Sat Mar 8 5:32PM - 13 days, 17 hours left in session

Senate Bill 65

Consumer Solar Protection Act [view on nmlegis.gov]

Financial Analysis: FIR


Sponsors
Sen. Katy Duhigg 10 Bernalillo
Rep. Janelle Anyanonu 19 Bernalillo

Status
STBTCPassed, Feb 6, with Do Pass, as amended
SJCWas scheduled for Feb 24. No vote recorded. Presumed stalled.


"Official" History

This is the official nmlegis action history. I'm doing my best to translate the LONG/WEIRD-STRING to something less gibberishy. And before you ask, no, the "Legis Day" number has no mapping to the real world.

Actions: [2] STBTC/SJC-STBTC [4] DP/a-SJC

Legis DayActionDetails
2 referred STBTC/SJC
2 sent STBTC
4 passed STBTC (view committee report) DP/a 7-3; nays: Paul, Sanchez, Sharer
4 sent SJC


This table shows bill actions detected on Ed's system, using heuristics that may not be 100% accurate and which may not reflect the "official" nmlegis chronology. It is probably more than you care to know.

Jan 22 filed: Consumer Solar Protection Act
[new]
sent to STBTC
actions: 'SPREF' -> '[2] STBTC/SJC-STBTC'
new sponsor: Katy Duhigg
Feb 5 scheduled for STBTC on Thu Feb 6, 13:30
Feb 7 passed STBTC; sent to SJC
actions: '[2] STBTC/SJC-STBTC' -> '[2] STBTC/SJC-STBTC [4] DP/a-SJC'
Feb 13 scheduled for SJC on Fri Feb 14, 13:30
Feb 14 scheduled for SJC on Mon Feb 17, 13:30
new sponsor: Janelle Anyanonu
Feb 20 scheduled for SJC on Fri Feb 21, 13:30
Feb 21 rescheduled for SJC on Mon Feb 24, 13:30
Feb 24 bumped to first in SJC agenda Mon Feb 24, 13:30

SENATE BILL 65

57th legislature - STATE OF NEW MEXICO - first session, 2025

INTRODUCED BY

Katy M. Duhigg and Janelle Anyanonu

 

 

 

 

 

AN ACT

RELATING TO CONSUMER PROTECTION; ENACTING THE CONSUMER SOLAR PROTECTION ACT; PROVIDING FOR FINANCE CONTRACTS; PROVIDING DUTIES AND LIMITATIONS.

 

BE IT ENACTED BY THE LEGISLATURE OF THE STATE OF NEW MEXICO:

     SECTION 1. [NEW MATERIAL] SHORT TITLE.--This act may be cited as the "Consumer Solar Protection Act".

     SECTION 2. [NEW MATERIAL] DEFINITIONS.--As used in the Consumer Solar Protection Act:

          A. "consumer" means a natural person;

          B. "consumer reporting agency" means a person that for monetary fees or dues or on a cooperative nonprofit basis regularly engages in whole or in part in the practice of assembling or evaluating consumer credit information or other information on consumers to furnish consumer reports to third parties and that uses any means or facility of interstate commerce to prepare or furnish consumer reports;

          C. "finance contract" means an agreement that provides financing for the sale or installation of a residential solar energy system, a lease for a residential solar energy system or a power purchase agreement;

          D. "power purchase agreement" means an agreement by which a third party installs, owns and operates a residential solar energy system on a consumer's property and the consumer purchases the system's electric output for a predetermined period;

          E. "repurchase" means that the holder of a finance contract demanded and received a return of the amount paid to the seller or installer pursuant to the finance contract; and

          F. "residential solar energy system" means a residential facility or system that uses photovoltaic cells and solar energy to generate electricity.

     SECTION 3. [NEW MATERIAL] PERMITS--SELLERS AND INSTALLERS--PROHIBITED ACTIONS.--

          A. A person who is intending to install a residential solar energy system shall have all required permits approved and displayed as provided by state law or local ordinance before any installation work occurs.

          B. A person selling a residential solar energy system to a consumer shall not:

                (1) create an email account for the consumer or attempt to access the consumer's email account in connection with the application of an electronic signature on any sales, installation or finance contract documents in connection with the system;

                (2) represent or imply that the system is:

                     (a) offered as part of a government program;

                     (b) offered as part of a program from the applicable utility company; or

                     (c) free; or

                (3) represent to the consumer that the system entitles the consumer to federal or state tax credits unless the seller:

                     (a) is qualified to give tax advice;

                     (b) has evaluated the eligibility of the consumer to whom the representation is being made; and

                     (c) provides written documentation of the evaluation and representation at the time the representation is made.

          C. Prior to or at the time of the sale of a residential solar energy system to a consumer, a person selling the system shall provide to the consumer upon request a paper copy of any documents proffered in electronic form, including finance contracts or other contracts.

          D. A person selling or installing a residential solar energy system shall not request or accept a power of attorney from the consumer for whom the system is being installed. A power of attorney accepted in violation of this subsection is void.

     SECTION 4. [NEW MATERIAL] WHEN SYSTEMS OPERATIONAL--PAYMENTS NOT DUE WHEN NOT OPERATIONAL.--

          A. A residential solar energy system is considered to be operational if it is generating electricity.

          B. If a residential solar energy system is not operational within ninety days after the first date of installation of solar panels, the holder of a finance contract, seller, installer, lessor or electricity generator shall not:

                (1) request or accept payments from the consumer under the finance contract, lease or agreement until the system is operational;

                (2) fail to or refuse to return any payments made or received while the system was not operational; or

                (3) report to a consumer reporting agency that a payment was late if it was due while the system was not operational.

          C. A holder of a finance contract shall not request or accept payments from a consumer after repurchase.

     SECTION 5. [NEW MATERIAL] PRIVATE RIGHT OF ACTION.--

          A. A person violating a provision of the Consumer Solar Protection Act with respect to a consumer shall be liable to the consumer for the greater of actual damages or statutory damages in the amount of one thousand dollars ($1,000).

          B. In an action filed by a consumer or on behalf of a class of consumers, if the consumer proves that the violation was willful, actual or statutory damages, as applicable, shall be trebled, injunctive relief may be granted and the court shall award reasonable attorney fees and costs to the prevailing consumer.

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Legislators: Democratic sponsorship Republican sponsorship Bipartisan sponsorship This indicates your legislator
(Highlights bills they sponsor, committees they sit in)
Bill Rows: Active -- hearings scheduled (NN) - sequence number in agenda Inactive -- no hearings scheduled
Bill Progress: Passed Failed Vote Tabled
Incomplete Data: Heard(?)
(was scheduled for hearing recently)
Heard Long Ago
(was scheduled for hearing many days ago)
(There is very little I can do about these because nmlegis.gov does not report real-time results)

This site pulls data from nmlegis.gov but is in no way associated with that site or the state of New Mexico. It's just a labor of love by Ed.

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