A supposed affordable housing development in
Properties the housing authority planned to develop in
Gallegos’ resignation is part of a larger scandal that has left the state’s regional housing authorities in shambles. The Region III authority, based in
During its investigation of the housing authorities, the investment council discovered a 33-lot development near
“Clearly, Mr. Harenberg would not qualify as a ‘person of low income,’” the letter states. “… We understand… that other, similar projects are contemplated or underway in Grants,
The allegation that Gallegos was involved in selling homes to investors was first made public several months ago by Region VII Board Member Frances Williams.
The investment council requested that the housing authority immediately quit the project in
Region III recently defaulted on $5 million in bond payments it owes the state. If bonds purchased by the state and now in default paid for homes sold to private investors, anti-donation clause questions should also be raised.
The problems with the housing authorities are so vast that the governor’s office has said they might be irreparable. It has recommended the creation of a government-oversight office for the quasi-state agencies. The housing authorities are governed by boards appointed by the governor but, in theory, operate through the sales of bonds and proceeds from home sales, so no tax dollars are used.
Unless they default on bonds.
Following his Aug. 1 resignation as Region III director, Gallegos was replaced temporarily by Lawrence Rael, executive director of the Mid-Region Council of Governments. Emma Johnson Ortiz resigned earlier this year as Region VII director, but not before the Region VII authority built up a debt of several hundred thousand dollars while doing little about the housing situation.
There were also new revelations this weekend about problems in
The authority also “wrongly used bond money to finance salaries, to purchase vehicles and for office expenses, and it routinely took out bank loans on properties it was supposed to purchase with bond money,” the Journal article states.
One of the employees who purchased a home from the authority earns more than $46,000 per year, and the other earns more than $51,000 per year, the Journal reported. Another home was sold to Region III Board Member Eugene Hurtado, who was an investigator with the New Mexico Racing Commission. The governor’s office asked for Hurtado to resign both positions last week, and he did.
The authority also apparently loaned money to Gallegos’ private construction company, VSG Enterprises Inc., the Journal reported.
Gallegos, a former Democratic state legislator from
“It is obvious by the actions of the (
According to the State Investment Council review, there are other possible improprieties, the Journal reported.
• The money received from buyers of 40 properties wasn’t used to pay off bonds.
• The authority withdrew bond money to buy five properties it already owned.
• The authority withdrew $880,000 to buy 16 properties, but paid $280,000 for the properties.
The question, then, is, where did the money go? The investment council’s final report is due out soon.