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Tuesday, May 16, 2023

Spring Break: We’ll See You Back Here Next Week 

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Thursday, May 04, 2023

Ownership Of Land For Relocating Unser Museum Raises Questions, Plus: Defending Mayor Marty’s Crime Fighting Efforts, And: The Year Was 1974 

Now that the ABQ City Council has approved a $4 million bond issue for the November election ballot to relocate the Unser Racing Museum from Los Ranchos to Central and Unser, readers are asking questions. 

Chief among them is who owns the land where the museum would be relocated? Reader Alan Schwartz discovered it is not the Unser family and it is not the city of Albuquerque, So who is it? 

Well, it appears it is none other than the Garcia automotive family, major land developers who own large swaths of downtown area real estate. The Garcia’s are also part owners of the New Mexico United soccer team, which spent lavishly on a campaign for an $80 million downtown soccer stadium that was defeated by voters last year. In addition, the family has been a major political supporter of Albuquerque Mayor Tim Keller. Here’s Schwartz’s legwork:

Joe, according to Bernalillo County records the owner of the current museum site is Rio Grande Valley Ventures LLC located in Saint Paul, MN. Does the Museum operate as a nonprofit? According to records at the NM SOS, it appears that was the case at one time but currently the status is “Revoked Final” and the standing is “Not in Good Standing”. I was unable to find any Unser Museum records at GuideStar. 

The Museum does not own the Unser and Central site. Until recently it was owned by the Al Unser revocable trust. But in January of 2021 a real estate contract was executed between the trust as Grantor and Start Your Engines LLC as grantee. The mailing address listed for Start Your Engines is 8301 Lomas which is Garcia Motors and the agent for Start Your Engines is Edward T. Garcia and the business classification is “Real Estate Development” per Open Corporates. 

The necessity of relocating the museum, which has continually suffered from low attendance, is a valid debating point and now so is the ownership of the land where the museum would be relocated. Stay tuned.

CHAVEZ AND CRIME

Blogging about the proposal from ABQ City Councilors Sanchez and Grout to abolish the strong form of mayoral government in Albuquerque and replace it with a strong manager form, we mentioned Mayer Chavez as among the mayors who failed in recent years in fighting the city crime wave. Former Councilor Greg Payne, who was a transit Director under Chavez, says his old boss does not belong on that list:

Joe, while most of your "Fixing ABQ" post was spot on, lumping former Mayor Marty Chavez in with R.J. Berry, and current Mayor Tim Keller, was an absolute miss. Everyone knows Marty was ABQ's last good mayor. The buck stopped with him. He ran the city, and he ran it well. The economy was booming and crime, murders and the cartels weren't out of control.  Berry and Keller were and are birds of the same feather - and that bird is called "Political Peacock". They're inept poseurs. All style and zero substance. You can literally pinpoint ABQ's decline to the election of Berry. And, after six years, Keller has proved to be little more than a progressive version of R.J. (they both gave us A.R.T. - thanks, but no thanks).

Chavez was a good mayor but we still believe he belongs on our list, because he was desperate to hire a total of 1000 police officers and in the process lowered the standards to become an officer. That led to major trouble for APD and for crime fighting in Albuquerque. 

TV Journalist Janet Blair, now retired, covered the 1974 transition from the manager form of government to the strong mayor form. Today she reads the blog from Corrales and has this comment: 

 Hi Joe--It is inconceivable to me that the city council is even considering going back to the city manager form of government. I covered this debate in 1974 and I clearly remember what a muddle the city was in with a city manager. Talk about lack of accountability! Albuquerque is way too big to return to this.  Mayor Keller (and his predecessors) may not have solved the crime problem here, but a return to a city manager would guarantee a diffuse and hapless approach to the major problems that face Albuquerque.  Not a smart idea. 

THE YEAR WAS 1974

We end the week where we started, with the passing of former Gov. Jerry Apodaca at the age of 88. He served from 1975 through 1979. Today we post one of his media ads from the ‘74 campaign that garnered so much praise back then and set the path for future political campaigns. Chris Brown was the media consultant for that effort. 50 years later we asked him to comment on its creation: 

We intended the jogging motif to define several positive aspects of Jerry Apodaca. Energy to get things done.  Authenticity: he’d been a star running back at UNM, so his athletic image was natural, not contrived. Engaged with his kids in healthy and wholesome activity. He ran with his sons at his side in the TV bio, and shot hoops with his daughters in the driveway. And to project the opposite image of a politician puffing on a cigar and throwing down the hard stuff in a smoke-filled, deal-making backroom. The white running suit was a bonus. White evokes several positives: We caught a lucky break in that he had to borrow a white suit for the first still shoot in Santa Fe because he forgot to bring his own from Las Cruces, seen in TV spot filmed later.

Thanks, Chris, for a truly memorable moment in the history of our beloved La Política.

It was announced st a Legislative Council meeting that Governor Apodaca will lie in state at the Roundhouse on Monday, May 15, 2023 from noon to 3 PM. 

Thanks for stopping by this week.

This is Joe Monahan reporting from various undisclosed locations and this is…

The Home of New Mexico Politics.

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Thursday, June 02, 2011

Momentum Grows For Simple Special Session; Ball In Susana's Court, Plus: Senate Money Chase Analysis, And: The Berry Bonds 

Momentum appears to be growing to keep the special redistricting session of the Legislature from becoming more of a political playground than one would normally expect from 112 politicians gathered under one roof.

Governor Martinez will ask lawmakers to take up the hyper-controversial issue of repealing driver's licenses for illegal immigrants and perhaps other issues that led to gridlock at this year's regular legislative session. A newspaper editorial sums up the concern now swirling that the redistricting session, set for September, could morph into an ugly and divisive circus:

....Unless New Mexico’s leaders can walk into the Roundhouse with some compromise and consensus on those issues — or at the minimum a commitment to put things to a vote — the session promises to drag out as an exercise in futility that distracts all from the redistricting job at hand. And that makes the proposal for a separate special session, or waiting for the 2012 regular session, sound better all the time.

The session to redistrict the state's congressional and legislative districts to conform with the 2010 census is estimated to cost $50,000 a day--not chump change when the state can't even come up with money for supplemental food stamps for 4,000 old people.

Senate Majority Leader Michael Sanchez told us recently that he would like the special to last seven days or so. He pointed out that Governor Martinez can include on her "call" any issues she wants, but that doesn't mean the lawmakers will consider them.

Martinez has not yet come with her full agenda, but she's getting plenty of warning that if her political arm tries to turn the session into a lengthy wedge issue festival aimed at the 2012 campaigns and not the redistricting business at hand, she is going to have her hands full stemming the resulting rebellion.

THE MONEY CHASE

By turning her back on the Senate bid of Lt. Gov. John Sanchez, Governor Martinez hopes to dry up his money. Some R's who don't want to be on the wrong side of the Guv will oblige, but it will be interesting to see how conservative oil money flows. They are no fans of Heather Wilson, the other major GOP Senate contender, but did give heavily to Susana.

Southern Congressman Steve Pearce, who beat Wilson for the Senate nod in 2008, could be very helpful to Sanchez in making up any money he loses because of Martinez's near endorsement of Heather. How much of a behind-the-scenes role will Steve play?

Also, with national conservative groups on the war path against Wilson, Sanchez seems positioned to get more out-of-state money than Heather, as well as indirect support through third-party TV advertising as Pearce did. How much out-of-state conservative grass roots money will flow his way is unknown, but if they put out the call, it could be substantial.

Then there is the X factor of personal wealth. No one knows yet how much Sanchez is worth, but the roofing company owner last year gave over $200,000 of his own money to his successful campaign for the GOP nod for Light Guv. If he comes with a similar amount for the Senate race, it would go a long way in a primary in which raising $1.5 million or so is a big deal.

Then there's that best fund-raiser of all--the polls. If Sanchez starts closing the gap with front-runner Wilson, the money will flow. No wonder Sanchez spent $25,000 on TV ads over the weekend---a year before the primary election.

BERRY BONDS

ABQ Mayor Berry is promoting a number of "fun" quality of life projects as possibles for the $50 million bond issue he passed through the city council and which will be on the October city election ballot. But this Alligator says before the fun begins it's time to get serious about bond money already approved by voters. He comes with this example:

Before the Berry administration launches millions of dollars worth of "game-changing" general-obligation bond projects, it should audit how city bureaucrats have managed past GO bond money. Four years later, neighbors of Ladera Golf Course still don't know what happened to $750,000 in 2007 bond money earmarked for golf maintenance equipment there. Nearly two years after voters OK'd $1.5 million to replace Ladera's leaky 31-year-old irrigation system, nothing has been built. Where has this money gone? As Ricky Ricardo once told Lucy, the Parks and Recreation Department has "some 'splainin' to do" regarding past finances before it is entrusted with tens of millions more.


One project on the list for possible use of the bond money is reconstruction of the scene of the city's worst traffic mess--the Paseo del Norte and I-25 interchange. It will take anywhere from $250 to $450 million to get that done. If we took the entire $50 million in bonding capacity in question and put it towards that project, it might show the federal government we are dead serious and free up Uncle Sam's cash to see the project to completion (using local contractors and employees). It might not be "fun" but it might be more in line with the city's needs.

THE BOTTOM LINES
Larry Ahrens
We averred in Wednesday's blog that ABQ seems adrift, largely because of the lackluster economy, but also for reasons dealing with leadership. That view found support from veteran NM radio broadcaster and longtime Republican Larry Ahrens who now works in creative for Comcast:

Joe, Your words on our community adrift were very much appreciated. I made my living for years on the radio feeling the “vibe” of this city. There were a lot of people and institutions who carried momentum forward. Slow at times--but at least there was momentum.

The “vibe” now is just as you described. We are making do. Getting by. Taking it a day at a time.


I agree with you. I sense little urgency on the part of business and our political class to redefine things around here.

To acknowledge your point about both political parties, the stagnation of ideas is palpable on both sides. Nobody seems willing to look at new approaches. Over the years on the air, I always said that New Mexico doesn’t have to invent anything. Just go model cities and states where things are working and duplicate it. Texas seems to have some ideas on creating jobs. Let’s go see what they’re doing. Same for North Carolina, Virginia and Indiana and others.

Cities that are growing, creating jobs and prospering right now are Austin, TX, Columbus, Ohio, Raleigh, NC, Omaha, Nebraska, Oklahoma City and Salt Lake City. Isn’t it possible we could learn a few things from them?


Your comments come on the announcement of the passing of business icon Bob Hoffman. Bob never saw New Mexico as second-best. He always believed in what was possible both in the state and our city. It’s enigmatic that we should be mired in self-doubt at a time like this. Thanks to you for bringing this topic forward.

Pretty good stuff there, Larry. You even have us rethinking our attitude toward Texas. Maybe you ought to run for something?

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