New Mexico
New Mexico top prosecutor to focus on child civil rights
ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. — New Mexico’s high prosecutor needs to begin a dialog with lawmakers and the governor in hopes of charting a brand new course for a state beleaguered by violent crime, poor instructional outcomes and persistently dismal little one welfare rankings.
Lawyer Common Raúl Torrez, who took workplace Jan. 1 after serving because the district legal professional in New Mexico’s busiest judicial district, needs to concentrate on the civil rights of youngsters by offering them with authorized illustration.
The Democrat says New Mexico is off the charts in the case of abuse and neglect — and making a particular unit throughout the legal professional basic’s workplace might assist flip the tide in the case of combatting antagonistic childhood experiences that usually lead to youth ending up within the prison justice system.
Torrez outlined priorities for his administration and for the legislative session that begins Tuesday in a current interview with The Related Press.
Whereas acknowledging the suite of public security, bail reform and gun management payments to be launched by lawmakers, he stated he needs extra of the main target to be on the function that little one well-being performs within the state’s issues.
Torrez labored on one of many state’s highest profile little one abuse instances whereas in non-public observe and was usually requested as district legal professional in regards to the supply of Albuquerque’s crime and public security issues.
He stated there’s been a number of speak about medicine and weapons however he believes it comes again to what occurs when youngsters find yourself in harmful or destabilized properties or do not get the assistance they want within the classroom.
“The folks that we’re attempting to detain at present are normally children which have been failed by the system 15 and 20 years earlier than. That’s the place they find yourself,” he stated. “And so what I’m attempting to do now could be transfer the lens and transfer my focus not away from public security, however additional upstream to see if there’s a approach for us to forestall individuals from coming into contact with the prison justice system within the first place.”
Advocates who’ve been pushing for years for little one welfare reforms in New Mexico are excited in regards to the prospects. Some describe it as a “public well being disaster,” pointing to scientific analysis that reveals abuse, neglect and different antagonistic experiences have been recognized to lead to damaging outcomes later in life.
New Mexico would be part of California and different states which have particular places of work targeted on youngsters’s rights or unbiased oversight panels that monitor little one welfare businesses.
West Virginia, for instance, has an workplace devoted to instructional stability for foster youth and juvenile justice and greater than a dozen different state legislatures enacted payments in 2022 to ascertain advisory councils, boards and examine committees targeted on streamlining little one companies and accountability.
In New Mexico, the Youngsters, Youth and Households Division has skilled turnover throughout Democratic Gov. Michelle Lujan Grisham’s administration and the present secretary — retired Supreme Court docket Justice Barbara Vigil — has vowed to make modifications.
The company has been criticized not just for eradicating youngsters from their properties quicker than they need to have but in addition for not taking them into care when abuse was suspected, leading to authorized motion.
Maralyn Beck, govt director of the nonprofit New Mexico Youngster First Community, described the system as damaged and stated she’s inspired by the legal professional basic’s concentrate on the difficulty.
“Options exist,” she stated. “We now have to prioritize this as a real disaster that wants addressing whereas understanding we don’t should reinvent the wheel.”
Veronica Montano-Pilch, govt director of New Mexico Youngsters Matter, stated her group has about 500 court-appointed volunteers across the state who look out for kids as their instances work by means of the system and dealing with Torrez’s workplace would assist.
“Say there’s a waterfall and should you’re on the backside and also you’re simply pulling individuals out, what good is that?” Montano-Pilch stated. “They’re already moist, they’re already drowning.”
New Mexico persistently ranks as worst within the U.S. in the case of components of kid well-being. The newest report by the Annie E. Casey Basis reveals one in 4 New Mexico youngsters dwell in poverty and greater than one-third have mother and father with out safe employment. New Mexico additionally has the nation’s highest fee of youngsters affected by antagonistic experiences, based on nationwide research and the state’s high well being officers.
Laws geared toward fixing the issues is not new. Final 12 months, lawmakers accredited a measure creating a brand new workplace that would supply authorized illustration for sure youngsters, mother and father and guardians whose youngsters are prone to being positioned in state custody.
Nevertheless, a invoice that will have created an ombudsman oversight place stalled within the state Senate final 12 months.
The legal professional basic stated he believes the extent of frustration has reached a degree the place individuals are prepared for change.
“They’re uninterested in seeing damaged establishments,” he stated. “They’re uninterested in seeing these children positioned in hurt’s approach and now we have the flexibility to do one thing. Different states have these form of programs in place and I believe we’re prepared for it right here in New Mexico.”
New Mexico
New Mexico Green Amendment to be filed in Legislature this week • Source New Mexico
A proposal to create a fundamental right to a clean environment on par with other rights found in New Mexico’s constitution will return to the Legislature in the coming days.
The sponsors will prefile the legislation this week, Sen. Harold Pope (D-Albuquerque), said during a news conference Tuesday with other sponsors and advocates. Lawmakers have already turned in bills dealing with tribal education, retired public sector workers’ health care and foster care in advance of the session starting Jan. 21.
If passed and signed into law, the legislation would create a ballot question asking voters whether to add a Green Amendment to the New Mexico Constitution.
Traditional environmental laws often fail to prevent harm because they focus on regulating how much damage pollution does, rather than preventing it altogether, argues Maya van Rossum, founder of the nonprofit Green Amendments for the Generations.
Three states have constitutional Green Amendments that protect people’s right to clean water and air, a safe climate and a healthy environment, van Rossum said during the news conference: Pennsylvania, Montana and New Jersey.
Similar amendments have been proposed in 19 other states, she said, with an ongoing ballot initiative in one state.
If the amendment passes, New Mexico would be the first state in the country to explicitly recognize in its state constitutional Bill of Rights the right of all people, including future generations, to a safe climate, she said.
It would also be the first to lift up critical environmental justice protections to that highest constitutional level, she said.
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Gov. Michelle Lujan Grisham’s administration has passed strong regulations to protect the environment, said Sen. Antoinette Sedillo López (D-Albuquerque), but she is worried about how the federal government could try to roll back those gains.
The Green Amendment is a way to protect New Mexico from the excesses of the incoming Donald Trump administration, she said.
It will be the fifth time the Green Amendment has been debated at the Roundhouse. The proposal has been introduced every year since 2021.
Previous versions of the bill would have repealed an existing part of the state constitution that recognizes that the Legislature has a duty to protect commonly owned natural resources and ensure the public can use them. This year’s version keeps that in place, van Rossum said.
It took 10 years of persistent advocacy and some changes in who had power at the Roundhouse to end the death penalty, Sedillo López said.
“We have some changes in the Legislature, and we have a growing number of advocates who continue to provide sustained advocacy,” she said of the efforts around the Green Amendment. “And, we have persistent legislators. We will get this done.”
It also took five years of legislative debate to create New Mexico’s community solar program, Rep. Patricia Roybal Caballero (D-Albuquerque) noted.
Roybal Caballero said so long as New Mexico lacks necessary guardrails like the Green Amendment, the state’s inhabitants remain at risk of declining children’s health, raging wildfires and flash floods.
“Our right to clean air, water, soil and environment should be protected above profits for the elite,” Roybal Caballero said. “Let New Mexicans decide if we prefer drinkable water for ourselves and future generations, or to continue to line the pocketbooks of the elite few.”
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New Mexico
Winter weather advisory in effect for parts of New Mexico
It’s going to be a chilly day across New Mexico. See the latest conditions at KOB.com/Weather.
ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. — A winter weather advisory is in effect in parts of New Mexico where snow and slick roads are possible through Friday.
The advisory warns of 1-3 inches of snow and slick roads for places in southern New Mexico through Friday at 5 a.m. Snow accumulations could total as much as five inches in Ruidoso, two inches in Roswell and 1.7 inches in Silver City.
Elsewhere, Tuesday will see the canyon winds pick up and temperatures cool down as a backdoor cold front comes barging in.
Meteorologist Kira Miner shares all the details in her full forecast in the video above.
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