New Mexico
Senator wants to help more NM college students complete degrees
Throughout this commencement season, I’m proud to acknowledge all the scholars in New Mexico, and their households, who’ve labored so exhausting to earn their diplomas. The monetary rewards of ending faculty are properly documented. On common, college students who full a bachelor’s diploma earn one million extra {dollars} over the course of their lifetimes than these with solely a highschool diploma. These rewards profit not simply the scholars themselves, however their kids, their households and their communities as an entire.
Sadly, far too many college students who enroll in faculty aren’t reaching this necessary milestone. Whereas 86% of scholars graduated from highschool in 2019, a proportion that has steadily risen for the final twenty years, solely 1 / 4 of scholars getting into public two-year faculties graduate inside three years.
In New Mexico, now we have improved the share of our highschool graduates who enter faculty. Nonetheless, solely round 40% of first-time freshmen within the state who’ve enrolled in two or four-year faculties have accomplished their diploma. Amongst Hispanic, Black and Native, in addition to these from low-income households, commencement charges are even decrease.
We want to take action a lot better than that. That’s why I’m working exhausting to face up a first-of-its-kind federal Faculty Retention and Completion Grants program to assist extra of New Mexico’s college students navigate the entire obstacles between orientation day and commencement day.
Lately, there has rightly been a concentrate on placing a university schooling inside attain for extra college students. We’re nearer than ever to serving to college students extra simply afford a university schooling by way of tuition help on the state stage by way of the New Mexico Alternative Scholarship and on the federal stage with main will increase to the Pell Grant, one of the vital necessary instruments that helps many low and middle-income college students pay for varsity bills.
Regardless of all that welcome progress for school entry and affordability, policymakers nonetheless want to acknowledge that for a lot of faculty college students – significantly first-generation college students and people from low-income households – entering into faculty is simply the start.
If we would like extra college students to finish their levels and notice the entire financial advantages that include that schooling, our faculties and universities should be capable of present college students with extra personalised, complete help. And so they want to ensure all college students are capable of entry reasonably priced transportation and housing and educational mentoring to assist with navigating faculty necessities and staying on monitor.
My laws to ascertain a brand new Faculty Retention and Completion Fund would offer states with new funding to extend commencement and completion charges for all college students enrolled of their public faculties and universities. I helped safe an preliminary $5 million within the Fiscal 2022 Omnibus Appropriations Settlement that Congress handed in March to start out this program.
Schools throughout the nation will be capable of put these funds to work immediately for a wide range of evidence-based packages that help pupil retention, completion and success. That features packages just like the Pupil Expertise Undertaking, which is working with companion establishments just like the College of New Mexico to create a extra inclusive and equitable classroom surroundings in entry-level programs and enhance the help companies supplied to first and second-year college students from underrepresented backgrounds. One other nice instance is New Mexico State College’s on-campus meals financial institution known as the Aggie Cabinet, which has helped handle rising meals insecurity amongst its pupil group.
Schools may also be capable of implement two-generation options that assist faculty college students with kids. We have now not tailored properly sufficient to the fact that multiple in 5 faculty college students are additionally dad and mom. If dad and mom are capable of finding time to attend college, they’ve to suit their class schedule round their jobs and their little one’s college and little one care hours. All of this limits dad and mom’ entry to a full and rigorous class schedule. The brand new Retention and Completion Grants will permit faculties to offer higher help to college students with kids, then households will overcome limitations and obtain success collectively.
The brand new Retention and Completion Grants may also permit faculties to scale up the direct helps that college students want corresponding to psychological well being companies, mentoring, and profession teaching. Faculties will be capable of present college students with help in making use of for and accessing monetary help and profit packages that may assist them meet the essential wants like meals and housing. Lastly, this new funding will permit faculties to create incentives to maintain college students on monitor, present accelerated studying choices corresponding to early faculty highschool packages, and enhance switch pathways between totally different state faculties and group faculties.
I stay centered on passing even higher long-term investments within the newly established Faculty Retention and Completion Grants so we will lastly be certain that college students aren’t simply entering into faculty. We should be certain that they’re additionally getting by way of faculty.
New Mexico
Snowy and slick Thursday expected in New Mexico
We’re expecting widespread light snow Thursday in New Mexico. See the latest forecast at KOB.com/Weather.
ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. — The snow was falling and the roads were slick to start Thursday in parts of New Mexico and it’s likely that will continue throughout the day.
We’ll see on and off scattered snow showers, especially in parts of southern New Mexico. That will become more widespread with blowing snow possible.
A winter weather advisory is still in effect until Friday morning for 1-3 inches of snow expected and 5-6 inches of snow in higher-elevation areas. It encompasses most of southern New Mexico and stretches just above Interstate 40 near Tucumcari, heading toward the Texas state line.
High temperatures will be at least 10° below average for pretty much everyone.
Meteorologist Kira Miner shares all the details in her full forecast in the video above.
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New Mexico
New Mexico sending firefighters to California
LAS CRUCES, New Mexico (KVIA) — The state of New Mexico announced it is sending five fire engines and 25 New Mexico firefighters to assist in fighting the California wildfires.
The departments participating are from Bernalillo, San Juan, and Los Alamos Counties, as well as the cities of Albuquerque and Santa Fe. The units and firefighters will leave for California on January 9 at 9 a.m.
The state of New Mexico is also warning residents that high winds and dry conditions make the state at high risk for fires as well. Residents are encouraged to clear dry brush from around their homes and keep anything flammable away from heat sources.
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New Mexico
Survey finds more than half of New Mexicans have experienced sexual violence • Source New Mexico
More than half of all New Mexicans have been sexually assaulted or raped at some point in their life, and 40% have been the victim of some kind of sexual violence while in New Mexico in the past year, according to a report published Wednesday.
Researchers from the Catherine Cutler Institute at the University of Southern Maine set out to understand how often people in New Mexico become victims of sexual violence, how often they report it and how often they seek help.
They surveyed 1,272 people between September 2023 and June 2024, and 54% of the people who responded said they had either been raped or sexually assaulted within their lifetime. “This rate translates to more than 1.1 million New Mexico residents,” the authors wrote.
The findings mark the first new New Mexico sexual violence crime victimization survey data in nearly two decades, the authors wrote. The last one was conducted between 2005 and 2006.
Researchers collected the data for the New Mexico Coalition of Sexual Assault Programs, a nonprofit that provides technical assistance to more than 60 sexual assault service providers, sexual assault nurse examiners, child advocacy centers and community mental health centers.
In an interview with Source, Alexandria Taylor, the coalition’s executive director, said she thinks a lack of funding is the primary explanation for why it’s been so long since the last survey.
Taylor said the findings validate and quantify what she has known anecdotally for years: sexual assault is present in many people’s lives.
“All of our service providers, whether it’s our substance use treatment centers, our schools, our places of employment — even our places of incarceration — they’re all serving survivors of sexual assault,” she said.
Rachel Cox, the coalition’s deputy director of programs, told Source she was surprised the report gave her some hope they can actually address the prevalence of sexual assault, because it shows neither victims nor perpetrators of sexual violence are exceptional.
“We’re really talking about something that vicariously impacts everyone in New Mexico,” she said.
While counts of sexual violence victims commonly derived from service organizations and police reports are informative, they are also “certainly undercounts,” the report states.
Researchers asked New Mexicans about their experiences with four kinds of sexual violence: stalking, rape, sexual assault and domestic violence. Forty percent said they had been the victim of at least one of these crimes within the last 12 months while they were in New Mexico.
The research was funded by the Crime Victims Reparation Commission, a state agency that helps crime victims recover losses resulting from being victimized, and provides federal grants to other organizations serving them.
In a news release attached to the report, the coalition outlined its priorities for the upcoming legislative session to boost support for survivors and evidence-based prevention education.
The group plans to ask the Legislature to set aside $3 million to the Department of Health for prevention initiatives, $2 million to the Health Care Authority for medical and counseling needs, and $2 million to the Crime Victims Reparation Commission for providers and the New Mexico Sexual Assault Helpline.
The report also noted that 68% of victims of sexual assault and 75% of victims of rape did not seek support.
State law prohibits reparations to people victimized in prison
As researchers conducted the survey, they also sought to find disparities between demographic groups.
For example, people who have been incarcerated have the highest overall rate of victimization: 69%. They were also more likely to have been the victim of stalking than any other group.
Formerly incarcerated New Mexicans were also less likely to seek victim services, and more likely to have experienced “significant problems” with their job or schoolwork as a result of being victimized, the researchers found.
The group with the next highest rate of victimization was homeless people, at 68%.
Taylor said people who are most systemically impacted either have experienced sexual violence or are at greater risk of experiencing it. Cox said incarcerated and unhoused people can be some of the most invisible in society.
The findings are notable, in part, because New Mexico law does not allow reparations to people who were victimized while they were incarcerated. Taylor said it can’t be ignored that people who do harm and end up incarcerated have also themselves experienced harm and need healing.
“That’s where we have to use what we know from the individual level to impact things at the policy level,” she said.
Transgender or nonbinary people were more likely than cisgender people to have been raped, and Black respondents were more likely than other races to have been raped.
Perpetrators of rape were most commonly identified as casual acquaintances of the victims, at 34%; followed by a former partner or spouse, 30%; a current partner or spouse, 23%, and finally a stranger, 22%.
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