Albuquerque’s downtown neighborhoods, like those in many metro areas across the nation, are a study in contrasts.
Close to the interchange of Interstate 25 and Interstate 40, the area is dotted with distilleries and other trendy businesses, as well as large manufacturing yards and a Creamland Dairies garage.
Amid the affluence and industry, homeless people gathered throughout the area on a brisk, sunny day in late January, congregating on city sidewalks in makeshift tents and flanked by shopping carts full of gear. Many had canine companions with them, some wearing dog vests in the cold weather.
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The sight has become familiar in communities throughout New Mexico, but is particularly prominent in the state’s most populous city.
How many people are homeless in Albuquerque and across the state? Accurate estimates are hard to come by. But teams of volunteers set out during a four-day period late last month to count those who are perhaps most visible and vulnerable — the street homeless — as well as those living in shelters.
A homeless man who wished to remain unidentified organizes his collection of remote control car tires after answering questions for the annual Point in Time Count on the corner of McKnight Avenue and First Street in Albuquerque on Jan. 28. The man told The New Mexican how he lost many of his personal items during an encampment sweep done by the city, and he was only able to keep a handful of his personal belongings.
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Gabriela Campos/The New Mexican
The annual Point in Time Count, conducted nationwide, is the largest data collection effort focused on the homeless population. It found 771,000 homeless people across the U.S. in 2024, the most ever recorded. That compares with nearly 4,700 counted in New Mexico in 2025 — with almost 3,000 in Albuquerque alone. While the PIT Count’s numbers largely are considered a significant undercount of the true homeless population, advocates say it’s the best method available to assess a growing problem.
“The PIT is a deeply flawed survey, but it is one of the best tools we have,” said Sara Lucero, a development director for Albuquerque Health Care for the Homeless, who coordinated an outing Jan. 28 to count — and connect with — the city’s homeless.
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The volunteer power
A small group of volunteers and staff members departed from the headquarters of Albuquerque Health Care for the Homeless — at 1217 First St., about a mile north of the Alvarado Transportation Center on Central Avenue — with a rolling cart full of snacks, water, hygiene kits, socks and other cold-weather gear.
While distributing the supplies, gratefully received, volunteers also asked homeless people where they had spent the night and if they would be willing to fill out a survey offering more details on their experiences.
One woman said she had slept on the street in downtown Albuquerque. She had previously spent time at one of the city’s shelters, she said, but left after being harassed. She would rather be on the street, she told a surveyor.
One man asked if there was any reimbursement for participating, which there is not.
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“Time is money!” he said with a laugh.
A man with the street name Buffalo, who said he has been homeless for 23 years, said he had been surveyed by PIT Count volunteers a day earlier but accepted some snacks and a hand warmer. He was playing music he had recorded on a portable stereo and said he dreamed about producing an album and performing for record executive and TV personality Simon Cowell.
Dr. Elizabeth “Bee” Cumby visits with a homeless man while collecting information for the annual Point in Time Count on the corner of McKnight Avenue and First Street in Albuquerque on Jan. 28.
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Gabriela Campos/The New Mexican
One of the volunteers in the group was Dr. Elizabeth “Bee” Cumby, who came from her home in Los Lunas that morning to pitch in. It was her first time volunteering for the PIT count, but she had worked at Health Care for the Homeless during her career as a medical doctor, much of which had been spent as a contractor with the federal Indian Health Service.
Cumby was troubled by the increase in visible homelessness in her community following the coronavirus pandemic, saying many more people seem to be living in recreational vehicles on other people’s property or along the bosque of the Rio Grande than she recalls seeing previously.
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She also wondered about the connection between mental health and homelessness, a question with no easy answers.
Part of her medical training involved going to the New Mexico Behavioral Health Institute in Las Vegas, which she described as “a sad place.”
Still, she said, people living on the street are vulnerable to many of the same problems as those who are institutionalized, including physical and sexual violence, neglect and theft, and she wondered if the shuttering of residential mental health facilities in decades past was wise.
“On a cold night like last night, I keep thinking if we had kept all these facilities going, at least these people would be housed, and getting food,” she said.
Lucero encouraged people the group encountered to come to Health Care for the Homeless if they needed help with medical conditions.
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One woman said she had a prescription for arthritis in her hands, but the medication was discarded during a city sweep of a homeless encampment. She was one of several people the volunteers encountered during a shift who said they had lost items during a sweep.
More stringent enforcement of bans on camping on public property has impacted the PIT count, advocates say, making it more difficult for volunteers to locate and survey homeless people. The New Mexico Coalition to End Homelessness, which oversees the state’s PIT Count each year, cites the city of Albuquerque’s “aggressive decommissioning policy” of homeless encampments in its 2025 report as an impediment to the effort.
Federally mandated survey
The Point in Time Count, an annual survey of the nation’s sheltered and unsheltered homeless people on a single night in January, is mandated by the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development for organizations that receive funding through the federal Continuum of Care program.
While the count is for a single night — Jan. 26 this year — the department gives organizers up to a week to do outreach, and the New Mexico coalition conducted a four-day count this year.
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The nationwide endeavor largely is carried out by volunteers who venture into city streets, parks and out-of-the-way places to find and survey those living without shelter. It’s not an easy task.
William Bowen, a program director for the New Mexico Coalition to End Homelessness, said several factors lead to depressed numbers.
The midwinter count is contingent on volunteer participation, which widely varies by location. The Department of Housing and Urban Development’s narrow definition of homelessness, which does not include people who are couch-surfing or families doubled up in a home, also fails to capture a large number of homeless people.
More recently, the PIT Count has been affected by encampment sweeps.
Still, Bowen and other coalition officials say the count is the best system of collecting large-scale data on homelessness and can be used to identify trends.
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“No one else is trying to do this,” noted Axton Nichols, a director with the coalition’s Continuum of Care team.
Bowen said the Point in Time Count data, as the name implies, is only intended to capture a snapshot in time and reflects the transitory nature of the homeless experience. If the count was taken again several months later, even if the numbers were similar, there’s no guarantee it would be tallying the same people.
“People cycle in and out of homelessness, I think, a lot more rapidly than the public maybe understands,” he said.
Nichols noted measures are in place to prevent the same people from being counted more than once.
How much of the homeless population remains uncounted is unclear.
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Bowen said the coalition believes the PIT Count is capturing about 50% to 60% of the Albuquerque’s true homeless population, but the statewide numbers are harder to estimate.
The survey is not conducted in every county in New Mexico, as it relies on volunteers being available and willing to organize it in their communities. It was administered in 18 of New Mexico’s 33 counties in 2025.
About 200 volunteers participated this year in the Albuquerque count, Bowen said.
A study last year by the New Mexico Department of Health, based on hospital data, found the state’s homeless population could be two to four times higher than numbers reflected in the PIT Count, at more than 9,000.
Data collected under the requirements of the federal McKinney-Veto Act, a law that requires public schools to serve homeless children, shows 10,533 homeless students in New Mexico during the 2024-25 school year.
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The McKinney-Veto Act uses a broader definition of homelessness than the federal government, which includes only people who are living in shelters or on the streets.
Nichols said that leads to homeless youth and women being particularly underrepresented in the PIT Count, as they are both hard-to-reach populations.
That contributes to a perception that the average homeless person is a man, Nichols said, which makes it more difficult to prove there is a need for resources for some of the most vulnerable groups of homeless people, including those engaging in sex work.
He provided an example: A person who “used sex work to pay for a hotel one night, but otherwise they’d be on the street — HUD considers them housed.”
Who are the homeless?
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Along with asking people where they were sleeping on a designated night, PIT Count surveys ask how long they have been homeless and inquire about their race and gender, if they have a disability, substance addiction or mental illness, and what barriers they have experienced when it comes to accessing housing.
Some of the questions can bring up painful emotions for people. Lucero reminded volunteers people can decline to answer questions, even after they’ve agreed to take the survey.
The Department of Housing and Urban Development requires certain questions, but survey coordinators can add additional questions. One added by the New Mexico Coalition to End Homelessness inquires about where a person is originally from, and if they were homeless when they arrived in their current city.
Half of the people surveyed in Albuquerque in 2025 reported being from the city, and 58% were from somewhere in New Mexico. Of those originally from out of state, 64% were not homeless when they arrived. Surveys of people in Santa Fe and other areas of the state showed similar numbers.
The majority of out-of-staters were from the Western U.S., including Texas, California, Arizona and Colorado.
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Sara Lucero, development director for Albuquerque Health Care for the Homeless, fists bumps a homeless man after speaking with him about the annual Point in Time Count in Albuquerque on Jan. 28.
Gabriela Campos/The New Mexican
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Nichols said a popular sentiment, especially in major cities, that homeless people travel there from other places to take advantage of resources is not reflected in the numbers: “The data has never borne that out.”
The coalition’s 2025 report points to a slight increase in homelessness in Albuquerque compared to the past year and a slight decrease in the numbers from other areas of New Mexico.
Something shown in the count’s data over time are “persistent racial disparities,” Bowen said. The percentage of Indigenous people who were homeless in 2025 was more than double the percentage of Indigenous people in the state’s population. For Black people, the rate of those who were homeless was more than triple.
More than half of homeless Indigenous people surveyed in 2025 were from the Navajo Nation, with small numbers from New Mexico pueblos and a few from out-of-state tribes.
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In recent years, Bowen said, reports also have identified a rise in the homeless senior population, mirroring a national trend that has been seen in Santa Fe.
About one-third of women surveyed said their homelessness was due to domestic violence, according to the 2025 report, and 9% of unsheltered homeless people reported having served in the U.S. military.
For all its shortcomings, Bowen said one advantage of the PIT Count is that it gives people the opportunity to meet with those in their community in need and other people who want to make a difference.
“Even if the general systemic benefit of PIT Count is maybe debatable, it’s an opportunity to connect with people,” he said. “And I think that that has value as well.”
LAS CRUCES, N.M. (KFOX14/CBS4) — A leader in the New Mexico Republican Party was arrested Wednesday, accused of a deadly hit-and-run in Las Cruces.
Former Treasurer of the Republican Party in New Mexico, Kimberly Ann Skaggs, 54, was arrested Wednesday and charged with leaving the scene and tampering with evidence, jail records show.
Police documents show the charges stem from a deadly hit-and-run crash that happened Monday afternoon, which killed 40-year-old bicyclist, Andrew Brown.
Investigators believed Skaggs was involved after an investigation revealed that Skaggs allegedly was driving fast in the area, fled the scene after the crash and then tried to hide the vehicle from authorities.
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The investigation
According to police documents, a witness at the scene of the crash– 850 N. Fairacres Rd.– described seeing a dark blonde-haired woman flee in a black Cadillac Escalade SUV.
Afterwards, investigators said they saw on Flock cameras– A.I. powered license plate readers– a black Cadillac Escalade traveling near the site of the crash minutes before the incident.
READ MORE: Dona Ana County expands Flock license plate cameras as officials cite crime-solving gains
The license plates showed that the vehicle belonged to Skaggs and that, in September 2025, the Las Cruces Police Department had given her a citation for “racing on streets-exhibition driving.”
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Investigators stated that a business on Picacho Ave. captured what they alleged was the same black Cadillac Escalade driving fast.
Then, the documents described how investigators tracked down the Escalade using OnStar’s live GPS tracking, discovering the SUV was at a property on the 5000 block of Northwind Road, which investigators said the Dona Ana County Assessors Office confirmed is a property owned by Skaggs.
On Tuesday, at around 6:41 p.m.– over 24 hours after the deadly hit-and-run– investigators executed a search warrant on the property and described finding the black Cadillac Escalade behind a home, under a red metal carport.
Investigators noted damage on the SUV consistent with the crash, highlighting that there was blood splatter near one of the front tires, markings on the front bumper consistent with hitting a bicycle and parts missing, which investigators said were the same parts found at the scene.
Dona Ana County jail records show Skaggs was booked on Wednesday afternoon and remains jailed without a bond.
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About Skaggs
On the official website of the Republican Party of New Mexico, Skaggs was listed as the treasurer before she was removed.
KFOX14/CBS4 has reached out to the Republican Party to learn more and are waiting for a comment regarding the arrest.
Also, according to election statistics, Skaggs ran for State Representative in District 36 in 2022 and 2024, losing both times to Democrat Nathan P. Small.
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SANTA FE, N.M. – Gov. Michelle Lujan Grisham asked Attorney General Raúl Torrez to investigate whether any Drug Enforcement Administration agents broke state law when pills reached New Mexico streets.
In a statement, Lujan Grisham said, “make no mistake: the DEA knew people would die if these pills made it into New Mexico communities.”
The governor also shared a timeline from 2022 to 2025 that she said shows when she asked federal officials for help with New Mexico’s fentanyl crisis and violent crime.
Lujan Grisham said the first request came on June 21, 2022, when she wrote to then-Federal Bureau of Investigation Director Christopher Wray and asked for 50 additional federal agents.
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She said she wrote to then-Attorney General Merrick Garland on Sept. 15, 2022, asking for more agents, resources and support for New Mexico law enforcement.
Lujan Grisham said she wrote Garland a second time on Aug. 8, 2023, with the same request.
What came next?
About a month later, Lujan Grisham said she sent Garland a third letter and said New Mexico needed more federal law enforcement to curb violent crime, drug trafficking and human trafficking.
She said her most recent request came on Sept. 4, 2025, when she wrote to former Attorney General Pam Bondi and again asked for additional agents and resources.
The governor’s statement says those requests span several years as she pressed the federal government for more help in New Mexico.
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Full statement from Gov. Michelle Lujan Grisham:
“I am appalled by reporting this week by the Associated Press and Albuquerque Journal that revealed federal authorities made a deliberate decision to let hundreds of thousands of fentanyl pills flood into New Mexico communities, despite knowing that fentanyl is so lethal the White House has designated it a weapon of mass destruction.
Let me say that again: the Drug Enforcement Administration watched as 74,000 fentanyl pills were delivered to a mobile home park in Albuquerque, and they did nothing. And that’s just one transaction. Shockingly, the federal government stood by while monitoring shipments, tallying exact pill counts, and watching as these deadly drugs hit the streets.
There are no words to describe how reckless and dangerous these decisions were. Make no mistake: the DEA knew people would die if these pills made it into New Mexico communities, and the agency let it happen anyway. The result: hundreds of New Mexican parents burying their kids. Hundreds of New Mexican kids growing up without stable parents. All while the federal government stood by.
If the justification for letting these pills flood our communities was that it would somehow make New Mexico safer down the road through bigger eventual busts, the results say otherwise. New Mexico now leads the nation in the increase in overdose deaths for the second straight year, despite deaths dropping nationwide.
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Today, I wrote to Attorney General Raúl Torrez and asked him to investigate whether any federal agents broke state law when they allowed lethal drugs to remain on our streets, and to prosecute anyone responsible — regardless of whether they are a federal agent or not.
I have spent years working across two administrations — writing letters, traveling to Washington, meeting directly with President Joe Biden and his cabinet, pushing for accountability, asking for more federal agents to be deployed to New Mexico to help fight this crisis.
On June 21, 2022, I wrote to FBI Director Christopher Wray, imploring the FBI to assign no less than 50 additional agents to New Mexico to stem escalating drug trafficking and violent crime.
On September 15, 2022, I wrote to Attorney General Merrick Garland, requesting that the Department of Justice provide additional federal agents, resources and support to New Mexico law enforcement. We asked the department to match the level of investigative, analytical, and technical resources the FBI had deployed in its Buffalo, NY surge.
On August 8, 2023, I wrote again to Attorney General Garland, renewing my request that the DOJ expeditiously assign more federal agents to New Mexico.
On September 7, 2023, I wrote to Attorney General Garland for a third time, reiterating my request once more federal law enforcement support to curb violent crime, drug and human trafficking.
On September 4, 2025, I wrote to Attorney General Pam Bondi, once again requesting additional agents and resources.
I have declared the surge of drugs like fentanyl to be a public health emergency. I have deployed the National Guard to both Albuquerque and Española. While my administration was doing everything we could to stem the tide of fentanyl coming into our state, the federal government deliberately allowed it to flood in.
New Mexican lives are not the federal government’s cost of doing business.
I plan to hold the federal government accountable for this disaster and will explore every possible avenue of action against the federal government to right these wrongs.”
The Canyon Venado Fire has grown to 852 acres east of Clines Corners and crews say wind farms in the area are threatened.
CLINES CORNERS, N.M. – The Canyon Venado Fire has grown to 852 acres east of Clines Corners and crews say wind farms in the area are threatened.
The fire is burning just east of Clines Corners, south of Interstate 40.
It forced the closure of eastbound Interstate 40 at Clines Corners on Tuesday night. I-40 reopened Tuesday night. I-40 is back open but smoke still affects visibility.
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“We’re on the side of I-40 so drivers have to be pretty cautious. As far as our establishment itself we’re pretty isolated by the freeway itself as a nice fire break,” said Lincoln Tarantino, Clines Corner general manager.
The fire has burned around 852 acres, up from just 20 at this time Monday.
Crews say the fire is not contained and wind farms in the area are threatened.