Thursday, March 23, 2023Key Advocate For Holtec Nuke Site Says Legislature Dealt Project A Setback But Not A Death Blow; NRC Delays License Decision, Plus: GOP Senator Happy With Session That Delivered Goodies For His District
We strongly believe that there are avenues allowing the HOLTEC project to move forward, but the passage of this bill will certainly delay the process.
Perhaps just as frustrating as the passage of SB 53 is the broader issue that there seem to be individuals in other parts of the state who still seem to be automatically opposed to anything with the word “nuclear” in it, without considering the specifics. It is very clear that there is still a lot of work left to do in terms of nuclear education. There are many nuclear projects that offer safe and responsible opportunities for our state, and HOLTEC is one of them. Republican Janway and other SE NM officials see the waste site as a major economic catch for SE NM. The AP reported Tuesday that the Nuclear Regulatory Commission has delayed its decision on licensing the project from the end of March to May citing staff constraints. The waste would include spent nuclear fuel rods from commercial nuclear reactors, waste that has yet to find a permanent home. Holtec is asking for a 40 year license. MLG will sign SB53 and has also written a fresh letter to the NRC in opposition to the storage proposal. The Mayor's office says that when we reported on a December poll showing a great majority of New Mexico voters did not want a nuke waste disposal site we did not point out that the poll was commissioned by an anti-nuclear waste group. And we didn't. . .so We asked veteran NM pollster Brian Sanderoff if he had any recent independent polling data on voter opinion on placing a high level nuclear waste site in the state. He said to his knowledge there is no such polling. Meanwhile, Janeway has just marked his 13th anniversary as Carlsbad mayor. He doesn't need a poll to determine his popularity. A HAPPY R
--Paving the way, along with Senator Ron Griggs (R-Alamogordo), for the expansion of the Alamogordo airport. --Leading the defeat of a bill that would have killed 200 district jobs and a major Otero County investment in the migrant detention facility. --Joining with the Otero County delegation to deliver nearly $15 million dollars on essential infrastructure. Not bad for an old radio guy. That retiree income bill permanently exempts up to $30,000 in military retirement from state taxes, updating the exemption that passed last year. Holloman Air Force Base is a major presence in Alamogordo and has been since 1942. The base says it now "supports about 21,000 Active Duty, Guard, Reserve, retirees, DoD civilians and their family members." MEDIA BEAT After our Wednesday piece on the ABQ Journal layoffs readers wondered about the status of The Paper, the weekly that ABQ City Council Pat Davis began in June of 2020. They noted that the website had not been updated for several weeks and that the paper was not available on newsstands. But not to worry. Davis says a confluence of events had folks thinking The Paper has ceased publication but that isn't the case: Joe, I’m glad you checked in on The Paper (and the Sandoval Signpost, Corrales Comment and The Independent, all at our publishing group now).
Like you, we didn’t know the Journal was preparing those unannounced layoffs the same week we took our paper websites down for a quick refresh, but we are definitely still here. We’ve been slowly and quietly growing but I’m proud to report that our daily digital issues now have more than 45,000 daily (M-F) subscribers giving us the 2nd largest news reach in the state.
We’ve quietly been reinvesting in new staff and resources. . . Starting next week readers of all 4 papers will find new layouts and new websites for each community. . . Most notably, the Sandoval Signpost will relaunch as a new weekly print paper and daily digital version covering the entire county, including Bernalillo which hasn’t had a hometown paper for at least 30 years. In the East Mountains and Torrance County, we completed the agreement to purchase The Independent which ceased publishing in November. It will come back next week as a weekly print with a new daily digital version as well. We are looking for a full-time editor to rebuild that paper (resumes to pat@newmexico.news) And, of course, The Paper remains the city’s go-to arts and culture guide with a little news thrown in. We still print 10,000 print copies weekly. . .This mission to save local news is so important. . . Speaking of specialty local news, the Downtown ABQ News has been publishing for several years and has expanded during that time. If that's your thing, the publication offers reliable coverage of all things Downtown.
This is the home of New Mexico politics. E-mail your news and comments. (newsguy@yahoo.com) Wednesday, March 22, 2023Vasquez DC Crime Vote Has GOP Pouncing; Herrell Too, Plus: More ABQ Journal Watch As Layoffs HitWe spotted trouble for Dem US Rep. Gabe Vasquez when he voted against a GOP resolution overturning the liberal Washington DC City Council's rewrite of the District's criminal code. We couldn't smoke him out for a comment on that vote but the national Republicans have as they set their sights on Vasquez by naming him a top target in next year's election: Gabe Vasquez is a radical Democrat who supports defunding the police and reducing penalties for violent crime. After just a few months in Congress, Vasquez has aligned himself with the extreme Left, which will come back to haunt him in 2024,” Delanie Bomer, a spokeswoman for the NRCC, said. That forced Vasquez onto the record with this: My vote on H.J. Res. 24 was a vote to give the residents of Washington, D.C. autonomy over their own city and their own local decisions, particularly because they lack federal representation, as our states do. As a former (las Cruces) City Councilor, I believe local governments should have a say in important local decisions without federal government overreach.” The vote overturning the DC crime code was supported by Dem Sen. Martin Heinrich who also faces re-election next year. All three NM members of the House voted against. President Biden did not discourage the measure and signed it into law. And former GOP Rep. Yvette Herrell, who Vasquez narrowly ousted after one term last year and is expected to seek a rematch next year, surfaced to pile on Vasquez: National Republicans are listing Gabe Vasquez as one of the most vulnerable members of Congress. Why? Because in his short time in office, he has prioritized his radical agenda over hardworking Americans. Voting to empower dangerous criminals and against common sense policies that would move New Mexico forward. We deserve better… The vote is a flash point in ABQ where the crime wave rages and where Vasquez now represents a large swath of the city's westside. Vasquez and his rookie press staff can wave off any comment to us but they can't wave a crime wave away. JOURNAL WATCH We were not aware of impending layoffs at the ABQ Journal when we reported last Monday on their change in editors and the increasingly difficult financial times the state's largest paper faces. The announcement of layoffs came days later, with 10 personnel let go, although no "frontline reporters,” according to the Journal. However, the paper did let go veteran photojournalist Roberto Rosales, a member of the unit that has traditionally been one of the paper’s strongest. The paper has seen a dramatic reduction in advertising by Dreamstyle Modeling (which appeared to be their largest advertiser for years) and other enterprises that would often pay for large display ads. Journal Publisher William Lang referenced "current economic conditions" in announcing the staff reduction. Unless there is a rapid advertising recovery for print (unlikely) the layoffs may not be over. But the next time the newsroom could be vulnerable as most other divisions of the paper have already been hit with cuts and streamlining. As for the Internet, readership is large but monetizing those eyeballs remains an issue for the newspaper industry. Reader D. Reed Eckhardt, former executive editor of the Wyoming Tribune Eagle and now an industry consultant reading us from Santa Fe, writes of speculation that the family-owned Journal could be the target of a buyer: Despite all the shrinkage that has occurred at the ABQ Journal, it’s far better than what will come with the purchase by a chain or some investor group. Their goal will be one thing — to make money — and that will entail further cuts of staff, which, of course, is the greatest source of overhead left now that the Journal is published in Santa Fe. It’s an unfortunate reality. I’ve seen what the guys do to family- owned papers personally, including their ending my 43-year career in the business. But the truth is, the trend will strike here sooner or later. I’m praying for later. The title of this piece "Journal Watch" is borrowed from a column of the same name that was written for a number of years by retired newsman Arthur Alpert who died in February. He also founded the ABQ senior magazine PrimeTime (which we wrote for) and served as news director at KRQE-TV after a career in media around the nation. Obit here. Arthur Alpert was 90. RIP. This is the home of New Mexico politics. E-mail your news and comments. (newsguy@yahoo.com) Tuesday, March 21, 2023Rumbles From Roswell: Locals Eye Replacement For Scandal Stricken Sen. Cliff Pirtle; Will He Resign? Will Ethics Complaint Be Filed? Senate Leadership Remains Mum
His colleagues uttered nary a public word about the scandal that engulfed Roswell GOP state Senator Cliff Pirtle during the final days of the legislative session, but word spread like wildfire among his constituents in his SE NM district. Already there are rumblings about possible candidates to take on Pirtle should he seek a fourth term in '24 or resign his seat and a replacement be appointed.
Pirtle showed no outward signs of distress after a sheriff's department deputy was called to his Santa Fe apartment Sunday morning March 12 where he had been confronted by his wife Aysia, her mother and the couple's three children. Aysia said upon arriving she caught Pirtle in bed with another woman. A loud argument ensued at the apartment and that got the law involved. A deputy lapel camera video shows Pirtle calmly answering questions about the incident. In the final half hour of the session Saturday he promoted a memorial for senate consideration as if he didn't have a worry in the world. Of course, he does. The rumor mill has the other woman Pirtle is involved with being a young woman working in another GOP senator's legislative office. He has not responded to inquires asking him if that is the case. If true, it would be a major ethical violation and another sign of impending doom for the Republican lawmaker--not that the isn't already a dead man walking. Republican operatives/Alligators report that local R's are waiting on word from veteran GOP state Rep. Candy Ezzell to signal whether she is interested in replacing Pirtle. Says one: Candy is seen as having first dibs on the seat because of her nearly 20 years in Santa Fe and her consistent conservatism. That she is a woman doesn't hurt as the district may be looking for that in the wake of the Pirtle scandal. Ezzell, 69, who owns a ranch with her husband, has been in the state House since 2004 and is also seen as someone MLG could appoint if she were called on to fill the vacancy that would occur in the event Pirtle got out: They have opposite political views but there is no real bad blood there and I believe the Governor would honor the wishes of the conservative district if the county commissions in the three counties sent her name up to fill the vacancy. Another local observer says the gubernatorial reception for GOP Chaves County Sheriff Michael Herrington, who is another possible name floating as a Pirtle replacement, could be more chilly: Mike took on the Governor directly during Covid, saying his department would not enforce the mask mandate the Governor ordered. He would be a strong candidate in a Republican primary, but an appointment could be difficult. Senate District 32 is solidly Republican. Pirtle took the seat when he narrowly defeated conservative Democrat Tim Jennings in 2012 after winning the GOP primary by a scant 9 votes. Jennings is now mayor of Roswell. Pirtle has proven popular--until now. He ran unopposed for re-election in 2016 and 2020 but if he does not resign his seat before the '24 primary the scandal that his senate colleagues were so willing to only whisper about will not find his Bible Belt electorate so accommodating. A WELL-KNOWN FAMILY Pirtle's scandal is not only an embarrassment for him and his immediate family but also for one of the top family-owned businesses in Roswell--Pirtle Farms located since 1926 in the SE NM city. The operation includes cows, goat and sheep whose meat and dairy products they market to the public, along with selling feed to area farmers. Cliff Pirtle was born into the family and has been an owner/manager of the farm since 1999: Pirtle Farms has been in Roswell New Mexico since 1926. George Elbert Pirtle along with his father Thomas Jefferson Pirtle started Pirtle Farms along with his wife Sarah Helen Whitehead Pirtle and their children Darrell, George Thomas, Charlotte, and Joann Pirtle. The Pirtle family does not shy away from their faith, saying on their website: We believe in honoring God by tending his garden and livestock that he has entrusted to us; through producing quality crops and nutritious milk that feed the world. In his 2012 ABQ Journal questionnaire candidate Pirtle said his "major personal accomplishment" was: Staying true to myself, being the best husband and father I can be, and finding the right balance between work and family. That statement is yet another reason the scandal is a back-breaker for the senator who is known legislatively for advocating legalized marijuana while his GOP colleagues were opposed and for annually introducing a bill that would end daylight saving time. One of Pirtle's major contributors last year was marijuana company Ultra Health which donated $5,000. In October Pirtle reported $24,000 in campaign cash on hand with $9,100 in debt. With the reputations of a well-respected family and business on the line and already subjected to humiliation, the prospect of an early senate retirement for Pirtle would seem likely. If that's not enough there is the real possibility of an ethics complaint being filed with the State Ethics Commission against him over his conduct and demanding an investigation o determine if he was improperly consorting with a legislative employee. If Pirtle were to resign the three county commissions from Chaves, Eddy and Otero would each choose a replacement candidate to send to the Governor who would make the final selection. E-mail your news and comments. (newsguy@yahoo.com) Monday, March 20, 2023News, Analysis And Perspective On The '23 Legislative Session
When it came to voting rights, abortion rights and passing a more than ample state budget, progressives succeeded. But when it comes to the intransigent problems caused by errant human behavior and that have plummeted the state ever downward in the national rankings, the progressives were not up to the task. The major losses in behavioral health were telling. --The Senate leadership's decision to abandon the Child Advocate bill in the final hours--despite huge margins of support in both chambers--left the dysfunctional CYFD alone on its island without desperately needed oversight and as the body count from child abuse continues to rise. MLG insisted that the independent oversight was not necessary and offered an in-house program. Senate leadership could not bear a veto fight. But if more horrific abuse follows, this wrong turn will land squarely on MLG's lap. --There will be less than a penny increase per drink in the state alcohol tax that had not been raised for decades. But the consequences of such a tiny bite are more malignant now that the state is by far the worst in the nation for alcohol deaths and suffers inordinately from associated issues. The wee boost does open the door for consideration of more but the decision shows the Legislature is still not serious about digging in on the social conditions crisis. The liquor lobby is serious. They shower lawmakers with campaign cash, including House tax chairman Derrick Lente, who whittled away at the alcohol tax. He received $8,700 in campaign funds from alcohol interests between 2016-2022. --The lack of focus on the drug-crime epidemic within the state's progressive leadership (and their interest groups) exhibits a disturbing apathy that is not unfamiliar in state politics. That fentanyl is the centerpiece of the crime wave in the ABQ metro and elsewhere is not arguable and that rehab clinics are overrun with potential clients is also not in dispute. The shrugging of shoulders in Santa Fe was acceptance of the status quo. PROGRESSIVE WINS
--The abortion rights measure in particular could be an example followed by other states in a post-Roe America. --The inching toward a more progressive tax code with another slight cut in the gross receipts tax and an increase in the child tax credit will have the most impact among lower income New Mexicans and will reach into the future. The increase in the capital gains tax directly addresses the income inequality that has skyrocketed the past decade. But when it comes to those national rankings on child well-being, booze deaths, drug addiction and high crime, we're disappointed to report that despite the largest cash surpluses in state history, we may be letting opportunity slip from our grasp. Not once did we hear a lawmaker of any ideological stripe (or the Governor) rise to address the state's woeful standing and plead for--or propose--a comprehensive plan to take those rankings down in a very specific manner in the way Mississippi did when it came to public education. Without a plan state government is taking shots in the dark with scattershot legislation that won't hurt but won't get at the crux of the matter. The head-in-the-sand approach avoids political unpleasantness but leaves the state pedaling on a stationary bicycle. That new early childhood education funding made possible by a constitutional amendment approved by voters and that takes effect in July has a lot more riding on it in the aftermath of this legislative session. The bottom line? The new progressivism comes with much of the same baggage as the center-right governments that held legislative power in Santa Fe before them. GUV REACT MLG appeared mostly mostly pleased with the outcome of the session and her habit of calling special sessions is thankfully paused for now. But she continues her relentless pursuit of a pre-trial detention bill even though it has gone nowhere and is going nowhere:I know that you want me to say I’m disappointed, but I’m motivated. I’m very motivated to find additional ways to make sure that we really do everything in our power to make our communities and state safer. I think that each of us are dedicated to that, but we come at it a little differently. Everyone here knows I’m introducing that again — and again — and again. The pre-trial detention bill is starting to sound a lot like GOP Guv Martinez and her obsession with repealing driver's licenses for undocumented immigrants. Both are nice political wedge issues but they can't pass and are doubtful tools in the crime-fighting box. Remarked House Speaker Martinez in reaction to the Guv's persistence: He said changes to the state’s pretrial detention laws would not solve the state’s high violent crime rate, saying, “I’m telling you, that is not the silver bullet.” And the chairman of the Senate Judiciary Committee agrees so. . . The Fourth Floor may want to come up with a new act--if they're really serious and not posturing. But with Dems nationally and locally up against the ropes on crime, don't expect an about face from New Mexico's executive. On that proposed Rural Health Care Delivery Fund from the Guv that we've been going around on, the final result is the Fund passing but the $200 million appropriation she wanted was stripped out in the Senate and the appropriation ended up at $20 million. It turns out that our first take that the bill was being "decimated" turned out to be the correct call, not that more attention to rural health needs is unwarranted. ENVIRO BEAT
Some Dems opposed said that the measure was pointless because nuclear waste is a federal issue and the state is powerless, the same argument Holtec, the company proposing the site, employed. Dixon is one of the most effective political fund-raisers in the House. Her haul for her '22 campaign included $1,000 from Holtec; $5,200 from Chevron and $2,500 from Devon Energy. Tina Cordova of the Tularsoa Basin Downwinders writes in to counter the argument that the waste bill was a waste of time: Thanks to Senator Steinborn and Representative McQueen for working so diligently to get SB 53 passed. The Feds are not looking out for us. They never have and the Downwinders and uranium workers are good examples of that. No one has ever come back to clean the more than 1000 abandoned uranium mine and mill sites across Laguna and Acoma Pueblo and the Navajo Nation. No one has ever come back to take care of the Downwinders who lived as close as 12 miles to a nuclear test site. All the while people die without help or adequate health care. . .Holtec is nothing more than an extension of the horrid nuclear sacrifice zone that New Mexico was long ago declared . . . There is an argument to be made that New Mexico has done more than its fair share in serving the nation when it comes to its nuclear needs. MLG has already signed the ban on transporting the radioactive waste into the state. The Nuclear Regulatory Commission is expected to announce a decision soon on whether to award a license to the company for the NM project. This is the home of New Mexico politics. E-mail your news and comments. (newsguy@yahoo.com) Thursday, March 16, 2023No Salaries And No Full-Time For Legislators This Time And That's Fine With Voters, Plus: The Pirtle Affair; More Details And What Needs To Happen Next, Also: Booze Tax Update And A Pandemic Book Catches Flak
Senate Finance Committee Chairman Munoz read the room correctly and has basically pronounced the constitutional amendment to do just that dead for this session. The drive for a full-time legislature also fell flat. Why, voters ask, in a state that has experienced essentially no population growth in a decade do we need to increase legislators hours? The Legislature did do their most important duty of the session--sending a state budget to the Governor as they headed for a Saturday adjournment. That could only be interrupted if MLG gets ornery and calls a special session. (Please don't. The state has had enough for a while.) That budget is the largest ever with a nearly 14 percent increase, coming in at $9.6 billion but still tucking away a reserve of 30 percent in case of an oil crash. In the latest bull move oil peaked at $121 a barrel in June and this week fell below $70 a barrel. There is cause for concern but the price is still healthy for the drillers in the SE NM Permian Basin and with other reserve funds packed to the gills, the budget should be able to pass any oil price tests that arise. There was much ado about much of everything in Santa Fe the past two months, but in the end it is that budget that will have the most impact of any legislation approved and for which the session will likely be most remembered. Well, and Cliff Pirtle. . . THE PIRTLE AFFAIR
Joe,
What I find most amusing about this Pirtle "scandal" is that he is always spouting off in committee about family values and how, being married to an Hispanic woman, he understands Hispanics. As we blogged Tuesday, the public's point of interest is if the "other woman" is affiliated with the state legislature--meaning an employee--which would make an affair more than a simple moral infraction. (Lapel camera video of Pirtle and sheriff's deputy here.) WHO IS SHE? The rumor mill now is centered on the narrative that Pirtle, 37, was bedding a young staffer from rural New Mexico who works in another Senator's office. That would be a serious ethics violation and demands an investigation by the Ethics Commission, the commission that progressives for years clamored to establish. Reader Arcy Baca aptly asks: Where are the progressive women who went after Sen. Ivey Soto last year when he was accused of sex harassment charges? This is sounding much worse than that--possibly having sex with a young subordinate who works in a fellowship senator's office. Pretty outrageous. Women can't pick and choose when it comes to sexual misconduct at the legislature, unless they aren't serious and want to be labeled hypocrites. And how long has this alleged affair been going on? Senate President Pro Tem Mimi Stewart and her colleagues need to get a Pirtle probe up and running. Pirtle could do his constituents and the state a favor by coming clean on the details of the scandal and then resigning his seat. Where is the Senate GOP leadership on that proposition? Watching Jimmy Swaggart reruns? Maybe if they hadn't needlessly kicked Sen. Stuart Ingle out as their Minority Leader there would be someone with enough huevos (and stature) to tell Pirtle that it's time to go. REPLACING PIRTLE If Pirtle does call it quits, the name of GOP Roswell Rep. Candy Ezzell pops to the surface as a possible replacement. Said one of the Roundhouse Gators: She's been in the Legislature since 2005, is s a rock-ribbed conservative and smart. She would be a natural replacement. The county commissions from Chaves, Eddy and Otero--the three counties that contain Pirtle's district--would each recommend a replacement if Pirtle resigns, with the Governor making the final choice. Finally, how about this. The Roswell Daily Record, the hometown paper of Pirtle, doesn't even carry the story. Not a peep about Pirtle's behavior from them or his interaction with law enforcement. Yeah, tell the blogger all about journalism, boys. What a joke. LIQUOR TAX UPDATE ABQ Dem state Senator Antoinette Sedillo Lopez is kicking herself over the legislature's failure to enact a quarter a drink tax on alcoholic beverages in the state with the worst rate of booze abuse in the nation. But she shouldn't be. The Senate tax committee Wednesday approved a bill that would raise the tax by five cent a drinks which still had the lobbyists choking back tears. Whether that survives to final passage in the hectic last days of the session is another question. The increase would cut the rate of drinking, according to experts, by 1.8 percent and would be the first hike in the alcohol tax in decades. Would it be best for Sedillo Lopez and Rep. Joanne Ferrary to throw in the towel on any increase now and come back next year with guns blazing? Maybe. If the liquor lobby swallows that tiny increase they will argue next year that they are being targeted. Or would the small-sized increase pave the way for more? A tough call. JOURNAL WATCH Reader Stan Wonn has this take on our piece this week about changes at the ABQ Journal Hi Mr. Monahan,
Just read your piece on the blog discussing the future of the Journal and whether or not it remains in private ownership.
I've been a digital Journal subscriber since moving back to the state in late 2017. I recall the days when the Journal had many more sections, pages and ads as well. It is not surprising to see the paper shrink, and the economics of the newspaper industry are reflected in that. I honestly don't care much who owns the Journal as long as they continue to cover local and state news because there is no other paper (other than the New Mexican) which is doing that here. However, if the Journal starts replacing local/state coverage with wire stories, or if they sell to a terrible chain like Gannett, I'll drop it like a bad habit!
Until then, I'll remain a Journal subscriber because I believe it is important to support local journalism where it still exists. And one other note from the ink-stained world, the 538 site has updated their national pollster rankings to include the 2022 election. Research and Polling, the Journal's longtime pollster, went from a grade of A to A+, just one of four pollsters in the nation to achieve that grade out of several hundred. PANDEMIC HISTORY A former ABQ Journal columnist who penned a book on the Covid-19 era in the city of ABQ with a focus on the actions of city government and social protests of the time will discuss those events: The Albuquerque Museum Third Thursday on March 16 includes a conversation with Joline Gutierrez Krueger, author of City at the Crossroads: The Pandemic, Protests, and Public Service in Albuquerque. The conversation, hosted by Dr. Shelle Sanchez, director of the Department of Arts & Culture, will begin at 6 p.m. in the museum's auditorium. The talk coincides with the third anniversary of New Mexico's shutdown related to the global pandemic. Krueger's nonfiction account covers the city’s response to emergency management in an unprecedented time. In addition to COVID-19, social unrest is front-and-center in the book. There's been some controversy about the book, with ABQ City Councilor Louis Sanchez asking the attorney general to investigate: (The book) includes nearly 50 pictures of Mayor Keller and his
family. . .I do not think spending nearly a hundred thousand dollars of
taxpayer money to pay a journalist and publish a book, which appears to be a marketing device
regarding the Mayor’s response to COVID, is appropriate or legal. If one searches
for the “book” online, it is being sold at multiple retailers for profit. It is my understanding sales
of the book are being handled by The One Albuquerque Fund which some accuse of functioning as
a Political Action Committee (PAC) for Mayor Keller. . . The book does show much love for Keller and company but we found it informative and insightful and think future city residents will also. THE BOTTOM LINES
Regarding the $5.1 million capital outlay for the Regional Sports Complex at Mesa Del Sol. David Campbell works for Steve Chavez and the Mesa del Sol company. They have nothing to do with the Regional Sports Complex on Bernalillo County Land stretching from the Isleta Pavillon to Bobby Foster road. The Bernalillo County Youth Sports Commission in conjunction with (other county offices) has orchestrated a 31 multi-use field project to serve our community's local youth sports teams. . .When completed the project will improve outdoor sports. . .for individuals to use in our community. Geez, kids. We went into overtime today. Hope you enjoyed it. E-mail your news and comments. (newsguy@yahoo.com) Wednesday, March 15, 2023Please Pass The Pork, Giant $1.2 Billion Capital Outlay Bill Heads For Final Approval; Projects Aplenty For Everyone: Highlights From Across Our StateThe rhetoric gets high and mighty on the Senate and House floors on the major issues of the day but there's nothing more important to the 112 lawmakers--and many of their constituents--than the piles of pork they send home each year to make their cities, towns and villages more prosperous. This year the pork is again more plentiful than a Valencia County matanza, thanks to the still gushing oil wells in SE NM. The capital outlay bill (HB 505) expected to win final approval this week totals over $1.2 billion and has over 32 pages of projects. Because you need time to work on your Netflix watch list, we've combed through the entire 32 pages to give you the flavor of New Mexico's wants and needs. So let's take a pork barrel road trip. . . We start in the big city where Coronado Park near ABQ's downtown, a former haven for the homeless until being shut own, will undergo a $5.2 million transformation and become a Fire Rescue and Training facility. But what about the next homeless park?. . . The ABQ Gateway Center, a new homeless shelter and drug treatment center scheduled to open soon, continues to receive big dollars. The SE Heights facility won $10 million in the capital outlay bill for the project's second phase (even though the city wanted $20 million). ABQ taxpayers have put up the lion's share of the $20 million spent so far on Gateway. The Bernalillo County Sheriff's Department is in line for a new helicopter and it will get $2.1 million from the state to buy one. Tragically, last July four sheriff's deputies died in a department helicopter that crashed near Las Vegas, NM The Mesa Del Sol development in the SE corner of ABQ stalled out for decades but activity has picked up in recent years. The community will be getting $5.1 million for an outdoor sports complex courtesy of capital outlay. The UNM Tow Diehm Athletic Facility will look more spiffy soon, thanks to $4 million in pork. That's where the Lobo athletes hang to stay in shape for the next big game. CHAVEZ, CIBOLA AND CURRY
There is not a whole lot going on in Milan in Cibola County but the next time you're there maybe go for a swim. Capital outlay of $2.256 million was being awarded to improve the Milan pool. That's going to be some swimming hole out there. In Curry County, if you see a bunch of judges with beaming smiles, thank the capital outlay bill that puts up $14 million to build a new magistrate courthouse. That should go nicely with the new $10 million Clovis behavioral health center the city will get from Santa Fe. DOWN DONA ANA WAY Down in Dona Ana they're getting a dose of controversial pork. The $10 million for a reproductive health center being pushed by MLG still has Republicans trying to stop it, but it appears to be a go and will be used by many out of state women running up against stricter abortion laws. (The House R's were so upset over the center they voted against the entire capital outlay bill! That won't stop them from taking credit for projects, but cutting off your nose to spite your face is never a sound strategy.) We haven't flown in or out of Las Cruces in years but maybe we'll give it a whirl now that they're getting $1.050 million in funds to make improvements. Throw in another $1 million for an elections bureau warehouse. Hey, it's only money. . . FAIR GOING How about a trip to the state Fair in Grant County? That would be something new and with the fairgrounds receiving $75,000 in improvements they should be ready for you when they host their September fair. Nothing against Grant County, but we would probably opt for the Harding County Fair this August. Our smallest county by population with less than 1,000 residents is getting $375,000 to improve their fairgrounds. The drive over there through the high desert vastness is not to be missed. Just watch out for those blackbirds slamming into your windshield. LEA AND LOS ALAMOS Hey, old timers. Do you remember Republican state Senator Billy McKibben? Sure you do. And so does Lea County which will receive $120,000 to make improvements to the senior center named after the former lawmaker. Los Alamos County routinely makes the list of richest counties in the nation but they still have needs. One of them is for fire protection in the Jemez Mountains. They'll get $7 million to make the area safer from fires. BY GEORGE!
The list for his McKinley County goes on and on, including $7.5 million for a new Gallup senior center and $6.4 million for a Navajo Nation Code Talker Museum and Veterans Center. There's no talking in code when it comes to George and capital outlay. His motto is: "Show me the money." OTERO, ROOSEVELT AND SAN JUAN How about a round of golf in Alamogordo in Otero County? With a new $900,000 irrigation system the greens at the city golf course there should look much more green in that desert city. And while in Portales in Roosevelt County please don't miss out on taking a selfie with their new chip spreader. They're paying $250,000 for it--or, we should say, you are. Maybe your tastes run to shiny fire trucks. Farmington in San Juan County will have them, thanks to $2 million in capital outlay. SAN MIGUEL, SANDOVAL, SIERRA AND SANTA FE The money is going to rain down in Las Vegas in San Miguel County like the summer monsoon. That's because of the widespread damage done by last year's historic forest fires. The need is great and the capital outlay bill will help with $9 million to rehabilitate the Peterson Dam. Millions more in aid will be coming from the Feds. Remember when the city of Rio Rancho in Sandoval County was nearly a crime free zone? It wasn't that long ago but no more. The suburb of ABQ will get $200,000 to install a gunshot detection system, a somewhat sad sign of the times. Not a golf or soccer fan? How about a game of pickleball? We'll meet you in Santa Fe and try to learn as we play at the new state-funded $650,000 pickle ball complex at Fort Marcy Park. Heck, we'll bill Mayor Webber for our iced tea. He can afford it. The next time you find yourself in little Williamsburg in Sierra County check out Doris Avenue for us and the new $350,000 in improvements. Then report back on whether the avenue is named after Doris Day. If that takes you too far south circle back up north to Taos County and enjoy a tour of the acequias, including Acequia del Llano de San Miguel. That one will get $10,000 to stay in shape as will many others across the north in the always illuminating state capital outlay bill. This is the home of New Mexico politics. E-mail your news and comments. (newsguy@yahoo.com) Tuesday, March 14, 2023Haaland Honeymoon With Progressives Crashes Following Her Approval Of Alaska Oil Drilling; New Rival Sen. Heinrich Piles On, Plus: Scandal Watch: State Sen. Pirtle's Wife Says She Caught Him In Bed With Another Woman; Questions Raised On Roundhouse Connection
The criticism was rare for Haaland. who is routinely hailed for being the first Native American to occupy her cabinet post, but as a progressive working for a centrist president it was a matter of time before she took a tumble. Here's how it came down: The order, one of the most significant of Interior Secretary Haaland’s tenure, was not signed by her but rather by her deputy, Tommy Beaudreau, who grew up in Alaska and has a close relationship with state lawmakers. She was notably silent on the project, which she had opposed as a New Mexico congresswoman before becoming Interior secretary two years ago. Climate activists were outraged that Biden greenlighted the project, which they say put his climate legacy at risk. Allowing the drilling plan to go forward also would break Biden’s campaign promise to stop new oil drilling on public lands, they say. The most politically charged knife in Haaland's back came from none other than NM Sen. Martin Heinrich who tweeted out: It’s disappointing to see Secretary Haaland and President Biden approve the “Willow Project” for ConocoPhillips. Was that Heinrich's opening attack on Haaland in their behind-the-scenes-battle to succeed MLG in 2026? If so, Haaland supporters were ready to fire back, with one of them telling us: Heinrich's vicious side is sneaking out because he realizes that for the first time he is not the favorite in a political contest. For him to call out Deb by name is a low blow from the state's senior senator who should be doing all he can to create unity within the delegation and with New Mexicans serving their country. Heinrich is a noted enviro who was mentioned along with Haaland and others as a possible Secretary of Interior when Biden took office. Haaland is now enduring the wrath of the enviros but it's a risky limb Heinrich is out on to personally go after her. ABQ Dem Rep. Stansbury also expressed disappointment with the Willow decision but did not mention Haaland. The next meeting of the state's DC delegation out to be interesting. Ya think? SCANDAL WATCH
So who is the woman the wife of GOP state Sen. Cliff Pirtle, 37, said she caught him in bed with at the senator's Santa Fe rental Sunday morning? Was she connected to the legislature? A staffer? A fellow legislator? Because if she is, here is a possible scandal brewing that goes beyond the story line of a guy caught in bed with another woman. For example, a senator having a dalliance with a paid employee of the legislature is fraught with legal implications. And were there other individuals with or without legislative connections at that apartment where Aysia Pirtle, her mother and kids in tow, confronted her husband and sparked a loud argument that prompted neighbors to call the sheriff's office? Lapel camera video shows Pirtle, a dairy farmer first elected from the Roswell area in 2012, playing it cool with a sheriff's deputy, telling him he and his wife had an argument about "personal problems." He said no domestic violence occurred. His wife told the law that she had "shoved Cliff on the shoulder." Will answers to the above questions soon unfold in a new Roundhouse atmosphere where sexual harassment guidelines have been stiffened and where there is now an Ethics Commission to handle delicate matters? The state House this session passed an updated Governmental Conduct Act (HB 5) making the exchange of sexual favors an ethics violation punishable by a fine of $5,000 to $10,000. Not that the Pirtle incident has any relationship to that, but it does show the "MeToo" movement is still alive in the Roundhouse halls and even a story line as old as "man caught in bed with another woman" is not to be taken at face value. As for Pirtle politically, he's finished. The Bible thumpers he was fooling in cow country will be looking for a new Trumper in '24. And a paid, full-time legislature? New Mexico probably wants to first sort out what's really going on with the current one. HEARD IN THE HALLS Is Senate Pro Tem Mimi Stewart livid enough over a House committee killing her favored Family Medical Leave Act Monday that she will hold up House legislation in the Senate in the session's final days? Dem moderate Reps Patricia Lundstorm and Marian Mathews were key in denying Mimi's dream now she could give them (and the House) nightmares. We shall see. George Goes Rogue. That would be Senate Finance Committee Chairman George Munoz cutting backroom budget deals with the Governor's team causing harsh criticism from fellow senators who said he's representing the wrong team. Munoz is sounding contrite but there's little question his dealings with new DFA Secretary Propst and the Guv's co-chief of staff Schlegel--both Munoz buddies--has left a sour taste in the upper chamber. Call home, George. The Senate is waiting. . . Monday, March 13, 2023At Odds: Heinrich Splits With MLG On Child Advocate Bill For CYFD; Says "We Must Do Better" As She Resists Change, Plus: DC Crime Bill And NM, And: ABQ Journal Watch; Editor Moves On; Future Of Paper Discussed
Sen. Heinrich is urging the Legislature to continue to advance SB 373 and HB 11 establishing an independent Child Advocate for the agency and get one to the Guv's desk, even as she threatens a veto. The measures have been supported in initial votes by overwhelming margins. Heinrich made his case on the socials: Our children deserve every opportunity--and that starts with accountability, transparency, and functioning systems of support. That starts with honest assessments of what’s working and what’s not, and taking concrete action to do better for New Mexico’s children. That's why I support the Legislature's effort to establish an Office of the Child Advocate.
Our children deserve the very best. And we should all be willing to do everything we can to deliver exactly that. But too often, the systems set up to protect and care for our children aren’t up to the task, with life-changing impacts. We have to do better. . . Heinrich is seeking re-election to a third term next year and also continues to juggle the possibility of running for Governor in '26. MLG maintains an advocate would be ineffective and cause conflict within CYFD. Numerous heinous child murder and abuse cases have pushed the backs of legislators against the Roundhouse walls as constituents clamor for action. Many of the victims were already known to CYFD yet they were still attacked and maimed or killed. Meanwhile, the Guv and her allies are scrambling to block the advocate legislation with HB 461, a weak substitute for the independent Child Advocate bill that has won sweeping approval from lawmakers. From HB 461: The Office of Children’s and Families’ Rights would be administratively attached to CYFD and would be responsible for providing CYFD with independent and objective recommendations to improve the outcomes for and the well-being of children who are in foster care, including administering “the children’s and families’ grievance process, providing mediation services, providing civil rights consultation on cases, and recommending improvements to CYFD. But how could the planned office provide "independent and objective recomendations" when it is "attached to CYFD" whose rotted culture is in need of urgent reform? The independent Advocate would utilize office space at attorney general's office and would be appointed by a variety of legislators and the Governor. The Advocate could only be removed for serious wrongdoing. That's what the abused children of the state need and deserve--as did those that are now dead from abuse that could have been prevented. HB 461 is a crutch for CYFD. SB 373 and HB 11 empowering a Child Advocate are a solution. (The Senate approved SB 373 on a 30-8 vote, not unanimously, as we briefly reported in a first draft Thursday). NM, DC AND CRIME
He joined with senate Republicans in an unlikely alliance to block passage of a new criminal code approved by the DC City Council that was faulted for being weak. President Biden supported nixing the code. It was blocked by an 84-14 vote. The vote was a shift in the Dem position that DC should be allowed to govern itself. (Sen. Lujan also voted to block passage). Last month freshman Dem Rep. Gabe Vasquez joined with fellow NM Dem House members--progressives Stansbury and Leger Fernandez--in voting not to block the DC crime code. The House vote was 260-162, with 42 House Democrats voting in favor of the GOP-backed proposal. Vasquez's southern district now includes a wide swath of ABQ's Westside where crime is a top agenda item. Most recently shootings involving teens at West Mesa High School have made headlines. We asked Vasquez's office for his thinking behind the vote. They said a statement was forthcoming but then backed off and and said no comment. National media reported some House Dems voted against blocking the criminal code with the awareness that Biden would carry the day in the Senate. Vasquez is expected to face former GOP Rep.Yvette Herrell in a rematch next year and it will be votes such as the DC crime bill that will keep her on the attack. The Westside is already represented by conservative Dem City Councilor Louis Sanchez and GOP Councilor Dan Lewis. Herrell would like to tap into that vein of support. Vasquez handily carried the area in '22 and she needs to cut his ABQ margin to win the sprawling district. ROUNDHOUSE GUNS Meantime at the Roundhouse the one gun bill that the Alligators have been predicting would pass has done so. MLG will sign "Bennie's Bill" (HB 9) that was given final approval last week by the House 34 to 28. The act is aimed at protecting children by ensuring adults store their firearms safely. It is named after Hargrove, a middle school student who was murdered in 2021 by a classmate using his father's gun that was not stored properly. The relative closeness of the vote--with some Dems joining the R's in voting against--signals that the major gun measures--such as raising the age to 21 for buying certain guns--will probably not make it this year. MLG has talked of calling a special session if the gun bills she supports are not approved. ABQ JOURNAL WATCH
Moses, 67, a UNM grad, who was Managing Editor for 22 years before assuming the top job, said: It’s been an honor to work with so many talented individuals through the years, and be a part of an organization committed to making a difference in New Mexico. Meanwhile, things are very different at the Journal that traces its origin back to 1880. Several months ago those numerous (and lucrative) full-page ads from Dreamstyle Remodeling, owned by ABQ's Larry Chavez, disappeared after years of being the paper's primary advertiser. And the paper is now publishing only two sections for its weekday editions, numbering just 20 to 25 pages--down from at least 35 pages or more. To cut costs the paper in recent years paper has resorted to layoffs (2015), retirements of senior reporters who command high wages, shutting down their DC bureau, eliminating vending machines and inking a printing agreement with the Santa Fe New Mexican. The relentless march of the Internet--while not appearing to put the Journal in immediate existential danger--does raise the issue of how committed the Lang family, who have owned and operated the privately held paper for decades, remains to operating with a hand tied behind their backs. The paper has also been under ongoing pressure from local ad agencies over what they argue are too high rates as circulation for the print edition declines. No circulation numbers have been publicly released in years. Retired radio talk show host and veteran NM politico Mike Santullo says: Like many papers, the Internet has eaten the Journal's lunch. A sale at this point would not be a shocker. The main reason for the Langs to keep the paper is influence, not the profits which peaked long ago. But with the old New Mexico fading and the new multi-media landscape firmly planted, even that reasoning is suspect. Santullo added that the ABQ Publishing Company has widespread real estate interests, presumably profitable, that can subsidize the paper. The Journal report on Moses leaving did not include a statement from the publisher praising her service, unlike when Walz retired. The paper says it has launched a national search for an editor. They said starting pay would be as low as $125,000. Like we said, things are very different at the ABQ Journal. |
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