Judge swears in two new LCPS board members

Two new members of the Las Cruces Public Schools Board of Education were sworn in today. District 4 Board Member Bonnie Votaw and District 5 Member Connie Phillips will participate in their first meeting as board members on Tuesday. Votaw replaces John Schwebke, who did not seek re-election, and Phillips replaces Sharon Wooden, who she defeated in last month’s election. The two were sworn in by District Judge Robert E. Robles at the LCPS administration building. Before swearing them in, Robles told the new board members that “the work they begin is of the highest importance. Continue Reading

Senate committee chair delays ethics reform hearings

A government watchdog is upset about a Senate committee head’s decision to delay hearings on two ethics reform bills earlier today. Senate Bill 931, which would place limits on gifts to public officials, has been on the Senate Rules Committee calendar for more than a week. Senate Bill 800, which would place limits on campaign contributions, has been on the calendar for at least four days. They’re both sponsored by members of the committee, and yet Linda Lopez, D-Albuquerque and the committee’s chair, passed them up again today in favor of hearing other bills, said Matt Brix, Common Cause New Mexico executive director. At the end of the hearing, a quorum of members were willing to stay to hear the ethics bills, Brix said, but Lopez would not allow it. Continue Reading

Subpoenas issued in U.S. attorney investigation as Domenici and Wilson continue to dodge questions

U.S. Sen. Pete Domenici and Rep. Heather Wilson, R-N.M., are still refusing to talk about whether they had a hand in forcing out former U.S. Attorney David Iglesias, even as a House subcommittee is issuing subpoenas in an attempt to find the truth. Meanwhile, the spokesman for a congresswoman leading the House investigation says any House members who pressured Iglesias to issue indictments in a public corruption scandal in order to affect the November 2006 elections might have committed ethics violations. Iglesias claims he was forced from his job by the Bush Administration because he refused pressure in October from two members of New Mexico’s congressional delegation to speed indictments in an ongoing investigation of alleged kickbacks related to the construction of government buildings in Bernalillo County. Though he has refused to name the members, three of the five – Democratic Sen. Jeff Bingaman and Rep. Tom Udall and Republican Rep. Steve Pearce – were quick on Wednesday to say they didn’t do it. Domenici and Wilson, on the other hand, aren’t talking. Continue Reading

Jail head to resume duty while he fights charges

Doña Ana County Detention Center Administrator Chris Barela, who is facing charges of assault on a police officer and resisting arrest, will return to work Friday following more than a week on suspension. Assistant County Manager Sue Padilla made the decision today to reinstate Barela, who had been on paid administrative leave since Feb. 20. Padilla made the decision because County Manager Brian Haines is out of the office. Barela, 42, was arrested on Feb. Continue Reading

House committee moves another ethics reform bill

Another bill in the House Democrats’ package of proposed ethics reforms was approved by a committee this morning. House Joint Resolution 6, sponsored by Majority Leader Ken Martinez, D-Grants, would propose a constitutional amendment to voters that would allow an annual disbursement for lawmakers equal to 15 percent of the salary of New Mexico Supreme Court justices, to be spent only on expenses directly related to their duties. With only Rep. Eric Youngberg, R-Albuquerque dissenting, the committee voted to send the bill to the House floor. The bill is a companion to Martinez’s House Bill 820, which would prohibit lawmakers from spending campaign funds except, for the most part, on politically related activities, and would authorize the disbursements to lawmakers. That bill is one of five in the House Democrats’ ethics package that have been approved by the House. Continue Reading

Unanimous Senate vote against timely campaign finance disclosure has reformers shaking their heads

With its opposition to opening conference committees to the public and just about all ethics reform proposals moving through the House, the Senate has done a lot lately to upset reformers. A unanimous vote by the lawmaking body on Wednesday means the anger and disappointment will continue to grow. Senate Bill 363, sponsored by Majority Leader Michael Sanchez, D-Belen, was approved on a vote of 32-0. It would eliminate the requirement that candidates file campaign disclosure reports electronically, and move the state away from better disclosure of money that influences elections. The Legislature and governor enacted a law in 2003 requiring that candidates, beginning in 2006, file campaign finance reports electronically. Continue Reading

Gutierrez, committee shelve coal plant tax break

After voting two weeks ago to bring the bill back to life, Rep. Joni Gutierrez, D-Las Cruces, voted with fellow Democrats today to permanently table a bill that would give an $85-million tax break for the Desert Rock coal plant on the Navajo Nation. The proposal is still alive in the Senate, but the Senate Finance Committee has yet to schedule a hearing on Senate Bill 431, sponsored by Senate President Pro Tem Ben Altamirano, D-Silver City. The vote on House Bill 178, sponsored by Rep. Tom Taylor, R-Farmington and the minority leader, was 7-6 in favor of shelving the bill in the House Energy and Natural Resources Committee earlier today. Gutierrez and the committee’s other Democrats, including Jeff Steinborn and Antonio Lujan of Las Cruces, voted to shelve the bill for the remainder of the session, while the committee’s Republicans all voted against the motion to table. Rep. Thomas Garcia, D-Ocate, missed the vote. Continue Reading

Compromise on surface owners’ rights passes House

Rep. Andy Nuñez, D-Hatch, agreed to support Ben Lujan last year in his bid to remain speaker of the House in exchange for the chairmanship of the Agriculture and Water Resources Committee. Nuñez did that because he wanted another shot at passing a bill the oil and gas industry has torpedoed for several years. Lujan won the leadership battle, Nuñez got his chairmanship and increased clout, and the House, earlier today, passed House Bill 827, which requires oil and gas companies to pay landowners for damage to their property caused by drilling. Following some amendments that actually earned the bill the endorsement of the Oil and Gas Association, it was approved on a vote of 62-5. It now goes to the Senate for consideration. Continue Reading

Vigil defense lawyer could be the next U.S. attorney

One of former state Treasurer Robert Vigil’s defense attorneys is under consideration and may be the frontrunner to replace David Iglesias as the U.S. attorney for New Mexico. Fresh off helping win Vigil’s acquittal on 23 of 24 felony counts, Jason Bowles is under consideration for the top federal law enforcement job in the state, a source close to the process confirmed for me. He said Bowles is the frontrunner. Reached by telephone, Bowles wouldn’t confirm that he is being considered or is the frontrunner, but he didn’t deny it. “I can’t comment on any of this,” he told me. Continue Reading

Group decries Democrat-sponsored industry bill

An activist group whose aim is to get young people involved in politics is attacking a bill working its way through the House as a proposal that would benefit only “the corporations and the sleazebag lobbyists, whose single goal is to consolidate wealth and power for their rich friends.” House Bill 685, sponsored by Rep. Dan Silva, D-Albuquerque, is a lengthy bill titled the Administrative Accountability Act. The bill would create uniform requirements for rulemaking, adjudication and inspection performed by state agencies, according to the fiscal impact report, but it’s a few of the particulars that have the League of Young Voters upset. • The bill would require agencies to divulge names of people who report violations by companies the agencies regulate, unless prohibited by law. That, according to the bill’s fiscal impact report, “could have a deleterious affect on the health, safety and welfare of New Mexicans since potential whistleblowers may be deterred from coming forward because of fear of retaliation. This type of provision is not found in other state, federal or model administrative procedure acts.” • It would limit agencies’ ability to make rules and charge fees to only those areas where the Legislature has specifically granted such authority, which, according to the fiscal impact report, “could greatly reduce an agency’s ability to act” because some agencies have been given “very specific rulemaking” while others have been given only general authority. Continue Reading

House approves bill that would allow district judges to force the mentally ill to submit to treatment

Rep. Joni Gutierrez’s second attempt at passing a bill that would allow judges to order treatment for the mentally ill in some circumstances has been approved by the House. Gutierrez, D-Las Cruces, introduced Kendra’s Law, which would allow judges to force mentally ill patients who are dangerous to take their medication and submit to other treatment, during the 2006 session, but it was quickly shot down. Gutierrez worked over the summer with a wide range of people who work with mental illness and tweaked her bill, the Santa Fe New Mexican is reporting. House Bill 609 was approved Tuesday by the House on a vote of 53-13, and now heads to the Senate for consideration. The bill allows a family member, treatment guardian, hospital director, doctor, service provider or police officer to petition a district judge to force a mentally ill person to submit to treatment, if that person is refusing treatment and may be a danger. Continue Reading

Outgoing U.S. Attorney Iglesias says he was fragged

David Iglesias, the outgoing U.S. attorney for New Mexico, says it was politics, not job performance, that cost him the position. In an interview with the Albuquerque Tribune, he confirmed that he did write in an e-mail to a friend that his dismissal was a political “fragging” – a military term for being killed by a subordinate. The e-mail was first reported Monday on Joe Monahan’s blog. “I know that performance was not the real issue,” the Tribune quoted Iglesias as saying, contradicting a deputy U.S. attorney general who told a Senate panel the opposite. “That leaves only one possibility, and that’s politics,” he said. Continue Reading

Papen explains votes on conference committee bill

A pair of votes Sen. Mary Kay Papen, D-Las Cruces, didn’t intend to cast sent the Senate into a bizarre series of events on Tuesday afternoon. At the end of it all, the Senate had killed, on a vote of 21-20, Senate Bill 322, sponsored by Joe Carraro, R-Albuquerque, which would have opened legislative conference committees to the public. Before that, however, the Senate approved the bill on a vote of 19-18, with Papen voting for it. Several minutes later, she made a motion to reconsider the vote, which was approved on a vote of 21-20, but she voted against the motion. “They were a couple of stupid votes,” Papen told me. Continue Reading

GRIP II, spaceport road funding approved by House

A bill that includes $25 million to fund a paved road to Spaceport America was approved by the House this afternoon. On a vote of 62-5, the House approved GRIP II, a bill that provides $250 million for road and other transportation projects around the state. It now heads to the Senate for consideration. This is one of four proposals the Legislature failed to pass last year that Gov. Bill Richardson has demanded this session. Currently, the Upham exit off Interstate 25 in Doña Ana County leads to a dirt road that runs north into Sierra County and to the site of the spaceport. Continue Reading

Senate again kills conference committee proposal

The Senate has just voted to kill another proposal to open legislative conference committees to the public. On a vote of 20-21, Senate Bill 322, sponsored by Joe Carraro, R-Albuquerque, died. The resolution came after a bizarre afternoon in which the Senate at first passed the bill on a vote of 19-18 with Sen. Mary Kay Papen, D-Las Cruces, voting in favor of it, Kate Nash of the Albuquerque Tribune reported. Papen then made a motion to reconsider the proposal, which passed 21-20. Following more than an hour of debate after that, Papen and 20 others voted to kill Carraro’s proposal. Continue Reading