New Mexico
NM restaurant industry rebounding from pandemic
Copyright © 2022 Albuquerque Journal
Has the New Mexico restaurant scene recovered? It relies on who you ask.
Meals and hospitality had been among the hardest hit industries through the pandemic.
The New Mexico Restaurant Affiliation asserted in an Aug. 12 information launch that the restaurant trade misplaced over 20,000 jobs and 1,000 eating places in New Mexico between 2019 and December 2021.
However the figures supplied by the state restaurant group are at odds with a report from the Nationwide Restaurant Affiliation and state allowing knowledge.
The Nationwide Restaurant Affiliation reported with knowledge from the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics that New Mexico really added 2,000 meals service jobs between 2019 and 2022 – a rise of lower than 3%, however a rise nonetheless. New Mexico was considered one of 18 states that had web enchancment in restaurant staffing ranges.
And, as of June 2022, there are about 350 extra meals and eating places permitted within the state than earlier than the pandemic, in response to knowledge from the New Mexico Surroundings Division, the Metropolis of Albuquerque and Bernalillo County compiled by the workplace of the governor.
Carol Wight, CEO of the NMRA, stated in an interview Tuesday that eating places are nonetheless struggling, however conceded that employment might have improved since December 2021, which was the newest knowledge included within the NMRA launch.
“I do know we’ve added a bunch of jobs since December,” Wight stated. “That’s simply apparent as a result of we wanted individuals. I simply know we nonetheless want plenty of of us.”
A partisan conflict was triggered by the NMRA restaurant numbers.
Days after the NMRA launch was revealed, the Republican Celebration of New Mexico issued a response, pinning job and enterprise losses on Democratic Gov. Michelle Lujan Grisham and her pandemic-era restaurant closures.
“Numbers don’t lie, and a brand new report launched by the New Mexico Restaurant Affiliation proves Gov. Lujan Grisham has badly broken the state’s vital restaurant trade, the newest vestige of the Governor’s incompetence and ruthless motion in opposition to New Mexico small companies,” learn the discharge, revealed by Republican Celebration of New Mexico communications director Mike Curtis.
In March 2020, Lujan Grisham issued a public well being order that shut non-essential companies. Indoor eating was nonetheless prohibited as of July 2020, and that month, the NMRA filed a lawsuit in opposition to Lujan Grisham’s pandemic-era ban on indoor eating. The lawsuit was unsuccessful, and by July 2021, all pandemic restrictions had been lifted all through the state.
The governor stated in a latest launch that she’s pleased with the progress that the small enterprise group has revamped the previous months.
“There’s little doubt the tourism and hospitality trade has proven unbelievable power and resiliency in the previous couple of years, which had been particularly tough for this sector,” Lujan Grisham was quoted saying. “I’m extremely inspired by this latest knowledge.”
John Haas, president and founding accomplice of M’Tucci’s eating places, which has 4 areas round Albuquerque, considered one of which opened this 12 months, stated he thinks the trade is headed in the best route.
“I’ve a very, actually optimistic outlook for the panorama of our trade proper now,” Haas stated. “I feel we’re going to proceed to see that pattern in our trade.”
The numbers
The August press launch from NMRA stated that in 2019, 96,000 individuals had been employed in New Mexico eating places, and by December 2021, that quantity was slashed to below 75,000 staff.
In an interview this week, Wight stated that these two numbers got here from completely different sources: the 2019 quantity from the New Mexico Division of Tourism, and the 2021 quantity from the New Mexico Division of Workforce Options.
Nonetheless, the 2 figures discuss with completely different teams of staff, in response to authorities officers.
Cody Johnson, a spokesperson for the Division of Tourism, stated in a written assertion that the 96,064 jobs referred extra broadly to all jobs sustained by tourism to the state, not simply meals service jobs. The statistic was revealed of their annual Financial Affect of Guests to New Mexico report. The employment knowledge from Office Options, nevertheless, was restricted to only jobs in eating places and bars.
In Quarter 3 of 2021, Workforce Options revealed that 70,301 individuals had been employed in food and drinks in New Mexico, which doesn’t embrace the opposite tourism-related jobs that had been included within the authentic determine from the Division of Tourism. A comparable knowledge level from Workforce Options exhibits that on the finish of 2019, 74,617 individuals had been employed in eating places and bars in New Mexico, indicating an employment lower of about 6%. The Workforce Options dataset is much less present than the Bureau of Labor Statistics knowledge, which incorporates employment from 2022 as nicely.
BLS knowledge exhibits that employment in leisure and hospitality as an entire – which incorporates arts, leisure/recreation, lodging, and meals companies – in New Mexico has grown steadily for the reason that 2020 lows.
Trade employment in New Mexico plunged to 57,400 workers in April 2020.
Two years later, in June of this 12 months, 98,500 New Mexicans had been employed in leisure and hospitality, virtually assembly the 99,200 stage seen in June 2019.
And eating places have carried out higher. Between June 2019 and June 2022, New Mexico had the ninth highest enhance in employment in food and drinks institutions within the nation by p.c.
Unemployment is the bottom it’s been within the state since 2008, though the speed remains to be greater than the nationwide common. Many officers and trade leaders stay involved a few comparatively low workforce participation fee within the state.
Trade norms
Kimberly Heimerich, proprietor of The Excellent Present … Shoppe in Previous City, which opened in June 2020, stated she’s seen the realm face enterprise closures for the previous few years. One in all her favourite eating places, La Crêpe Michel, closed through the pandemic.
“When individuals congratulate me on surviving two years, I simply suppose: ‘it’s nonetheless a wrestle’,” Heimerich stated.
Haas stated that even with out the additional stresses of the pandemic, surviving within the meals world is tough.
“The restaurant trade is a very powerful trade, the margins are actually slim,” Haas stated.
Pre-pandemic, roughly 50,000 U.S. consuming and ingesting institutions closed yearly and 60,000 opened, in response to an announcement from the Nationwide Restaurant Affiliation.
“We’re in an trade that does have plenty of openings and closures,” Haas stated. “I feel for some time we noticed plenty of closures and never plenty of openings.”
For the previous few months, Haas stated, he’s seen extra eating places opening than some other time through the pandemic. His personal companies, together with one opened through the pandemic, have additionally been busy.
“It was very easy to get downtrodden, and really feel like a little bit of a sufferer through the pandemic in our trade … you actually simply have to point out up and battle the battles you possibly can win,” Haas stated.
New Mexico
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New Mexico
Advocates want New Mexico to track climate change’s impact on public health • Source New Mexico
Health care advocates and officials will renew efforts to track harm to New Mexicans’ health from climate disasters in the forthcoming legislative session.
Healthy Climate New Mexico, a nonprofit collective of health care professionals concerned about climate change, and nine other groups back two proposals to improve preparedness and adaptation to extreme weather driven by human-caused climate change.
The first would beef up a climate health program at New Mexico Department of Health to track health impacts from heat, wildfire smoke, drought, flooding, dust and severe storms. The second is a proposal to offer grant funds for local and tribal governments to better respond to weather disasters.
“Our bills are focused on adaptation and resilience, preparedness and collecting data, which is essential in really knowing who’s at highest risk and where the solutions need to be applied, said Shelley Mann-Lev, the nonprofit’s executive director, who has decades of public health experience in New Mexico.
Both require state funds. First, there’s $1.1 million for a climate health program to fund additional staff for the Department of Health; implement more warning systems; and increase communication between the department, the public and other state agencies.
The request for the Extreme Weather Resilience Fund would be $12 million. Advocates have said they’ll introduce two bills with sponsors in both the House and Senate, but neither was filed as of Friday, Jan. 10.
This would be the third time similar proposals have been brought before lawmakers, and Mann-Lev said there’s been increased support from both the governor’s office and members of the legislature.
A spokesperson from the New Mexico Department of Health declined to comment, saying it’s policy to not speak about legislation proposed by outside groups. A spokesperson from the governor’s office declined to comment since the bills have not been formally introduced.
Sen. Liz Stefanics (D-Cerillos), who plans to sponsor the Senate legislation, and has introduced it before, said there seems to be more momentum and concern around the issues.
‘Beyond the body counts’
Other groups supporting the bill include Albuquerque Health Care for the Homeless, New Mexico Voices for children, four public health groups, including the American Lung Association, and two climate organizations.
Advocates note that climate disasters already harm and kill New Mexicans. Deaths and injuries from extreme heat are rising; floods across the state, including Roswell, raise concerns for mold development; smoke from wildfires harms lungs, especially for children and the elderly.
Preventable heat injuries and deaths rising in New Mexico
Stephanie Moraga-McHaley ran the environment health tracking program at the New Mexico Department of Health until her retirement in 2024. She supports the bill because it could expand the current program, which tracks the raw numbers of deaths and injuries.
“There’s just so much that needs to be done besides the body counts,” said Stephanie Moraga-McHaley, who retired from the health agency in March. “We need to get some action in place, some coordination with other departments and communities in need.”
Current numbers of impacted people are an undercount, said Nathaniel Matthews-Trigg, a Healthy Climate New Mexico board member and public health researcher.
Matthews-Trigg said New Mexico health officials have made improvements in tracking the number of heat injuries and deaths – which are difficult numbers to pin down – but there needs to be more funding and staff on board.
“We know from emergency department visits that they’re increasing dramatically due to extreme heat,” Matthews-Trigg said. “But, we also know how we’re tracking these is really just giving us a sliver of the actual impact of heat on our communities and on health.”
He said climate disasters pose the “greatest public health threat in our lifetimes,” and warned that impacts will only worsen if heating from fossil fuel emissions doesn’t slow.
“It’s not going to go away,” he said. “And we’re flying blind, without the surveillance.”
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New Mexico
New Mexico supreme court strikes down local abortion pill restrictions
The New Mexico supreme court late on Thursday ruled against several local ordinances in the state that aim to restrict distribution of the abortion pill.
In a unanimous opinion, the court said the ordinances invaded the legislature’s authority to regulate reproductive care.
“Our legislature granted to counties and municipalities all powers and duties not inconsistent with the laws of New Mexico. The ordinances violate this core precept and invade the legislature’s authority to regulate access to and provision of reproductive healthcare,” the court wrote in its opinion by the justice Shannon Bacon.
It declined to address whether the ordinances violated the state’s constitutional protections.
Abortion is legal in New Mexico, which has become a destination for women seeking abortions from Texas, especially, and other states that have banned the procedure following the US supreme court ruling in 2022 ending a woman’s constitutional right to abortion and handing powers over the issue to individual states.
Following that ruling, leaders of New Mexico’s Roosevelt and Lea counties and the towns of Clovis and Hobbs, all on the Texas border, passed ordinances seeking to stop abortion clinics from receiving or sending mifepristone, a pill taken with another drug to perform a medication abortion, and other abortion-related materials in the mail. Medication abortions account for more than half of all US abortions. Last June the supreme court upheld access to the drugs.
The ordinances invoked the federal Comstock Act, a 19th-century “anti-vice” law against mailing abortifacients, which are drugs that induce abortion, and said that clinics must comply with the law.
Under Roosevelt county’s ordinance, any person other than a government employee could bring a civil lawsuit and seek damages of at least $100,000 for each violation of the Comstock Act.
The New Mexico supreme court admonished this, saying that creating a private right of action and damages award was “clearly intended to punish protected conduct”.
The state attorney general, Raúl Torrez, praised the court’s ruling on Thursday, saying that the core of the argument was that state laws pre-empted any action by local governments to engage in activities that would infringe on the constitutional rights of citizens.
“The bottom line is simply this: abortion access is safe and secure in New Mexico,” he said. “It’s enshrined in law by the recent ruling by the New Mexico supreme court and thanks to the work of the New Mexico legislature.”
The New Mexico house speaker, Javier Martínez, called access to healthcare a basic fundamental right in New Mexico.
“It doesn’t take a genius to understand the statutory framework that we have. Local governments don’t regulate healthcare in New Mexico. It is up to the state,” the Albuquerque Democrat said.
Opposition to abortion runs deep in New Mexico communities along the border with Texas, however, which has one of the most restrictive bans in the US.
But Democrats, who control every statewide elected office in New Mexico and hold majorities in the state house and senate, have moved to shore up access to the service.
In 2021, the New Mexico legislature repealed a dormant 1969 statute that outlawed most abortion procedures as felonies, ensuring access to abortion even after the Roe v Wade reversal.
And in 2023, the Democratic New Mexico governor, Michelle Lujan Grisham, signed a bill that overrides local ordinances aimed at limiting abortion access and enacted a shield law that protects abortion providers from investigations by other states.
In September, construction began on a state-funded reproductive health and abortion clinic in southern New Mexico that will cater to local residents and people who travel from neighboring states.
The new clinic should open in 2026 to provide services ranging from medical and procedural abortions to contraception, cervical cancer screenings and education about adoptions.
It was not immediately clear whether the ruling can be appealed in federal court. The New Mexico supreme court opinion explicitly declined to address conflicts with federal law, basing its decision solely on state provisions.
The Texas-based attorney Jonathan Mitchell, a former Texas solicitor general and architect of that state’s strict abortion ban, said he looked forward “to litigating these issues in other states and bringing the meaning of the federal Comstock Act to the supreme court of the United States”.
Reuters and the Associated Press contributed reporting
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