increases from internal service funds/interagency transfers from the New Mexico youth conservation corps fund for projects approved by the New Mexico youth conservation corps commission and may request budget increases up to five hundred thousand dollars ($500,000) from internal service funds/interagency transfers and other state funds for clean energy and energy conservation program projects, the state parks program may request budget increases up to five hundred thousand dollars ($500,000) from other state funds and internal service funds/interagency transfers for operational expenses, maintenance and capital equipment replacements and may request budget increases from internal service funds/interagency transfers for outdoor classroom projects, the healthy forests program may request budget increases up to five hundred thousand dollars ($500,000) from other state funds for costs associated with the inmate work camp program and conservation planting revolving fund and the leadership and support program may request budget increases up to one hundred fifty thousand dollars ($150,000) from internal service funds/interagency transfers for operational expenses;
(27) the office of the state engineer may request budget increases up to two hundred fifty thousand dollars ($250,000) from internal service funds/interagency transfers from the department of finance and administration for multi-stakeholder planning for implementation of the New Mexico portion of the Arizona Water Settlements Act of 2004, may request budget increases up to one hundred twenty thousand dollars ($120,000) from internal service funds/interagency transfers from the Ute construction fund to continue with managing and participating in the Ute reservoir master plan development or other operational requirements at Ute reservoir, may request budget increases up to one hundred thousand dollars ($100,000) from other state funds from contractual services reimbursements for water modeling supply studies and may request budget increases up to eighty thousand dollars ($80,000) from the bureau of reclamation for the operation and maintenance costs of the Vaughn pipeline;
(28) the organic commodity commission may request budget increases up to thirty thousand dollars ($30,000) from other state funds;
(29) the commission on the status of women may request budget increases up to one hundred thousand dollars ($100,000) from other state funds for the statutorily mandated recognition program for women and may request budget increases up to one hundred thousand dollars ($100,000) from internal service funds/interagency transfers to support the office of the governor’s council on women’s health;
(30) the aging and long-term services department may request program transfers up to five hundred thousand dollars ($500,000) from all programs to the adult protective services program, aging network program and the long-term services program and the long-term services program may request category transfers up to five hundred thousand dollars ($500,000) to other financing uses to meet medicaid match requirements;
(31) the human services department may request program transfers between the medical assistance program and the medicaid behavioral health program;
(32) the division of vocational rehabilitation may request budget increases up to two hundred thousand dollars ($200,000) from other state funds to maintain services to clients;
(33) the developmental disabilities planning council program of the developmental disabilities planning council may request budget increases up to five hundred thousand dollars ($500,000) from internal service funds/interagency transfers and may request budget increases from other state funds from revenue from the sale of training modules and materials in the brain injury advisory council program and the consumer services program;
(34) the miners' hospital of New Mexico may request budget increases from other state funds;
(35) the department of health may request budget increases from other state funds from health facility license and certification fees pursuant to Subsection G of Section 24-1-5 NMSA 1978 and may request budget increases from other state funds related to private insurer payments for services provided through the public health and family infant toddler programs;
(36) the department of environment may request program transfers up to five hundred thousand dollars ($500,000) among programs, may request budget increases from other state funds for responsible party payments, may request budget increases from other state funds up to four hundred thousand dollars ($400,000) from revenues and interest accrued in the solid waste facility grant fund for issuing grants to establish or modify solid waste facilities or for contracting for solid waste services, may request budget increases from other state funds from the corrective action fund to pay claims, may request budget increases from other state funds from the hazardous waste emergency fund, may request budget increases from internal service funds/interagency transfers from funds from the office of the natural resources trustee to be used for restoration of the Mountain View nitrate plume site, the water quality program may request budget increases up to one hundred ten thousand dollars ($110,000) from internal service funds/interagency transfers to prepare for potential litigation with Texas on water issues, and the water and wastewater infrastructure development program may request budget increases up to one hundred eighty thousand dollars ($180,000) from other state funds for providing technical services related to the drinking water state revolving loan fund, water and wastewater project grant fund and local government planning fund programs;
(37) the office of the natural resources trustee may request budget increases up to one million dollars ($1,000,000) from internal service funds/interagency transfers and other state funds for restoration projects and may request budget increases from other state funds for restoration projects equal to any fines for damages resulting from a settlement;
(38) the program support of the department of public safety may request budget increases from internal service funds/interagency transfers and other state funds from fingerprint fees and records fees collected in excess of those budgeted and the law enforcement program of the department of public safety may request budget increases from revenues collected in excess of those budgeted from the law enforcement training and recruiting fund;
(39) the department of transportation may request budget increases up to two hundred fifty thousand dollars ($250,000) from other state funds for administrative costs as allowed in Subsection E of Section 2 of Chapter 3 of Laws 2007 first special session and may request program transfers between the transportation and highway operations program and the infrastructure program to fund costs in both programs related to engineering, construction and maintenance activities;
(40) the public school facilities authority may request budget increases for project management expenses pursuant to the Public School Capital Outlay Act; and
(41) the higher education department may request transfers to and from the other financing uses category.
F. the department of military affairs, the homeland security and emergency management department, the department of public safety, and the energy, minerals and natural resources department may request budget increases from the general fund as required by an executive order declaring a disaster or emergency.
Section 10. APPROPRIATION REDUCTIONS.--
A. General fund appropriations set forth in Section 4 of the General Appropriation Act of 2010:
(1) to agencies affected by reduced telecommunications rates are reduced by a total of five hundred thousand dollars ($500,000) to reflect those reduced department of information technology telecommunications rates;
(2) to agencies affected by reduced premiums are reduced by a total of one million nine hundred seventy-eight thousand six hundred dollars ($1,978,600) to reflect reduced general services department risk management division public liability and property premiums;
(3) to agencies affected by reduced assessments are reduced by a total of three hundred sixty-six thousand eight hundred dollars ($366,800) to reflect reduced department of information technology statewide human resources, accounting and management reporting system assessments;
(4) to agencies covered by a state system employing persons who have retired from a state system and returned to work without suspending their retirement are reduced by a total of four million dollars ($4,000,000) to reflect savings resulting from the elimination of the right of such retired persons to return to work for an agency covered by a state system without suspending their retirement. This reduction is contingent on enactment of a law by the second session of the forty-ninth legislature prohibiting retirees from a state system from returning to work with an agency covered by a state system without suspending their retirement. As used in this subsection,“state system” means a retirement program provided for in the Educational Retirement Act, the Public Employees Retirement Act, the Magistrate Retirement Act or the Judicial Retirement Act;
(5) to affected agencies are reduced by a total of three million one hundred forty-two thousand three hundred dollars ($3,142,300) to reflect savings realized by keeping exempt positions vacant;
(6) to agencies affected by the elimination of the employee assistance program are reduced a total of two hundred thousand dollars ($200,000) from the personal services and employee benefits category.
B. The general fund appropriations in Section 4 of the General Appropriation Act of 2010 are further reduced as follows:
(1) the general fund appropriations to each of the public post-secondary educational institutions are reduced by an amount equal to one and forty-three one-hundredths percent of total general fund appropriations for salary and associated benefits for a total reduction of twelve million nine hundred nine thousand nine hundred dollars ($12,909,900), provided that:
(a) the higher education department shall calculate the reduction for each institution; and
(b) each institution shall determine how the reduction is allocated among expenditure categories;
(2) the general fund appropriations to each of the judicial agencies, the supreme court, the court of appeals, each of the district courts, the Bernalillo county metropolitan court are reduced by an amount equal to one and forty-three one-hundredths percent of the total general fund appropriations for salary and associated benefits for a total reduction of one million five hundred fifty thousand one hundred dollars ($1,550,100), provided that:
(a) the administrative office of the courts shall calculate the reduction for each agency; and
(b) each agency shall determine how the reduction is allocated among expenditure categories;
(3) the general fund appropriations to each of the district attorneys and the administrative office of the district attorney are reduced by an amount equal to one and forty-three one-hundredths percent of the total general fund appropriations for salary and associated benefits for a total reduction of seven hundred ninety-five thousand one hundred dollars ($795,100), provided that:
(a) the administrative office of the district attorneys shall calculate the reduction for each district attorney; and
(b) each district attorney shall determine how the reduction is allocated among expenditure categories;
(4) the general fund appropriation to the state equalization guarantee distribution is reduced by twenty-eight million nine hundred one thousand six hundred dollars ($28,901,600);
(5) the general fund appropriation to the transportation distribution is reduced by six hundred sixty-eight thousand seven hundred dollars ($668,700); and
(6) the general fund appropriations to each of the other state agencies are reduced by an amount equal to one and forty-three one-hundredths percent of the total general fund appropriations for salary and associated benefits for a total of nine million five hundred thirty-five thousand one hundred dollars ($9,535,100), provided that:
(a) the department of finance and administration shall calculate the reduction for each agency; and
(b) each agency shall determine how the reduction is allocated among expenditure categories, except that the appropriation in the other financing uses category of the developmental disabilities support program at the department of health and the appropriations in the other category of the medical assistance program and the other category of the medicaid behavioral health program at the human services department shall not be reduced.
C. The general fund appropriations to each of the legislative agencies in Laws 2010, Chapter 1, Subsection A of Section 3, 4, 5 and Sections 7 and 8 are reduced by an amount equal to one and forty-three one-hundredths percent of the total general fund appropriations for salary and associated benefits for a total of one hundred eighty-one thousand one hundred dollars ($181,100), provided that:
(1) the New Mexico legislative council shall calculate the reduction for each legislative agency; and
(2) each legislative agency shall determine how the reduction is allocated among expenditure categories.
D. The general fund appropriations in Section 4 of the General Appropriation Act of 2010 are further reduced as follows to reflect lower employer contributions pursuant to the Public Employees Retirement Act, the Judicial Retirement Act, the Magistrate Retirement Act and the Educational Retirement Act, provided that the reductions are contingent on enactment of Senate Bill 246 or similar legislation of the second session of the forty-ninth legislature that reduces employer contributions:
(1) the general fund appropriations to the state equalization guarantee distribution and the transportation distribution are reduced by a total of fourteen million nine hundred sixty-six thousand six hundred dollars ($14,966,600), provided that the public education department shall calculate the appropriate reduction for the state equalization guarantee distribution and the transportation distribution;
(2) the general fund appropriations to each of the public post-secondary educational institutions are reduced by a total of six million two hundred twenty-eight thousand nine hundred dollars ($6,228,900) provided that the higher education department shall calculate the appropriate reduction for each of the institutions; and
(3) the general fund appropriations to each of the other agencies are reduced by a total of six million one hundred thousand two hundred dollars ($6,100,200) provided that the department of finance and administration shall calculate the appropriate reduction for each of the agencies.
E. The general fund appropriations in Laws 2010, Chapter 1, Subsection A of Section 3, 4, 5 and Sections 7 and 8 are further reduced by a total of eighty-six thousand one hundred dollars ($86,100) to reflect lower employer contributions pursuant to the Public Employees Retirement Act, provided that the reductions are contingent on enactment of Senate Bill 246 or similar legislation of the second session of the forty-ninth legislature that reduces employer contributions and provided further that the New Mexico legislative council shall calculate the appropriate reduction for each of the legislative agencies.
F. In order to effectuate the reductions made in this section, the state budget division of the department of finance and administration shall reduce the operating budget of each agency affected by a reduction.”.
2. On page 236 between lines 8 and 9 insert the following section:
“Section 12. TRANSFER AUTHORITY.--
A. The governor has projected that general fund revenues, including all transfers to the general fund authorized by law, are likely to be insufficient to meet the level of appropriations authorized by law from the general fund for fiscal year 2010 and to meet the level of appropriations recommended in the budget and appropriations bill for fiscal year 2011 submitted in accordance with Section 6-3-21 NMSA 1978, thus satisfying Subsection D of Section 6-4-2.2 NMSA 1978.
B. If the revenue and other transfers to the general fund at the end of fiscal year 2010 or 2011 are not sufficient to meet appropriations, the governor, with state board of finance approval, may transfer to the appropriation account of the general fund the amount necessary to meet that fiscal year's obligations from the tax stabilization reserve, provided that the total transferred pursuant to this subsection shall not exceed eighty-three million dollars ($83,000,000).
C. If, after the total amount authorized in Subsection B of this section has been transferred, the governor determines that revenue and transfers to the general fund at the end of fiscal year 2010 or 2011 are still not sufficient to meet appropriations, the governor, with state board of finance approval, may transfer to the appropriation account of the general fund the amount necessary to meet that fiscal year’s obligations from the appropriation contingency fund, provided that the total amount transferred pursuant to this subsection shall not exceed forty-nine million dollars ($49,000,000). A transfer pursuant to this subsection is from the separate account of the appropriation contingency fund dedicated for the purpose of implementing and maintaining educational reforms pursuant to Laws 2004, Chapter 114, Section 12 and shall be used for the purpose of supplanting general fund appropriations to the state equalization guarantee distribution, which implements and maintains educational reforms enacted in the second session of the forty-ninth legislature or previously.”.
3. Renumber the succeeding sections accordingly.
4. Correct all typographical and grammatical errors, renumber and reletter all sections and
subsections, adjust all totals and subtotals, adjust language accordingly and delete all
bracketed material.