New Mexico
New Mexico High School Basketball Rankings: Week 6 (BOYS)
NMPreps continues to provide the most accurate depiction of New Mexico high school basketball team rankings with our weekly Power-12 rankings for each classification. These rankings offer an unbiased and true evaluation of each team, using a “what have you done for me lately” approach that focuses on the most recent results.
New Mexico
What do people in New Mexico have in mind for the New Year?
People in New Mexico shared what their resolutions are for the New Year and how they’re already making progress on it, includng through a 5K run at a local brewery.
ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. — As the big chile dropped to ring in 2025 in New Mexico, thoughts of resolutions and goals for the New Year were plentiful in people’s minds.
From hitting the gym more to more time with loved ones and more, there is a lot that people are looking forward to in the New Year.
Canteen Brewhouse in Albuquerque even hosted a 5K run New Year’s Day to help people get started on the right foot — with a pint included — on day one.
Hear what people had to say in the video above.
New Mexico
New Mexico Cracks 100 Points in Easy Win Over Fresno State
Mustapha Amzil and C.J. Noland scored 23 points apiece to lead New Mexico to a 103-89 victory over Fresno State on Tuesday night at the Save Mart Center.
Amzil added five rebounds for the Lobos (11-3, 3-0 Mountain West Conference). Noland made 11 for 17 shots. Donovan Dent scored 17.
Zaon Collins led the Bulldogs (4-10, 0-3) with 20 points. Elijah Price totaled 15 points, 11 rebounds, six steals and three blocks. Brian Amuneke also had 15 points.
New Mexico took the lead with 17:53 remaining in the first half and did not relinquish it. The score was 53-36 at halftime, with Amzil racking up 14 points.
New Mexico pulled away with an 11-2 run in the second half to extend a 10-point lead to 19 points.
New Mexico
New Mexico Aging and Long-Term Services Department seeks $1M to reactivate key division • Source New Mexico
A 2025 budget proposal aims to revive a division of state government aimed at providing community-based and caregiver-based services to New Mexicans who fall just outside of Medicaid eligibility.
In the Aging and Long-Term Services Department’s roughly $5.7 million budget request for next year, $1 million is intended to staff its Long-Term Care Division, which has been inactive.
According to an Aging and Long-Term Services Department spokesperson, the Long-Term Care Division became inactive after the Medicaid waiver programs, which it used to manage, were moved to the state’s Department of Health. The programs – which include living care arrangements, disability assistance and other services – were moved again recently under the Health Care Authority.
Joey Long, public information officer for the department, said they did not have specific dates for the division’s dormancy.
In a presentation to lawmakers during a recent Legislative Finance Committee meeting, Aging and Long-Term Services Department Secretary-designee Emily Kaltenbach said the department also anticipates moving Adult Protective Services – including eight care transition specialists, the Veterans Service Program and New MexiCare program – under the Long-Term Care Division. The Alzheimer’s and Dementia program would also be housed within the division.
New MexiCare in particular has a goal of offering training and financial help to caregivers, who in turn help older New Mexicans age in place rather than in a nursing home. The program is offered in all counties except Bernalillo and Doña Ana, but Long said the department wants to open the program fully statewide by July 2025.
“This will allow us to really create a continuum of care from prevention to intervention to long-term care services and supports,” Kaltenbach said.”That would make us whole.”
The rest of the department’s budget request includes funding for five full-time ombudsman, Aging and Disability Resource Center staff, contractual services to support the call center and support for the department’s volunteer program.
Kaltenbach said the call center receives about 200 calls per day and had an additional 6,000 calls come in between Fiscal Year 2023 and 2024.
“The call center is really the entry point into our department,” Kaltenbach said.
The remaining funds are for special budget requests including emergency preparedness, marketing, information technology updates and the Kiki Saavedra Senior Dignity Fund. The honorary fund provides such services as transportation, access to food, physical and behavioral health services and case management.
The department’s roughly $5.7 million budget request is an 8% increase from the previous year. Kaltenbach pointed out that the department’s request is in keeping with the growing aging population in New Mexico, which is projected to have the fourth highest percentage of older adults among the states by 2030.
“I think it’s really interesting to see and not surprising that the highest percentage of older adults are living in our most rural and frontier counties,” Kaltenbach said. “We have more work to do and our budget reflects this need. 2030 is only five years away.”
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