Senate Bill 309 was presented to the Senate Finance Committee by Senator Gonzales. David Barton, CEO of the New Mexico Lottery Authority, said the bill would replace the current 30% return requirement with a mandated floor transfer to the scholarship fund of $43,000,000 for fiscal years 2028–2030 and $45,000,000 thereafter. Barton said the figure is based on a 10-year average of transfers and that a dollar-floor would allow the lottery to offer higher-value scratcher tickets and stabilize returns, arguing that neighboring states without statutory percentage mandates have had success growing revenues.
Rita Jones, chair of the Lottery board and a CPA, testified the board has internal and external audits and safeguards and that the bill includes a reversion provision that would restore the 30% requirement if the change underperforms. Supporters at the hearing included the New Mexico Council of University Presidents and a lobbyist for Playing for Education; opponents included Think New Mexico and a student testifier who said a flat floor risks capping growth and losing purchasing power over time. Committee members questioned the empirical basis of the claims and asked for more analysis; the sponsor and witnesses cited case studies from other states and a 10-year average used to calculate the floor.
After public testimony and extended questioning, the committee moved a 'do pass' recommendation for SB309 (roll-call exchanges are recorded in the transcript).