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THURS: Governor releases her proposed budget, + More

New Mexico Democratic Gov. Michelle Lujan Grisham speaks at Arcosa Wind Towers, Aug. 9, 2023, in Belen, N.M.
Ross D. Franklin
/
Capital & Main
Lawmakers are considering measures that would dramatically redirect the Oil and Gas Act to protect the environment and the public.

Governor releases her proposed budgetSanta Fe New Mexican, 九色网 News

Gov. Michelle Lujan Grisham released her Thursday ahead of the legislative session, which includes a 3% raise for most state government and public school employees and a 14% raise for State Police officers.

The Santa Fe New Mexican the budget has $10.5 billion in recurring spending, a nearly 10% increase from the last fiscal year. Of that there is $4.5 billion proposed for the state鈥檚 public education system 鈥 an increase of $283 million.

There are also investments for housing, public safety, economic development, and health care, including $2 billion for the Health Care Authority, which the governor鈥檚 office referred to as 鈥渇ormerly the Human Services Department.鈥 There is $88 million allocated for rate increases to Medicaid providers.

Another $25 million would create a new family services division within the Children, Youth and Families Department and $100 million would go towards the Rural Healthcare Delivery Fund. 

Under economic development, $100 million would launch the New Mexico Match Fund to leverage federal infrastructure investments.
 
The Legislative Finance Committee is scheduled to release its proposed budget Friday. The two spending plans will guide creation of the state budget in the legislative session, which stars on January 16.

Democrats will again push to pass New Mexico green amendment - Santa Fe New Mexican, 九色网 News

Democratic lawmakers will once again seek to pass a green amendment in the upcoming legislative session.

The Santa Fe New Mexican the idea is to create a constitutional amendment that would go before voters and ensure that a clean, healthy environment is a right in the state.

This would be the fourth time lawmakers have tried to pass a green amendment, even though Democrats have a majority in both chambers. No Republicans have supported past efforts. This year鈥檚 session is only 30 days long and only a small percentage of bills and measures are likely to pass.

Advocates say the amendment would make officials enforce current laws and also give them constitutional authority when existing regulations don鈥檛 cover threats to public health and the environment.

But opponents say it gives the government too much power and would hurt industries like oil and gas extraction and agriculture.

New York, Montana, and Pennsylvania are the only three states in the country to adopt a green amendment so far.

Gov. Michelle Lujan Grisham would not need to approve the proposed amendment, but bill sponsor, Sen. Antoinette Sedillo Lopez, said the governor鈥檚 support would help the effort. Lujan Grisham did not respond to the New Mexican鈥檚 request for comment. If the Senate and House approve the amendment it would go before voters in the fall election.

New Mexico considers setback requirements for oil wells near schools and day care centers - By Morgan Lee and Susan Montoya, Bryan Associated Press

A bill to ban oil and gas production within a mile of schools and day care centers across New Mexico is among the first published proposals as the state Legislature prepares for a 30-day session that could bring an overhaul to fundamental oil and gas regulations.

Regulators in the No. 2 U.S. state for oil production are considering reforms including setback requirements aimed at protecting children from pollution, amid pressure from environmental groups and other advocates to bolster pollution controls and fulfill constitutional obligations to regulate the industry.

Published Wednesday, a bill introduced by Democratic state Rep. Debra Sari帽ana of Albuquerque would halt approval of new drilling permits within a mile of school facilities starting in July of this year. It also would halt most oil and natural gas operations in those zones by 2028.

Democratic Gov. Michelle Lujan Grisham directed the state Energy, Minerals and Natural Resources Department to consult with a variety of stakeholders and develop its own robust set of proposed reforms to the New Mexico Oil and Gas Act, which regulates production of the two fossil fuels.

The results of that process will include the establishment of setbacks from schools, hospitals, medical facilities, multifamily housing, single family homes and water bodies statewide.

Lujan Grisham spokesperson Maddy Hayden said in an email Wednesday that the distance of the setbacks has yet to be determined. A draft of the agency's proposal includes language that refers to a setback of 2,640 feet for schools, homes and health care facilities.

Sari帽ana, a retired high school math teacher, said her proposal would likely affect about 800 existing wells out of more than 65,000 across the state.

"It's about our kids. This year it's about our kids," she said.

The state and governor are being sued by environmental groups over alleged failures to meet constitutional provisions for protecting against oil and gas pollution. The groups have pointed to buffers around schools, homes and health care facilities as one way the state could meet its obligations. Plaintiffs and other advocates say that limiting the buffer to just a half-mile doesn't go far enough.

In a letter sent to the state Oil Conservation Division in December, they argued that research shows a setback of at least one mile is necessary to protect public health. As setback distances decrease, they said the likelihood and magnitude of exposure risk for people who live, work, go to school or frequent places near oil and gas production increases.

"We feel this should be a no-brainer," Gail Evans, a senior attorney with the Center for Biological Diversity, said in a recent interview with The Associated Press. She represents the plaintiffs in the constitutional case.

While the State Land Office has imposed its own buffer around schools, Evans and others say the mandate should be expanded beyond state trust land and that it has been failures by the state Legislature to address the issue of contamination and pollution that led to the legal challenge.

The Legislature convenes from Jan. 16 through March 15 to approve an annual budget. Other initiatives can be considered at the discretion of the governor.

Published legislative proposals also include ban on the use of fresh water in fracking and enhance oversight and sanctions for spills by well operators.

APD releases data showing arrests are up, use of force is down - Albuquerque Journal, 九色网 News

The Albuquerque Police Department has now released statistics showing that the department has been arresting more people, but incidents involving the use of force from their officers has gone down.

s, the data released Wednesday showed annual arrests skyrocketed 29%, from just below 9,500 in 2021 to just over 12,200 in 2023. Officer use of force incidents decreased 30%, from 739 to 515.

APD spokesman Gilbert Gallegos told the Journal that, of those 515 use of force cases in 2023, 13 cases were found to be 鈥渙ut of policy.鈥 That resulted in 17 officers receiving some sort of discipline and seven were given written reprimands.

This data comes as the department nears full compliance with a Court-Approved Settlement Agreement with the U.S. Department of Justice in 2014 鈥 which mandated sweeping reforms to APD.

Since 2022, APD officers have shot, or shot at, 32 people, with at least 16 being fatal.

N.M. counties sketch spending wish list for 2024 - By Austin Fisher,

New Mexico鈥檚 county governments want state lawmakers in the upcoming legislative session to allocate an additional $188 million, to pay for a variety of local government functions like public sector workers鈥 health care, new courthouses, jail operations and pay raises.

New Mexico Counties, a lobbying group for all 33 county governments in the state, outlined that the bulk of the requested money is set to go toward covering insurance costs for state employees.

The counties are asking lawmakers to set aside $149 million to cover a shortfall in the pot of money used to pay for state employees鈥 health care, New Mexico Counties executive director Joy Esparsen told lawmakers on the Revenue Stabilization & Tax Policy Committee.

Esparsen said counties were blindsided last year by bills from the state General Services Department for the deficit in the Employee Health Benefits Fund.

Some counties and cities the state over the invoices last summer after House Bill 2, the legislation setting out the state budget, called for local governments to pay one-time fees of $10.2 million for health insurance premiums and $299,100 for life insurance premiums, according to Eastern New Mexico News.

鈥淲e recognize that funds need to be solvent but we don鈥檛 have a voice in that discussion when those premium increases were waived,鈥 Esparsen said. 鈥淲e have commitments from several legislators that this is going to be an issue that鈥檒l be discussed early on this session.鈥

PAYING FOR COURTHOUSES

The counties want lawmakers to set aside $20 million each year for building and renovating state district courthouses.

Often, state district courts and county magistrate courts share space in what are called 鈥渏udicial complexes,鈥 but counties cover the cost of maintaining them, Esparsen said.

鈥淭his is something we鈥檝e considered an unfunded mandate for many years,鈥 Esparsen said. 鈥淲e look at this as a much better approach to this as a shared revenue.鈥

The most recent state operating budget does have $23 million set aside by lawmakers for the Administrative Office of the Courts to cover these costs, the counties wrote.

$15 million of that was used to resolve a lawsuit between the Eighth Judicial District Court and Otero County.

The other $8 million is being distributed based on need across the state, the counties wrote. Various court officials asked AOC to use the money, but their requests totaled $22 million, Esparsen said.

PAYING JAIL GUARDS

Lawmakers passed a law directing the state to set up a special fund in 2023 called the Detention and Corrections Workforce Capacity Building Fund, to help counties recruit and retain jail guards, Esparsen said.

Now the counties are asking lawmakers to put $10 million in that fund, she said.

鈥淲e have detention centers that are operating at very concerning numbers of staff, and it鈥檚 a compounding problem 鈥 you have staff then that鈥檚 working multiple overtime,鈥 Esparsen said.

PEOPLE IN STATE CUSTODY HELD IN COUNTY JAILS

The counties are asking lawmakers to set aside $7.5 million that will reimburse county jails that detain people convicted of felonies who are sentenced to state prison, but are actually incarcerated in county jails.

According to the counties鈥 presentation, lawmakers created the County Detention Facility Reimbursement Fund in 2007 with $5 million, but the pot of money 鈥渄iminished to less than $2.5 million over the next decade.鈥

Even though lawmakers restored it to $5 million in 2022, the counties wrote that it costs an average of $7.5 million to incarcerate state prisoners in county jails each year, according to the New Mexico Sentencing Commission.

ADMINISTRATIVE FEES BY STATE

The New Mexico Municipal League lawmakers to eliminate a 3% fee charged to local governments by the state Taxation and Revenue Department. They want lawmakers to make it based on costs instead of a flat fee.

Esparsen said it鈥檚 also a concern for counties. That 3% is unreasonable and not based on actual costs, she said. She said counties paid $26 million last year to collect county sales taxes, she said.

FINES AND FEES BACKFILL

Mentioned in the counties鈥 presentation but not in Esparsen鈥檚 comments to lawmakers was a proposal for lawmakers to make up for the $1.3 million each year that was reportedly being raised by fees for traffic tickets and criminal charges on top of the fines required by the state鈥檚 criminal laws.

Lawmakers tossed out those fees last year.

FIREFIGHTERS AND MEDICS

The counties are asking lawmakers to find 鈥渁 more sustainable shared鈥 source of revenue to pay for emergency medical services.

That same day, the New Mexico Municipal League lawmakers put 10% of health insurance premium tax revenue into the fund to pay for local EMS services鈥 supplies, equipment and vehicles.

Rep. Liz Stefanics (D-Albuquerque) asked Esparsen if the counties agree with the cities鈥 suggestion, and she said 鈥渁bsolutely.鈥 She said the counties have met with the municipal league about the issue multiple times, along with the New Mexico Association of Chiefs of Police.

TRANSPORTING AND EXTRADITING INCARCERATED PEOPLE

The counties are asking lawmakers to set aside $750,000 to reimburse them for moving incarcerated people around the state or extraditing them from outside the state, according to their presentation.

There鈥檚 already a fund in state law that allows the state to pay back counties for this work but lawmakers have never put money into it, Esparsen said.

SERVICES FOR INCARCERATED PEOPLE

The counties are asking lawmakers to increase funding for mental health care, medication assisted treatment, housing, job training and other services for people incarcerated in county jails.

The Reach, Intervene, Support and Engage Program is overseen by the Behavioral Health Services Division of the state Human Services Department. The group runs in a dozen counties across the state 鈥 Bernalillo, Colfax, Dona Ana, Eddy, Grant, Lincoln, Luna, Roosevelt, San Juan, Sierra, Socorro and Valencia counties, according to the group鈥檚 presentation.

Neither the counties鈥 presentation nor Esparsen鈥檚 comments to lawmakers specify how much money goes into the program and how much more they want. More money 鈥渨ould provide sustainability and enable expansion鈥 of the program, the counties wrote.

ELECTEDS鈥 SALARIES

The counties are asking lawmakers to increase the salary cap for newly elected officials by 15%, and for their salaries to match the Consumer Price Index.

The counties wrote that an increase to the salary cap is imperative this year because it would affect any incoming elected officials who will take office in January 2025. The cap was last changed in 2018, they wrote.

Esparsen said 14 counties are at the cap set by state law.

鈥淭he reality is when you have a deputy that is making $40,000 to $50,000 more than the elected official, it doesn鈥檛 make it very enticing for them to run as an elected official, or to retain that institutional knowledge,鈥 Esparsen said.

City of Albuquerque outlines winter weather supports - By Nash Jones, 九色网 News 

With snow falling across the state, Albuquerque Mayor Tim Keller and representatives from several city departments Thursday gave an update on available winter-weather supports.

Keller emphasized preparation by city support services for the cold conditions. Namely, the recently-expanded Gateway Center鈥檚 85 overnight beds in addition to the Westside Emergency Housing Center鈥檚 24-hour shelter and meals.

For people stuck outside when it drops below freezing, the Albuquerque Community Safety Department now provides after-hours transportation to shelters from 8 p.m. to 7 a.m.

Additionally, the Department of Municipal Development highlighted their efforts to keep roads clear with a fleet of 40 trucks to spread salt. Keller said Emergency DMD crews 鈥渨ere monitoring this storm in real time and were ready to go.鈥

Albuquerque Fire Rescue shared safety tips, including keeping a 3-foot area around space heaters clear, getting fireplaces serviced annually, and not using gas stoves to heat homes due to the risk that carbon monoxide poses.

Four cities will host gun buybacks on SaturdayFarmington Daily Times, 九色网 News

New Mexico State Police will hold gun buybacks in four cities Saturday.

The Farmington Daily Times the agency is asking residents in Albuquerque, Espa帽ola, Farmington and Las Cruces to anonymously turn in firearms in exchange for Visa gift cards.

This is the second buyback since Gov. Michelle Lujan Grisham issued a public health order in September to address rising gun violence following the shooting deaths of several children in Albuquerque.

Previous buybacks in Albuquerque, Espa帽ola and Las Cruces brought in 279 firearms. But this will be the first event in Farmington, after an earlier event brought and was cancelled.

The weapons will be destroyed or recycled into other products. They do not need to in working order. Officials will offer $100 gift cards for handguns and $200 gift cards for rifles and shotguns.

The buybacks will take place between 8 a.m. and 2 p.m. at these locations:

路 Expo New Mexico, 300 San Pedro, Gate 8 off Louisiana Blvd. in Albuquerque

路 Harriet B. Simmons Office, 101 W. Animas in Farmington

路 First Baptist Church, 4201 N. Sonoma ranch Blvd. in Las Cruces

路 Espanola Annex Building, 1101 Industrial Park Road in Espa帽ola

Tony Sanchez introduced as New Mexico State's head football coach after 2 seasons as receivers coach - Associated Press

New Mexico State didn't need to look far when searching for a new head football coach.

Eleven days after Jerry Kill stepped down after two seasons with the Aggies, Tony Sanchez was officially introduced Wednesday as the program's 36th head coach.

Sanchez, 49, was a wide receiver for New Mexico State from 1994-95 and coached that position the past two years.

The Aggies had a 7-6 record in 2022, winning the Quick Lane Bowl, then went 10-5 last season and played for the Conference USA championship.

It marked the school's first back-to-back bowl games since 1959-60.

"Now there's a new standard here," Sanchez told reporters Wednesday. "We don't want to win anymore, we expect to win. That's going to be our attitude moving forward. We've got a great coaching staff, a great core group of players and I know we'll continue to move this thing forward."

Sanchez was UNLV's head coach from 2015-19 and had a 20-40 record.

New Mexico State athletic director Mario Moccia said Sanchez is expected to sign a five-year contract.

"We had a lot of really good coaches that I thought might have the ability to take over," Moccia said Wednesday. "In my opinion, Tony was the most ready. And that's why we made this selection."

Moccia added that two other major projects are upcoming for the football program 鈥 a new video board and new locker rooms.

NM lawmaker to propose limits on assault-style weapons - Santa Fe New Mexican, 九色网 News

Less than a month after Gov. Michelle Lujan Grisham called on lawmakers to consider restrictions on assault-style weapons in the upcoming legislative session, Democratic Rep. Andrea Romero is answering the call.

Romero says she plans to introduce legislation similar to a federal proposal from U.S. Senator Martin Hienrich that aims to limit how lethal the weapons are. The GOSAFE ACT would require that the weapons have permanently fixed magazines. It would also limit rifles to 10 rounds and some heavy-format pistols to 15.

While Romero鈥檚 proposal last year to prohibit magazines that hold more than 10 bullets failed, she says she鈥檚 drafting this year鈥檚 push with the help of law enforcement and legal counsel.

She says she knows the bill will be controversial, but that it鈥檚 important to have 鈥渉ard conversations鈥 about what鈥檚 needed to protect people.

A spokesperson for the governor told the New Mexican that her office is reviewing Romero鈥檚 proposal, adding that they look forward to working with lawmakers to 鈥減ut forth a robust suite of common sense gun laws in the upcoming session.鈥

New Mexico regulators reject utility's effort to recoup some investments in coal and nuclear plants - By Susan Montoya Bryan, Associated Press

Regulators rejected on Wednesday an effort by New Mexico's largest electric utility to recoup from customers millions of dollars of investments made in a coal-fired power plant in the northwestern corner of the state and a nuclear power plant in neighboring Arizona.

The Public Regulation Commission's decision means Public Service Co. of New Mexico customers will not have to bear some costs associated with PNM's stake in the Four Corners Power Plant near Farmington or in the Palo Verde Generating Station outside of Phoenix. Commissioners said those investments were not prudent.

Overall, residential customers will see a decrease in rates instead of the 9.7% increase that the utility was seeking.

The commission said in a statement that PNM still will be able to collect a reasonable return on its investments while providing reliable service to more than 500,000 customers around the state.

PNM filed a request for its first-rate hike in years in late 2022, saying the nearly $64 million in additional revenue was needed as part of a long-term plan to recoup $2.6 billion in investments necessary to modernize the grid and meet state mandates for transitioning away from coal and natural gas.

The utility also had cited the expiration of lease agreements for electricity from the Palo Verde plant and the desire to refinance debt to take advantage of lower interest rates.

Hearing examiners with the Public Regulation Commission who reviewed the case recommended in December that the commission reject costs associated with the sale of leases at Palo Verde to a third party. They also said PNM's 2016 decision to invest in extending the life of the Four Corners plant wasn't prudent.

PNM officials said late Wednesday that they were reviewing the commission's order. The utility has until Feb. 2 to seek a rehearing before the commission.

Consumer advocates and environmental groups were pleased the commission opted to reject some of the costs associated with PNM's investments.

"The commission recognized that PNM failed to do its due diligence before reinvesting in Four Corners after 2016, when there were clear signs that coal is a costly and deadly fuel," said Matthew Gerhart, a senior attorney with Sierra Club.

The utility had tried to divest itself from Four Corners by transferring its shares to a Navajo energy company. However, regulators rejected that proposal, a decision that was later upheld by the New Mexico Supreme Court.

Located on the Navajo Nation, the Four Corners plant is operated by Arizona Public Service Co. The utility owns a majority of shares in the plant's two remaining units.

Navajo Transitional Energy Co. had sought to take over PNM's shares, saying that preventing an early closure of the power plant would help soften the economic blow to communities that have long relied on tax revenue and jobs tied to coal-fired generation.

The nearby San Juan Generating Station was shuttered in 2022, sending financial ripples through the surrounding communities. PNM had operated that plant for decades.

USDA Deputy Sec. Torres Small tours NM with the state鈥檚 congressional representatives - By Nash Jones, 九色网 News

U.S. Agriculture Deputy Secretary Xochitl Torres Small is in New Mexico this week touting the Biden administration鈥檚 infrastructure and clean energy investments as well as its efforts to make use of the work happening at the nation's universities and research facilities.

Wednesday, Torres Small kicked off her trip to her home state by visiting Sandia Pueblo with U.S. Rep. Melanie Stansbury. They visited a tribal fire station that鈥檚 tapped USDA funds for emergency response equipment, according to a press release.

Thursday, she鈥檒l tour New Mexico State University with Rep. Gabe Vasquez. They鈥檒l focus on NMSU鈥檚 science and agricultural research efforts related to the USDA鈥檚 mission to further research, education and economics.

Torres Small will wrap up her visit Friday with Rep. Teresa Leger Fernandez in Mora County. They鈥檒l tour a business that received the agency鈥檚 Rural Energy for America Program grant to access renewable energy systems.