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HB 17

Pensions and Retirement Benefits - As introduced, enacts the "Tennessee Retirement Savings Plan Act." - Amends TCA Title 4; Title 8; Title 9 and Title 50.

114th Regular Session (2025-2026) Introduced by Charlie Baum

Creates a temporary nine-member Commission on Reduction of Grocery Costs to study NM price drivers and issue recommendations, incl. proposed legislation, by Nov 15, 2025.

Withdrawn.
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Bill Summary · HB 17

HB 17 — Commission on Reduction of Grocery Costs (New Mexico)

Status: Action postponed indefinitely (as of records provided)
Introduced / Sponsors: Drafted 2025; primary sponsors Rep. Charlotte Little, Sen. Sarah Silva, Rep. Reena Szczepanski (and listed House sponsor(s) in committee reports)
Subject: Boards & commissions; consumer protection; food prices

Main purpose

Create a temporary, nine‑member Commission on Reduction of Grocery Costs to study drivers of rising grocery prices in New Mexico, evaluate policy options to lower consumer grocery costs (with emphasis on essential household foods), and produce specific recommendations — including proposed legislation — to the Governor and Legislature.

Key provisions

  • Establishes the Commission on Reduction of Grocery Costs as a temporary body that will operate from appointment until March 31, 2026.
  • Membership (9 total): 3 appointed by the Governor and 6 by the New Mexico Legislative Council; no more than five members from the same political party. Appointing authorities are asked to pursue economic, geographic, gender, cultural and racial diversity and technical expertise (economics, consumer protection, agriculture, trade, food production, nutrition).
  • Duties and scope:
    • Review policies and develop proposals to reduce grocery costs for New Mexico consumers.
    • Recommend strategies to support local food businesses and expand retail access to locally grown/processed products.
    • Evaluate supply‑chain infrastructure (transportation, cold storage, aggregation) and whether investments could reduce costs and price volatility.
    • Review state law on price gouging, dynamic pricing, and other pricing practices.
    • Focus on essential household foods — specifically eggs, milk, fresh produce, bread, tortillas, and minimally processed foods.
    • Consider state actions to mitigate impacts from federal trade agreements or other external factors that could increase grocery costs.
    • Consider other policies/trends that increase grocery costs and make recommendations.
  • Reporting: Commission must submit a findings report, specific recommendations, and proposed legislation to the Governor, the New Mexico Legislative Council, and the relevant interim legislative committee by November 15, 2025.
  • Operations: Commission may elect officers, hire or contract staff, request assistance from Legislative Council Service and the Economic Development Department, and members are eligible for per diem under the Per Diem and Mileage Act.

Fiscal impact

  • Original bill included a $400,000 general‑fund appropriation (for EDD support) but the House Appropriations & Finance Committee amendment struck that appropriation.
  • Legislative Finance Committee (LFC) analysis estimates nonrecurring costs up to approximately $40,000 (primarily per diem/allowances and limited support) — described as an expected nonrecurring cost, with no recurring fiscal impact projected.
  • The commission is authorized to hire or contract staff; any significant staffing or contractor use could increase costs beyond the LFC estimate, but no appropriation remained in the amended version.

Who would be affected

  • Consumers (especially low‑income households) — potential downstream benefits if recommendations lower grocery bills.
  • Grocery retailers, local producers, food processors, and distributors — subject of the study and potential policy changes.
  • State agencies (Economic Development Department, Department of Agriculture, Legislative Council Service) — may provide assistance or implement recommendations.
  • Legislature — will receive proposed legislation and decide on statutory or budgetary follow‑ups.

Timeline / Procedural notes

  • Commission report due: November 15, 2025.
  • Commission terminates: March 31, 2026.
  • The bill included an emergency clause (immediate effect upon signature) in earlier drafts; committee amendments removed the $400,000 appropriation but retained the commission creation and reporting deadlines.
  • Current recorded status in the materials provided: action postponed indefinitely. If advanced, the commission would be short‑term and focused on producing actionable legislative recommendations before the November 15, 2025 deadline.

If you want, I can:
- Extract the exact statutory language for each duty and membership clause,
- Produce a one‑page memo on likely policy recommendations the commission might consider (based on similar studies), or
- Track subsequent actions and update the status.

Compiled from official sources — confirm details with the bill’s official record.

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