New Mexico
NM Senate Majority Leader expresses optimism about session • Source New Mexico
The opening gavel strike for the 2025 session is mere hours away and so begins the flurry of activity of a nearly $11 billion dollar budget and lawmaking.
Sen. Peter Wirth (D-Santa Fe), the Senate Majority Leader, sat down with Source New Mexico to talk about priorities in the 60-day session. He celebrated the closeness of the governor’s proposed budget, and the one proposed by lawmakers, saying there’s a lot of consensus even before the negotiations start.
“It’s a really good thing for us during the session, but also for New Mexicans, because we need to continue to put forward responsible budgets,” Wirth said.
The relationship between the fourth floor and the rest of the Roundhouse has thawed, but only recently.
In July, lawmakers adjourned a special session last year after five hours. The two houses passed emergency funds for disaster victims, but declined to take up any of the governor’s proposals for determining when someone can stand trial, harsher prison sentences and other crime legislation.
Gov. Michelle Lujan Grisham called July’s special session “one of the most disappointing days of my career,” and excoriated Democratic leadership in the days before and after for not sponsoring her proposed bills.
Wirth personally will be bringing bills addressing campaign finance reform, a plan to give the state more authority on protecting intermittent rivers from federal regulations gaps and raising caps for the state’s insurance program, a last resort for homeowners, among others.
But the first 30 days, lawmakers expect to focus on two legislative packages addressing public safety and behavioral health.
Source: What’s your assessment of how the Legislature will work with the governor’s public safety agenda?
Wirth: There have been a number of conversations between myself and the governor about the public safety process, and what we’ve done with the 30-day expedited plan.
The public safety package will be an omnibus bill centered around criminal competency and on the behavioral health side, there will be a new behavioral health trust fund, taking one-time, non-recurring money and putting it into a trust fund. It’ll spin off a 5% return. We’re hoping to get that up to $1 billion – may not happen this year, right up front. Then there’s going to be a second appropriation, probably $150 to $200 million for behavioral health infrastructure.
We are continuing to deal with the decimation of the whole behavioral health system that happened 10 years ago and critical to public safety proposals involving those suffering from mental illness and are unhoused is that there’s a place for them to get treatment.
I think the two parts of this overall package that we’ll do in the first 30 days are something certainly that the governor wants: It fits into her agenda. Obviously, there will be discussions about what is in the public safety agenda package – her priorities and our priorities – but I’m feeling more optimistic about a process that’s good to get us where we need to go.
There were hard words in the aftermath of last year’s special session from the governor, chastising lawmakers for not addressing public safety then; has the relation been better in recent months?
There’s no question that it was strained after the special session, but the governor reached out first, she and I have had a number of one-on-one meetings, and again, I think there’s an understanding that we need to move forward.
I’m really confident that the process we’ve set up here gives us the chance to thoroughly vet these bills, which are complicated. And the special session: it just wasn’t ready, there was no behavioral health piece. The frustrating thing is it wasn’t ready to go, it was forced and you can’t do a special session when everything’s not preplanned.
I also want to stress we’ve had six incredible years of productive work during Gov. Lujan Grisham’s term. I’ve been here long enough to know that’s certainly not always the case. Under the prior administration, from a Democratic perspective, we spent eight years fighting for the status quo.
Governor, Legislature feud over crime with special session just days away
There’s been this concern that the focus on crime would suck attention from other issues coming forward in the session, any response on that?
Absolutely. I had the same concern, but I think it’s really important by having this emphasis on the first 30 days. It allows us to really put forward a package, send it to the governor and then shift gears, and make sure we get all the other key issues through the process and to the table.
What you don’t want to have is 100 different crime bills floating around and us trying to round all that up right at the end of the session. I think that would have the potential to have the whole thing crater.
We’ll have a focused package up front and I want to be clear, it doesn’t mean additional crime bills won’t be heard on an individual basis. I think putting the emphasis up front addresses that concern and will allow us to obviously send it up to the governor. She gets her input on it, and adds things and figures out what needs to be on the table as we move forward.
Putting the emphasis on the midway point, I think helps address exactly those concerns.
New Mexico
NM Rep. calls El Paso airspace shutdown unacceptable; restrictions remain in Santa Teresa
SANTA TERESA, N.M. (KFOX14/CBS4) — A New Mexico Congressional Representative called the El Paso airspace shutdown “unacceptable” as flight restrictions remain around the Santa Teresa area.
New Mexico Representative for District 2 Gabe Vasquez accused the Federal Aviation Administration of ignoring standard procedures by closing a city’s airspace without alerting state and local officials.
“There are standard rules and procedures for how our airspace is controlled, including when the Department of Defense (DOD) is conducting any testing in our region. These procedures keep Americans safe and prevent disruption to civil airspace. This morning, the Administration decided to steamroll those policies and close a major city’s airspace without notifying state and local officials. That is unacceptable,” Vasquez wrote in a statement.
AP: Pentagon-FAA dispute over lasers to thwart cartel drones led to airspace closure
Furthermore, Vasquez questioned the explanations that government officials have been giving for the flight restrictions.
Vasquez said the FAA had been tracking the Department of Defense’s “counter drone” tests for days and he believes the FAA mistakenly responded to the tests by shutting down the airspace for 10 days.
“The statements this Administration has put out about the situation are misleading at best and a cover-up for their incompetence at worst,” Vasquez wrote. “Let’s be clear — the Administration has provided no proof of a drone incursion that would warrant this large-scale, 10-day response. Our nation can prepare for these threats without causing chaos and inducing unwarranted fear.”
Vasquez said that despite the 10-day closure of the El Paso airspace, which was cancelled only after seven hours, flight restrictions remain in an area a few miles from the Santa Teresa jet port, which remains open and was never impacted by the closure.
FAA map showing the airspace closure near Santa Teresa. Credit: FAA
Below is Vasquez’s full statement:
I have been tracking this situation since very early this morning, and I want to assure southern New Mexicans and those who rely on the El Paso Airport that there is no national security threat and operations are expected to resume as normal at the El Paso Airport.
There are standard rules and procedures for how our airspace is controlled, including when the Department of Defense (DOD) is conducting any testing in our region. These procedures keep Americans safe and prevent disruption to civil airspace. This morning, the Administration decided to steamroll those policies and close a major city’s airspace without notifying state and local officials. That is unacceptable.
Medical evacuation flights had to be diverted, commercial air carriers were forced to cancel as many as half their flights for the day, and people were left stranded. The American people deserve better than the chaos and lack of transparency we keep seeing from this Administration.”
Through my conversations with federal and local officials, it has become abundantly clear the FAA was tracking the DOD’s counter drone tests for multiple days, and the FAA responded — in error — with the disproportionate response of abruptly closing our airspace for 10 days. The statements this Administration has put out about the situation are misleading at best and a coverup for their incompetence at worst.
Let’s be clear — the Administration has provided no proof of a drone incursion that would warrant this large scale, 10-day response. Our nation can prepare for these threats without causing chaos and inducing unwarranted fear.
El Paso mayor criticizes FAA over airspace shutdown; called it ‘unnecessary decision’
BE THE FIRST TO COMMENT
Sign up to receive the top interesting stories from in and around our community once daily in your inbox.
New Mexico
Low pressure systems to raise rain chances in New Mexico
ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. — Here comes the two “love birds” – the low-pressure systems that could spark off showers and snow showers across the western U.S.
This has given us a cloudier and warmer start to Wednesday for most of New Mexico. In fact, the western half of the state woke up to temps 10-20 degrees above their climatological normal.
Showers are possible for some this afternoon and evening. The highest rain chances are across the Four Corners. Snow is possible but this will be limited to high elevations in the mountains of southwestern and south-central Colorado. This potential will begin around noon and increase through the day.
Rainfall amounts will be on the lower end, roughly 0.01-0.1″ – with locally higher totals up to a quarter of an inch. Albuquerque has a low chance – 10% chance at most – of a stray shower moving through the metro, any time after 5 p.m.
If rain moves in earlier in the afternoon, this will help keep the Four Corners a bit cooler but still above average. We’ll still see a temperature spread of the 50s-70s across New Mexico.
Meteorologist Amanda Goluszka shares all the details in her full forecast in the video above.
MORE:
New Mexico
New Mexico School for the Blind and Visually Impaired gets $6M for upgrades
The New Mexico School for the Blind and Visually Impaired is undergoing a $6 million upgrade to enhance accessibility for children in wheelchairs.
ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. – The New Mexico School for the Blind and Visually Impaired is undergoing a $6 million upgrade to enhance accessibility for children in wheelchairs.
The expansion will include a new cafeteria, a safer bus loop, and a brand-new playground with a wheelchair ramp and inclusive merry-go-round. These improvements aim to make the school more like a traditional setting.
“We are truly excited about it because the expansion will allow us to meet our students’ needs better and prepare them so they can be more independent when they move on to the next school setting,” said Paul Kilman, principal of the Early Childhood Program.
The school’s early learning program is located in Albuquerque and serves preschool and kindergarten students. The program focuses on teaching social skills and foundational skills for kindergarten.
“By going to the playground with an inclusive playground, children can start playing with each other. And children are the best at— they don’t care about who you are or where you’re coming from, they just see you,” said Kilman.
The school aims to create independence for its students, helping them transition to public schools and succeed despite vision impairments.
The project is awaiting a final vote from Albuquerque’s Environmental Planning Commission. Construction is expected to begin by July 2026 and take about a year to complete.
-
Politics6 days agoWhite House says murder rate plummeted to lowest level since 1900 under Trump administration
-
Alabama5 days agoGeneva’s Kiera Howell, 16, auditions for ‘American Idol’ season 24
-
Indiana1 week ago13-year-old boy dies in BMX accident, officials, Steel Wheels BMX says
-
Politics1 week agoTrump unveils new rendering of sprawling White House ballroom project
-
Culture1 week agoTry This Quiz on Mysteries Set in American Small Towns
-
San Francisco, CA1 week agoExclusive | Super Bowl 2026: Guide to the hottest events, concerts and parties happening in San Francisco
-
Ohio7 days agoOhio town launching treasure hunt for $10K worth of gold, jewelry
-
Education1 week agoVideo: We Tested Shark’s Viral Facial Device