Board of trustees; powers.

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The board of trustees may:

A. acquire, construct, operate or maintain one or more hospital facilities in the special hospital district for the purposes for which the special hospital district was created;

B. receive and expend all funds accruing to the special hospital district pursuant to any provision of the Special Hospital District Act through the sale of bonds or the levy of taxes, paid from any source on account of patients accommodated at the hospital, from any gift or bequest or from any federal, state or private grant;

C. enter into contracts, including contracts with the federal government and the departments and agencies thereof or the state government and the departments, institutions and agencies thereof, for the treatment of or the hospitalization of patients under the jurisdiction of such entities;

D. adopt and use a seal to authenticate its official transactions;

E. sue and be sued;

F. adopt rules and regulations for the governing of the special hospital district;

G. employ and fix the compensation of an executive director of the special hospital district and such other staff and clerical personnel it deems necessary;

H. employ a hospital administrator for hospital facilities under its control and approve or disapprove the recommendations of such administrator pertaining to compensation and employment benefits for hospital employees;

I. fix the mileage reimbursement rate for travel on official business in a privately owned vehicle by employees of hospital facilities under its control, provided that the rate shall not exceed the internal revenue service standard mileage rate for use of a vehicle for business;

J. exercise all powers necessary and requisite for the accomplishment of the purposes for which the special hospital district is created;

K. issue bonds in the manner provided by law for the issuance of special hospital district revenue bonds for the construction, purchase, renovation, remodeling, equipping or re-equipping of hospital facilities under its control and purchasing the necessary land therefor;

L. charge for hospital services rendered;

M. lease a hospital to any person, corporation or association for the operation and maintenance of the hospital upon such terms and conditions as the board of trustees may determine, provided that the lease may be terminated by the board of trustees without cause upon one hundred eighty days' notice after the first three years of the lease;

N. enter into an agreement with another county or counties, another county or counties and another political subdivision or any other person, corporation or association that provides that the parties to the agreement shall join together for the purpose of making some or all purchases necessary for the operation of hospitals owned or operated by the parties; and to designate one of the parties as the central purchasing office, as defined in the Procurement Code [13-1-28 to 13-1-199 NMSA 1978], for the others, to make purchases for the parties to the agreement as they shall deem necessary and to comply with the provisions of the Procurement Code;

O. expend public money to recruit health care personnel to serve the sick of the special hospital district; and

P. enter into an agreement with a state or federal agency, county, municipality, other political subdivision or person for the formation of a legal entity to jointly own or operate a common health care service, subject to the provisions of or exemptions from the Procurement Code.

History: 1978 Comp., § 4-48A-9, enacted by Laws 1978, ch. 29, § 9; 1981, ch. 84, § 7; 2001, ch. 291, § 5; 2003, ch. 21, § 1; 2005, ch. 92, § 1.

ANNOTATIONS

The 2005 amendment, effective June 17, 2005, allowed the board of trustees of a special hospital district to enter into an agreement to own or operate a common health care service.

The 2003 amendment, effective July 1, 2003, inserted present Subsection I and redesignated the subsequent subsections accordingly.

The 2001 amendment, effective June 15, 2001, added the proviso in Subsection L and substituted "Procurement Code" for "Public Purchases Act" twice in Subsection M.


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