Santa Fe New Mexican

Bill would offer state employees personal loans

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New Mexico state employees would gain access to shortterm personal loans that could be repaid through their paychecks, under newly proposed legislatio­n.

State Sen. Bill Tallman, D-Albuquerqu­e, said Monday that the bill is designed to ensure state employees can borrow modest amounts of money without resorting to high-interest loans from storefront lenders.

Effective this year, New Mexico is capping annual interest rates on small loans at 175 percent in an effort to combat predatory lending. Consumer advocates say that limit still is too high and are promoting new lending alternativ­es for individual­s and households that don’t have access to traditiona­l bank loans.

Tallman’s proposal would limit interest rates to 30 percent for qualified state employees and cap repayment at 12 percent of gross salary or wages. He said the goal is to lower costs and debt burdens on state workers.

“It’s a nice benefit we can give to state employees,” said Tallman, who previously worked as a city manager of several midsized municipali­ties outside New Mexico.

Several local government entities in New Mexico, from the city of Las Cruces to Santa Fe Public Schools, already have joined a program called TrueConnec­t that provides employees with shortterm loans that are repaid from a portion of their salary.

Santa Fe Public Schools offers its employees loans of $1,000 to $3,000 through TrueConnec­t, said district spokesman Jeff Gephart. He said the district does not make any money off the loans while paying its own administra­tive expenses.

Tallman’s bill would direct the New Mexico Department of Finance and Administra­tion to devise a loan program.

New Mexico state government employs nearly 20,000 people.

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