N.M. Stat. Ann. § 52-3-32.1
B. If a firefighter is diagnosed with one or more of the following conditions after the period of employment indicated, and the condition was not revealed during an initial employment medical screening examination or during a subsequent medical review pursuant to the Occupational Health and Safety Act [50-9-1 to 50-9-25 NMSA 1978] and rules promulgated pursuant to that act, the condition is presumed to be proximately caused by employment as a firefighter:
(1) the following cancers after five years:
History: Laws 2009, ch. 252, § 1; 2019, ch. 118, § 1; 2026, ch. 36, § 1.
The 2026 amendment, effective May 20, 2026, revised the list of conditions that are presumed to be proximately caused by employment as a firefighter; in Subsection B, deleted former Paragraphs B(1) through B(11) and added a new Paragraph B(1) and redesignated former Paragraph B(12) as Paragraph B(2).
The 2019 amendment, effective June 14, 2019, added posttraumatic stress disorder to the list of conditions presumed to be proximately caused by employment as a firefighter; replaced "disease" with "condition" throughout the section; in Subsection A, added Paragraph A(13); and in Subsection F, replaced each occurrence of "illness" with "condition".
Statutory presumption that the development of a listed disease is proximately caused by employment as a firefighter. — By enacting the firefighter occupational disease statute, the legislature adopted a statutory presumption that the development of the listed disease by a firefighter is linked to his or her service in that role under certain circumstances and exempts firefighters in certain situations from the burden of establishing a causal connection between their disease and their duties as a firefighter; when a firefighter establishes that he or she is suffering from one or more of the diseases listed in this section and the firefighter served the requisite number of years, subject to any other requirements under this section, the firefighter is entitled to the rebuttable presumption that the disease was caused by his or her employment as a firefighter. Di Luzio v. City of Santa Fe, 2015-NMCA-042.
Where worker was employed as a firefighter for the City of Santa Fe for twenty-one years and was diagnosed with mantle cell non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma twelve years after his service as a firefighter, worker met the statutory prerequisites to be entitled to the presumption that his disease was the result of his years of service as a firefighter, and was not required to establish that his disease was causally connected to his employment. Di Luzio v. City of Santa Fe, 2015-NMCA-042.
Test for retroactive application of the statute. — The relevant inquiry for determining whether this section was being applied retroactively or prospectively is not whether the firefighter was employed as a firefighter at the time of the statute’s enactment, but rather whether this section was in existence at the time the firefighter filed for disability benefits. Di Luzio v. City of Santa Fe, 2015-NMCA-042.
Where worker was employed as a firefighter for the city of Santa Fe for twenty-one years and was diagnosed with mantle cell non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma twelve years after his service as a firefighter, and where worker filed for disability benefits two years after this section’s enactment, application of the statute was not retroactive. Di Luzio v. City of Santa Fe, 2015-NMCA-042.