Gov. MLG Proposes $11.4 Billion Budget As Legislature Proposes $11.1 Billion Budget; Major Showdown On Universal Child Care Brewing Between Gov. MLG And Legislature; Universal Child Care Initiative, $200 Million To Move Or Repurpose State Fair Grounds Account For Funding Difference; Gov. MLG Should Abandon Efforts To Move Or Repurpose State Fair As Too Costly And Concentrate On Universal Child Care

The 2026 New Mexico legislative session begins on January 20 and ends on February 19. Thirty-day legislative sessions, commonly referred to as the “short sessions”, are focused primarily on budget matters. The agenda is set by the Governor as to what measures will be heard by the legislature.

The  budgetary process used to adopt the state’s annual budgets consists of both the governor and the Legislature releasing  separate spending plans before the start of each regular legislative session. State lawmakers then use both plans  to craft a new budget for the coming fiscal year.

Governor Lujan Grisham is in her final year in office of her second term which  ends January 1, 2027. State law prohibits an outgoing governor’s administration from spending more than half of appropriated funds before the governor leaves office at the end of December, which is the budget year’s midpoint.

This article is an in-depth report comparing both budgets and the brewing showdown between the Governor and the Legislature on universal child care.

GOVERNOR MLG’s PROPOSED  $11.4 BILLION BUDGET

On  December 22, Governor Michelle Lujan Grisham released her $11.3 billion proposed  budget for the fiscal year 2026 – 2027 which will commence July 1, 2026 and end June 30, 2027.

State spending can be  categorized as “recurring” or  “non-recurring”.  Examples of “recurring expenditures” would be creating new staff positions at state agencies or paying for increasing employee health care premiums. Examples of “non-recuring expenditures” would be one-time expenses like road construction projects. The slowed growth reflected in the governor’s 2026 proposed state budget primarily affects recurring spending.

The highlights of the governor’ proposed 2026-2027 budget include the following:

  • A 4.6% spending increase of approximately $503 million. The increase is due to signs of cooling state revenue growth.
  • The governor’s proposed budget contains funding to compensate for federal cuts by the Trump Administration. The state’s Health Care Authority would  receive a significant increase in spending under the governor’s proposed budget plan. The proposed spending plan calls for a $2.13 billion general fund budget for the Health Care Authority. It is an increase of $61.6 million, or 3%, over the current fiscal year, primarily to deal with federal funding cuts and changes to Medicaid and the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP), formerly known as food stamps. Much of the $61.6 million budget increase would go toward offsetting impacts posed by the federal budget bill signed by President Donald Trump in July which includes reducing federal funding for states’ administrative costs. The agency’s budget includes a recommended $92.9 million to provide health coverage for Medicaid enrollees who would otherwise lose coverage under the federal budget reconciliation bill known as the “One Big Beautiful Bill” signed by President Trump in July.
  • A 1% salary increase for all state workers and teachers. With the state  facing a revenue slowdown, the governor’s  2026 proposed budget contains no large pay raises for government workers. The governor’s proposed 2026 budget plan appropriates $62.7million to pay for a 1% salary increases for state employee’s and teacher’s salaries. It calls for an additional 7% salary increase for law enforcement and emergency fire response personnel. The governor’s  proposed budget  includes  $13.5 million for 7% salary increases for state police and firefighting personnel. Over the last six years, the average annual salary of New Mexico state workers has increased by 47%, from about $49,950 to $73,520 per year. Average teacher’s salaries have  increased at a slightly slower rate, increasing from $49,770 to $68,670
  • A $160 millionallocation for a universal childcare initiative. This is considered the  most controversial expenditure in the Governor’s proposed budget. According to the executive budget recommendation the $160 million increase brings the overall cost of childcare to $606.4 million. The governor announced the initiative in November, saying it would remove previous income limits for receiving state-subsidized childcare.
  • The governor’s spending plan calls for a capital outlay package of $525 millionand a $300 million tax package with sunset provisions, making it a one-time expense as opposed to a recurring expense. The 2026-2027 proposed budget calls for hefty one-time spending, including $100 million for statewide road projects$238 million for water projects and up to $200 million to overhaul the current site of the state fairgrounds in Albuquerque and to  possibly find a new home for the annual state fair also known as Expo New Mexico.

The 1.7 Billion in one-time appropriations include the following:

  • $200 million for the Federal Reimbursement Revolving Fund, which helps to pay for responses to natural disasters
  • $100 million to select, acquire and build a new State Fairgrounds, if necessary
  • $100 million for State Fairgrounds revitalization projects
  • $100 million for statewide road construction and maintenance projects
  • $65 million for statewide affordable and attainable housing initiatives
  • $65 million for the Strategic Water Supply Fund
  • $60 million to the New Mexico Match Fund, which helps New Mexico locales leverage federal grants
  • $49.3 million for the Quantum Benchmarking Initiative
  • $45 million for statewide homelessness initiatives
  • $38.5 million for career and technical education
  • $35 million Indian water rights settlements
  • $30 million for a reading intervention program
  • $25 million for a health professional loan repayment program
  • $22.5 million for complying with the terms of a settlement agreementin a lawsuit over the Rio Grande’s water supply
  • $22 million for aquifer monitoring
  • $21 million for statewide cybersecurity initiatives
  • $20 million for the state Research, Development and Deployment Fund

The link to review the Governor’s proposed 2026 budget is here:

Click to access Executive-Budget-FY26-Digital-1.pdf

GOVERNOR’S PROPOSSAL TO MOVE STATE FAIR AND REPURPOSE FAIRGROUNDS TO INCLUDE AFFORDABLE HOUSEING

The Governor’s proposed budget contains a proposed $100 million allocation  to select, acquire and build a new State Fairgrounds.  If also contains another $100 million for State Fairgrounds revitalization projects, including affordable housing, park areas and new entertainment venues.

It was  December 3, 2024 Governor Michelle Lujan Grisham announced plans to move the New Mexico State Fair to a different location and redevelop the 236 acre State Fair property into mixed-use development including affordable housing and a new stadium. On March 21, 2025, in response to the Governor’s announcement to redevelop or move the state fair, the New Mexico legislature passed legislation creating the “State Fairgrounds District.” It is a board that has redevelopment funding authority over the existing State Fair grounds property. On June 18, 2025, the state General Services Department announced that a $844,433 contract with Stantec Consulting Services Inc. was entered into  with the State for Stantec to create a master plan for repurposing the 236-acre tract of land that has since 1938 hosted the annual New Mexico State Fair.

On December 8, 2025,  the Governor’s Office released to the public three concept plans prepared by Stantec for the development of the State Fair property with one in particular calling  for moving the fairgrounds with no recommendation where nor cost estimate to rebuild All three plans propose  affordable housing be built  and for large park areas with public access on San Pedro and Central.

Moving the State Fair has generated strong opposition by area residents. At least two previous feasibility studies have found that the cost to move and rebuild the New Mexico State Fair would be over $1 Billion dollars.

The link to a related article on the New Mexico State Fair Grounds can be found in the postscript below.

LEGISLATOR’S REACTION TO GOVERNOR’S PROPSED BUDGET

During the December 21 news conference releasing the governor’s  proposed 2026 state budget, Lujan Grisham’s Chief of Staff  Daniel Schlegel and several cabinet secretaries attributed the proposed increased state spending largely to the governor’s universal childcare initiative, as well as funding changes related to President Trump’s “One Big Beautiful Bill.”

Under the governor’s proposed budget, the state would keep about $3.4 billion in reserves.

In response to the Governor’s proposed budget, Gallup Democrat State Senator George Muñoz, Chairman of the powerful Senate Finance Committee, noted a slowdown in revenue growth, including a decline in corporate and personal income taxes. Muñoz said this about the governor’s proposed 2026 state budget:

“It’s a little bit too high for the amount of recurring money we have. … Everything’s dropping, and I do not want to come back to a special session because those revenue numbers are way too high. … We in New Mexico have done a lot of great things …  and now the economy is slowing down. … We know that corporate income tax and personal income tax, and [Gross Receipts Tax] is slowing. We know that production is leveled off, but prices are down. So, as the economy slows, so do we, because we’ve set New Mexico up so we don’t ride a roller coaster again.”

Representative Nathan Small, D-Las Cruces, the chairman of the powerful Legislative Finance Committee, said in response to the Governor’s proposed budget that the Legislature shares many of the same spending priorities as the governor’s plan. However, Small expressed concern that the spending levels proposed by the Governor would grow the state budget by too much given current economic conditions.

LEGISLATURE’S PROPOSED $11.1 BUDGET

On January 7, the Legislative Finance Committee (LFC) released the legislature’s proposed 2026-2027 state budget. The LFC  is proposing  an $11.1 billion budget plan that features significantly less proposed spending than Governor Lujan Grisham’s proposed budget of $11.4 Billion. The Legislative Finance Committee’s proposed budget of $11.1 billion represents a 2.5% increase over the current fiscal year, while the governor is proposing a 4.6% increase. The Legislative Finance Committee’s spending plan increases year-over-year state spending by about $268 million, or roughly 2.5%. It  leaves general fund reserves at a healthy 32% of proposed spending.

Following are the major highlights of the proposed LFC budget:

  • The LFC’ s proposed budget calls for $1.7 billion in nonrecurring appropriations, including $328 million for transportation projects and $227 million for water projects. The LFC’s plan includes upwards of $545 million from various sources, including capital outlay and one-time appropriations, to fully fund the construction of a new school of medicine at the University of New Mexico in Albuquerque, which the LFC called a “lynchpin in an ambitious effort” to double enrollment with the end goal of expanding the state’s health care workforce.
  • Nonrecurring sources of revenue, including from the “Public Education Reform Fund” and the “Government Results and Opportunity Fund” for pilot projects accommodate additional spending.
  • The LFC’s nonrecurring general fund recommendation includes over $2.3 billion in special, supplemental, and deficiency spending for a broad range of projects, the transfer of set-aside funds, and transportation and Information Technology
  • Recurring general fund revenues for FY27 are projected by the LFC budget at $13.9 billion, a $317 million increase for the two years since FY25. With an average increase of 2.5%, most agencies would see moderate growth under the LFC’s spending plan.
  • Under the LFC proposed budget, two key natural resources agencies, the Environment Department and the Energy, Minerals and Natural Resources Department, would see above-average increases of 6% and 5%, respectively.
  • The Veterans Services Department would receive a 12% increase in general fund revenue.
  • The LFC committee recommends spending $73.2 million to increase the state’s share of healthcare premiums for public school employees  so that educators can keep more take-home pay. This is equivalent to a 2%  average pay increase. George Muñoz, D-Gallup, said the change could result in annual savings of about $2,000 for teachers around New Mexico making $60,000 to $70,000 per year.
  • The LFC committee recommends an average 1% salary increase for state, higher education, and public school employees at a total cost of $62.7 million.
  • The LFC’s nonrecurring investments include $350 million for higher education, including support for the lottery scholarship and the University of New Mexico medical school.
  • The LFC’s budget includes $10 million for aquifer restoration related to Rio Grande litigation with Texas, and $40 million for a fund that supports the commercialization of science and technology research.

In contrast to the LFC’s increase spending of about $268 million, or roughly 2.5%, Governor MLG’s budget recommendation calls for spending to increase by about $503 million, or roughly 4.6%, over current levels.  The difference between the two proposed spending plans is primarily attributable to higher proposed spending amounts in Governor MLJ’s  budget in three major areas:

  1. Health care administrative costs imposed because of Trump’s federal budget cuts.
  2. The Governor’s Universal Child care initiative.
  3. The Governor’s proposed budget contains a $100 million allocation  to select, acquire and build a new State Fairgrounds as well as another $100 million for State Fairgrounds revitalization projects.

AREAS OF AGREEMENT

There are two major areas of agreement between the Governor’s proposed  budget and the LFC’s proposed budget: state employee pay raises and funding for roads.

PAY RAISES

The LFC’s proposed budget plan, just like the governor’s plan, calls for 1% salary increases for all state workers and teachers, starting in July 2026. Those pay raises would be smaller than in recent years, but the legislative budget recommendation also calls for $73.2 million to be spent to increase the state’s share for public school employees’ health insurance premiums. A similar policy change was made last year for state workers.

ROAD FUNDING

The Governor’s budget plan  and legislative budget plans agree there is the need to repair and rebuild highways around New Mexico, as the percentage of roadways deemed acceptable in the state has decreased from 75% in 2011 to 69% in 2023. The legislative spending plan would authorize $155 million in one-time road maintenance funding, along with additional money for local and tribal governments. That’s slightly more than the $100 million for statewide road construction and repairs proposed by the governor. That’s slightly more than the $100 million for statewide road construction and repairs proposed by the governor

MAJOR DIFFERENCE IN A NUTSHELL

The major differences between Gov. Michelle Lujan Grisham’s proposed budget and the LFC’s proposed budget can be summarized as follows:

  • Early Childhood Education and Care Department: a $149.6 million difference between the two with the Governor proposing a larger amount.
  • Children, Youth and Families Department: a $17.2 million difference with the Governor proposing larger amount.
  • Health Care Authority: a $81.6 million difference with the Governor proposing larger amount.

LEGISLATOR’S REACTION

LFC Chairman State Rep. Nathan Small, a Las Cruces described  the LFC’s  spending plan as a starting point and said there’s room for negotiation. Small said this:

“We anticipate a great deal of work with the governor and agencies and folks all across the state. … We have a really strong and incredible opportunity to make New Mexico the most affordable place to have a family and to have kiddos, which is a key way to support New Mexicans. …  We have to do that in a responsible way and that financially works.”

“The financial picture, although it is still brighter in New Mexico than in many other states, there are bigger challenges ahead, and so this does not budget the full increase that the executive proposes … We anticipate a great deal of work collaboratively in that space.”

Small said  the current fiscal year one is  of the toughest the state has experienced “in recent memory” due to external factors like tariffs and federal funding cuts, leading to a dip in state revenues after seven years of growth. Small said this:

“We can’t really underestimate … the challenges that are ahead [because of] the massive federal budget reconciliation bill President Donald Trump signed into law last year . … With hundreds of millions of dollars in federal cuts on the horizon to food, health care and other public support programs, it’s clear that we have our work cut out for us. ”

Legislative Finance Committee Vice Chairman George Muñoz, a Democratic senator from Gallup, said New Mexico has had a “great run” in recent years, due in large part to a revenue bonanza from the oil and gas industry, but he noted the economy is slowing. He emphasized the importance of a “disciplined budget” to avoid what he called “reactionary problems.”  Muñoz said this:

“We can absorb price shocks, and we can absorb federal disruptions. … Economic slowdowns we can handle, and we don’t have to cut services, and we will not see a number of midyear cuts or special sessions because we’ve created a budget that creates a balance and stability as we move forward into the next year.”

The link to review the LFC’s proposed budget plan is here:

https://www.nmlegis.gov/Entity/LFC/Documents/Session_Publications/Budget_Recommendations/2027RecommendVolI.pdf

Links to relied upon or quoted news sources are here

https://www.santafenewmexican.com/news/local_news/new-mexico-lawmakers-spending-plan-wont-fully-fund-free-child-care/article_6757d75c-55f3-40e9-bc7a-9ad9bf2402eb.html

https://www.krqe.com/news/politics-government/legislature/legislative-finance-committee-shares-11-1b-budget-recommendation/

https://sourcenm.com/2026/01/07/nm-lawmakers-budget-proposal-doesnt-fully-fund-universal-child-care/?emci=2e5410b2-eeeb-f011-8195-000d3a1d58aa&emdi=b1305139-9fec-f011-8195-000d3a1d58aa&ceid=624623

REVISITING CREATION OF UNIVERSAL CHILDCARE

It was on September 9,  2025 Governor Michelle Lujan Grisham and the New Mexico Early Childhood Education and Care Department (ECECD) announced the  historic milestone that New Mexico would  become the first state in the nation to guarantee no-cost universal childcare starting November 1, 2025.  The groundbreaking new initiative makes childcare available to all New Mexicans, regardless of income, by removing income eligibility requirements from the state’s childcare assistance program and continuing the waiver of family copayments. This amounts to an average annual family savings of $12,000 per child. 

Governor Lujan Grisham said reaching the milestone of free universal child care required asking the Legislature and New Mexico voters for sustainable sources of funding. New Mexico voters in 2022 passed a Constitutional Amendment that pushed state lawmakers to tap into a state fund and use it to build out the early childhood education system in the state. Along with the expanded access to free child care, the state  allows entities like local governments and schools to start applying for low-interest loans to expand or create new child care facilities, under the  expanded rules to the state’s Child Care Facility Loan Fund passed in the 2025  legislative session.

During the 2025  legislative session, lawmakers increased the Early Childhood Education and Care Department’s budget by $113 million to $995 million total, including $463 million specifically for child care. The state in 2020 also created a new fund  called the Early Childhood Trust Fund, which started at $320 million and now has $10 billion as of September 9.

The announcement fulfilled the promise made by  Governor Lujan Grisham  and the New Mexico Legislature when they created the Early Childhood Education and Care Department in 2019.  Since then, New Mexico has expanded access to no-cost childcare to families with incomes at or below 400% of the federal poverty level, reducing financial strain on tens of thousands of families.

New Mexico families who receive childcare assistance report greater financial stability, more time to focus on their children, and the ability to choose higher-quality care settings.  New Mexico is also taking decisive action to build the supply of infant and toddler care statewide by taking the following actions:

  • Establishing a $12.7 million low-interest loan fund to construct, expand, and renovate childcare facilities, with an additional $20 million requested in the Fiscal Year 2027 budget.
  • Targeting growth to focus on care for infants, toddlers, low-income families, and children with special needs.
  • Partnering with employers and school districts to expand child care options for working families.
  • Launching a statewide campaign to recruit licensed and registered home providers.
  • To support providers, reimbursement rates will rise to reflect the true cost of care.

Programs that commit to paying entry-level staff a minimum of $18 per hour and offer 10 hours of care per day, five days a week, receive an incentive rate. Government officials  estimates an additional 5,000 early childhood professionals are needed to fully achieve a universal childcare system.

NM Early Childhood Education and Care Department Cabinet Secretary Elizabeth Groginsky said this:

“Early childhood care and education is a public good. … By providing universal access and improving pay for our early childhood workforce, we are easing financial pressure on families, strengthening our economy, and helping every child learn in safe, nurturing environments. This is the kind of investment that builds equity today and prosperity for the future.”

Governor Lujan Grisham said this when the announcement was made that New Mexico would offer no-cost universal child care:

 “Child care is essential to family stability, workforce participation, and New Mexico’s future prosperity. … By investing in universal child care, we are giving families financial relief, supporting our economy, and ensuring that every child has the opportunity to grow and thrive.  …  [Universal child care is] the backbone of creating a system of support for families that allow parents to go to work or college. … It’s going to make New Mexico extremely attractive to build your business here. … It’s going to make New Mexico extremely attractive to come here and raise your family.”

SUSTAINABILITY FOR FREE CHILD CARE RAISED

The funding and sustainability of New Mexico’s free childcare program  to all residents has raised major concerns.  The program, which previously only covered families making up to 400% of the federal poverty level, now extends to all New Mexicans. This expansion has led to concerns about the program’s cost and sustainability. Paul Gessing, president of the Rio Grande Foundation, a taxpayer watch group, referenced a report from the  Legislative Finance Committee, which warns that spending could increase from $450 million to nearly $850 million annually by 2027.  Gessing said this:

“Depending on uptake and further inflation and the challenge of bringing new providers into the system, this could just be the starting point in terms of those price increases.”

The Legislative Finance Committee report also highlights a significant increase in the number of children qualifying for the program, from just under 100,000 to 326,000, with only 31,000 care slots available. Reilly White, an economics professor at the University of New Mexico, noted the potential supply and demand issue saying this:

“We’ve increased the level of subsidies, but not the supply of available child care.”

Despite these concerns, Elizabeth Groginsky, the cabinet secretary for the state’s Early Childhood Education and Care Department, remains optimistic about the program’s sustainability. She said that care slots have increased by 20% since 2019, with an estimated 4,500 new spaces expected to open across the state. She also does not anticipate costs doubling by fiscal year 2027, estimating increases at $600 million instead of $800 million. When asked point blank if the program would be sustainable, Groginsky said this:

“Yes, I absolutely do! …  What we’re hearing from families is this has been the relief they’ve been looking for.”

Governor Michelle Lujan Grisham’s budget recommendation for fiscal year 2027 aligns with Groginsky’s calculations, suggesting $600 million in funding.

The link to the quoted or relied upon news source is here:

https://www.koat.com/article/legislative-committee-raises-sustainability-concerns-about-new-mexicos-universal-childcare-system/69859325

SHOWDOWN ON UNIVERSAL CHILD CARE LOOMS BETWEEN GOVERNOR AND LEGISLATURE

Several legislators have expressed misgivings about the hefty price tag and rollout of the Governor’s universal child care plan.  While the governor has proposed more than $160 million to expand child care assistance, the Legislative Finance Committee’s $11.1 billion budget would increase spending for the Early Childhood Education and Care Department by less than $14 million.

The Legislative Finance Committee wrote this in its released proposed budget:

“In fall 2025, the department announced it would be providing universal free childcare, which began in November 2025. … This announcement will create additional demand for Childcare Assistance without the necessary revenues to implement this policy decision should more people apply and qualify for subsidies. … ECECD requested a significant increase in general fund revenue in FY27 for universal childcare and likely will need significant additional revenue in following fiscal years.”

During the January 7  news conference at the state Capitol announcing the LFC’s proposed budget, LFC  Chairman Rep. Nathan Small, D-Las Cruces, said the LFC’s budget plan does not include an additional $160 million to prop up the program for the coming year that was included in the Governor’s executive plan.  Representative Small  said lawmakers are keenly focused on addressing affordability issues for New Mexico families, but indicated the Legislature is not fully on board with removing income limits for receiving state-paid child care.  Smalll said this:

“We have to do that in a responsible way that financially works.”

Representative  Small  pointed out the state’s child care assistance program has already seen its funding increase from about $150 million in 2022 to roughly $440 million as of this year.

Michael Coleman, the governor’s chief spokesperson, said this in a statement about  the Legislative Finance Committee’s early childhood budget proposal of significantly reduced funding:

“Governor Lujan Grisham is disappointed by the LFC’s early childhood budget proposal, but she is not surprised — and she is not deterred. … Executive and legislative budgets are rarely aligned initially. … The governor is confident the Legislature will fund universal childcare at levels that match the public’s strong support for this historic initiative.” 

COMMENTARY AND ANALYSIS

The 2026 session will be Governor Lujan Grisham’s last as Governor and for that reason she is considered a “lame duck”.  She will have far less leverage with the legislature than she has had in past sessions.

During her entire two terms  as Governor, Michelle Lujan Grisham has concentrated on improving the state’s education system, restoring the state’s mental health care system destroyed by her predecessor as well as child welfare needs to the point of creating the Early Childhood Education and Care Department.

The Governor’s proposed budget contains a $100 million allocation  to select, acquire and build a new State Fairgrounds, if necessary as well as another $100 million for State Fairgrounds revitalization projects. The Governor’s efforts to relocate and move the state fairgrounds should be rejected by the legislature and  abandoned by the Governor. The $200 Million in proposed funding  for the State Fair should be dedicated to the universal childcare funding.

There is little doubt that universal childcare will have the biggest impact on the state given the direct impact it will have on thousands of families and hundreds of thousands of New Mexico’s children long after Governor Michelle Lujan Grisham leaves office. It will be the Governor’s most lasting legacy only if the New Mexico legislature sees fit to fund the program.

The link to a related article on the State Fair is here:

Three Preliminary Concept Plans For State Fair Property Presented To State Fair District Board; Governor MLG Embraces Concept Plan To Move State Fair; Gov. MLG Falsely Claims Redevelopment Of Property Will Revitalize International District’; Parks On Property Will Be Magnets For Crime And Homeless Encampments   

City Awards $100,000 Contract To Find New APD Chief; COMMENTARY AND ANALYSIS: National Search Needed For New Management Team Of Chief And Deputy Chiefs

On January 9,  Mayor Tim Keller announced that he has begun the process of selecting a new APD Chief to replace former APD Chief Harold Medina. Under the city charter, the Mayor appoints the APD Chief and the appointment must be approved by the Albuquerque City Council.

Chief Medina retired on  December 31, 2025 after three decades in law  enforcement. Medina was appointed by Mayor Keller APD Chief and  served as  Chief since September 2021.

On December 31, in a New Year’s Eve news release, Mayor Keller announced his appointment of APD Deputy Chief Cecily Barker as Interim APD Chief. Cecily Barker has been with  APD over 20 years and has come up through the ranks.  It is being reported she has expressed interest in applying for the position to be made permanent but has yet to apply.

PUBLIC SECTOR SEARCH & CONSULTING INC

The city has hired the outside firm Public Sector Search & Consulting Inc., to assist in the search and  selection process for a new APD Chief. The firm specializes in police executive searches and has aided dozens of large law enforcement agencies, including those in Chicago and Dallas. The city has used the firm in the past, including for the search and selection of Deputy APD Chief.

According to its web site, Public Sector Search & Consulting holds itself out as a “boutique executive” search firm that  serves a limited number of clients and emphasizes a higher level of responsiveness. It is an executive staff search firm that focuses exclusively on recruiting police executives. The firms recruiters are former police chiefs who have extensive knowledge and expertise in both contemporary policing and recruiting practices. The firm proclaims its understanding of the candidate pool is unrivaled and that every new search it conducts relies on  their vast network of police leaders.

The link to their web site is here:

Homepage

According to the city of Albuquerque’s public records website, the firm’s contract began January  2 and has a maximum limit of $100,000.  Applications are already being submitted. According to APD spokesperson Gilbert Gallegos, as of January 8,  six people have applied for APD Chief.

Gallegos said there was no firm timeline for announcing the next selection, but he expects the process to move faster than when Chief Medina was chosen. When former APD chief Michael Geier announced he was retiring in 2020, it took Mayor Keller  upwards of  six months to choose Medina as Geier’s  permanent replacement even though Medina had been serving as Interim Chief.

According to a news  release, community input sessions will be scheduled so residents, advocates, organizations and businesses can “identify the leadership qualities, experience and priorities desired in the next chief of police,” the release states.  Residents will also be able to take a community survey to “ensure broad and meaningful input. “

Mayor Tim Keller said this in a January 8 news release:

“We are in a very different environment now that we completed our reform efforts with the Department of Justice; our crime-fighting strategies are working, and we are attracting more officers.  … We also know the community is still concerned about safety. We have an opportunity to choose a police chief who will rise to meet today’s challenges, like the proliferation of fentanyl and long-standing cracks in the criminal justice system.”

Links to quoted or relied upon news sources are here:

https://www.krqe.com/news/albuquerque-metro/city-of-albuquerque-begins-search-for-new-albuquerque-police-chief/

https://www.koat.com/article/albuquerque-process-select-new-police-chief/69961764

https://www.abqjournal.com/news/albuquerque-launches-search-for-new-police-chief/2956953

https://abqraw.com/post/100000-city-contract-awarded-to-find-next-police-chief/

HOW LONG WILL KELLER TAKE?

On December 9, Mayor Keller was elected to a third 4 year term and he must now find a person who will be his third APD Chief. The process could take mere weeks or months. Mayor Keller said this about the process of selecting a new chief:

“You either early on, find somebody and you really want to go with, and then it goes fast. Let’s say three months. … Or you’ve got four or five people that you like, and so you really got to vet them and interview them and get lots of input. Then it pushes it out to, like, nine months.

Mayor Keller said the long process will be all an effort to find someone who “checks every box.” That includes understanding Albuquerque and the challenges the city faces. The main priority, however, is keeping crime on a downward trend. Keller said this:

“Harold started that process [of keeping crime on a downward trend] , and it has been achieved through technology, through the use of civilians, and through much stronger investigative work. So we want the new chief to be able to build on those, but also come in with some new ideas. … We know we got to look around. … It could be national, in a sense of from another city, but maybe it’s also local. You know, maybe there’s state police or someone from Las Cruces.”

COMMENTARY AND ANALYIS

Mayor Tim Keller’s appointment of Cecily Barker as APD Interim Chief came as absolutely no surprise to APD watchers and city hall insiders. Her appointment was 100% expected. Former APD Chief Harold Medina advocated for one of his appointed Deputy Chief’s to take his place saying “I hope that I left a strong bench for mayor to look at and choose.”

Confidential sources have confirmed that former APD Chief Harold  Medina had been grooming Deputy Chief Cecily Barker to be his replacement as Chief for some time. The same sources have said that Mayor Keller has been “champing at the bit” to appoint the first female APD Chief in the city’s history as he has done with the appointment of  Fire Chief Emily Jaramillo.

It has  been reported that Interim Chief Cecily Barker is interested in being made permanent and that she will apply. Such a scenario has happened before. Mayor Keller has proclaimed in the past there will be a national search for a new chief, which is identical to what he said when he fired former APD Chief Geier and eventually appointed APD Chief Harold Medina, who Keller had appointed Interim Chief.

The selection process used by Keller that ultimately resulted in the appointment of Chief Harold Medina was considered by many a politcal sham.  Once Medina applied to be appointed Chief, it was a forgone conclusion that Keller would appoint him Chief. The blunt reality is that APD sworn police and in particular the APD Union will resist anyone from outside of APD.

APD NEEDS COMPLETELY NEW LEADERSHIP AND REORGANIZATION

The Albuquerque Police Department employs 1,880 full time employees which includes more than 950 sworn police officers. APD  has an annual approved budget of $271.5 million dollars. APD employs upwards of 20% of all city hall employees and has the largest budget of all the 27 departments. It is because of the department’s sure size that a strong management team is needed and not just a Chief.

APD is a train wreck. It is  top heavy with mid-management and plagued by a DWI dismissal scandal. Keller needs to appoint a new APD Chief and Deputy Chiefs and not just Medina loyalists or cronies.  Mayor Keller needs to replace the entire Chief’s command staff and completely reorganize the department for a new generation of leadership.

APD cannot deal with the city’s high crime rates because APD’s sworn personnel is at 950. For the last 10 years, recruitment has been stagnant and the department has not been able to keep up with retirements despite being the best paid law enforcement department in the state. As it stands, there are only 350 out of 950 sworn police assigned to the six area commands, broken down into 3 shifts and patrolling the streets responding the hundreds of thousands of calls for service a year.

Simply put, APD needs far more than one new Chief. It needs a whole new generation and management team of top command staff of Chief and Deputy Chiefs who need to come from outside of APD. If the entire command staff that Chief Medina has put in place over the last 5 years is not replaced, including all the Deputy Chiefs, there is little to no chance APD will change. APD will revert back to the old ways that brought on the Department of Justice (DOJ)  consent decree that lasted for 10 years with the city paying millions of taxpayer dollars to institute constitutional policing practices.

The award of a contract to Public Sector Search & Consulting Inc. is a good start and ostensibly signals that a national search for a new APD Chief will happen. But the work of Public Sector Search & Consulting Inc. must  be expanded to include a search for a whole new management team consisting of  one Chief and 2 or perhaps 3 Deputy Chiefs that a new chief can bring with them, trust and rely upon.  

Hope springs eternal that Mayor Tim Keller will in fact do a national search for a new APD Chief and Deputy Chiefs and that the search is not a political sham to replace Harold Medina and not simply meant to appoint a Medina crony who will continue with his management policies and archaic management style.

Six New Behavioral Health Clinics Opened And Metropolitan Competency Diversion Court Launched; Mental Health Care And Substance Abuse Treatment And Diversion Court Become Reality; ABQ City Attorney And District Attorney Should Create Specialized Unit To Initiate Civil Commitments Utilizing Diversion Court To Take Unhoused Who Refuse City Services Off The Street

This article in an in-depth report on two major developments on rebuilding the New Mexico Mental Health Care System and how the mentally ill will be provided with desperately need services. It reports on how they will be dealt with by the criminal justice system and the courts. The article also provides the historical and legislative action and  changes in the laws dealing with the mentally ill and the unhoused that was required to get both accomplished.

SIX BEHAVIORAL HEALTH CARE CLINICS OPENING, MORE TO COME

Back in 2013, many of the state’s behavioral health clinics were dismantled by then Republican Governor Susana Martinez. On December 13, 2025, KRQE News 13 reported that now, a full 12 years later, in response to the need for substance use and mental health treatment, the New Mexico Health Care Authority is opening up six clinics across the state.

New Mexico Solutions in Bernalillo County is one of six new behavioral health clinics that  opened on January 1 under the New Mexico Health Care Authority’s (HCA) certified community behavioral health clinic designation. New Mexico Solutions CCBHC Project Director Victoria Standley said a big problem she has seen in the county is getting help quickly, which she’s hoping they’ll help solve by expanding their hours. Standley said this:

“A lot of the time they have to wait weeks, months to get in, and once you get in, you have to do all these steps before seeing somebody. … So we already have great access, but we are improving access.”

Standley said they’re also developing a mobile crisis team to bring people on the street into their clinic for services.

The five other new clinics will open in Santa Fe, Rio Arriba, Curry, Lea, and Doña Ana counties, which will bring the total to 13. New Mexico HCA Behavioral Health Services Director Nick Boukas said this:

“We’re really excited to bring these services that serve all age groups regardless of if they can pay into their community, so they don’t have to travel far distances to get the help they need.”

Boukas said these clinics were chosen in part because there’s been an increase in overdoses in these areas, and in turn an increased need for substance use and mental health services. Boukas said this:

“These providers are gonna be based in those communities and can work with them directly because they’re gonna be more trusted because they know the community.”

Boukas believes the additional six opening  will make a difference in helping people navigate the system and said this:

“They will have agreements for inpatient, and services they cannot provide, they’ll have contracted services so we’re not leaving somebody to have to Google or go through the phone book trying to figure out what do I do next.”

The HCA said that once these six open next year, they will start working to open up more across the state.

The following agencies are certified and began services January 1:

  • Guidance Center of Lea County – Hobbs
  • New Mexico Solutions – Albuquerque
  • La Clinica De Familia – Las Cruces
  • Mental Health Resources – Clovis
  • Presbyterian Medical Services – Española and Santa Fe

These clinics opened in 2025 as certified community behavioral health clinics:

  • University of New Mexico Health System – Bernalillo and Sandoval Counties
  • Carlsbad Life House – Eddy County
  • Families and Youth Innovations Plus – Doña Ana County
  • Santa Fe Recovery Center – Santa Fe and McKinley Counties
  • Presbyterian Medical Services, Farmington Community Health Clinic – San Juan County

The link to the quoted and relied upon news source is here:

https://www.krqe.com/news/new-mexico/six-new-behavioral-health-clinics-coming-to-new-mexico-through-hca-certification/

BERNALILLO COUNTY METROPOLITAN DIVERSION COURT

On January 6, the Metropolitan Court Diversion Court was launched. The new court will redirect people with serious mental illness into treatment as an alternative to criminal prosecution for minor and nonviolent crimes. The new court will deal with people who previously have had criminal charges dismissed because they were found incompetent to stand trial. The criminal competency Diversion Court is the fifth such program statewide and is  the first in the state’s largest county.

During the recent Special Session of the New Mexico legislature that ended on October 2, 2025,  the legislature enacted legislation which allows the Bernalillo County Metropolitan Court to determine competency which previously was only allowed by the State District Court. A recent report by the New Mexico Justice Reinvestment Working Group found that 65% of individuals who enter the state’s criminal justice system have a behavioral health need and the criminal justice system cannot provide necessary medical treatment and facilities.

State lawmakers appropriated $293,000 a year for the Diversion Court which will pay for a program coordinator and two case managers, or navigators, to direct people to appropriate mental health and substance-abuse treatment and basic services such as housing. The funding also will pay for the program’s behavioral health service provider, Albuquerque-based A New Awakening.

The Diversion Court  provides people who are unhoused with the opportunity to resolve pending misdemeanor cases, outstanding warrants and unpaid fines, all of which can pose barriers to housing and employment opportunities and hinder progress toward self-sufficiency. The Diversion Court will be able to do more when it comes to the homeless who suffer from severe mental illness or who are drug addicted and are a danger to themselves and others.

Candidates for the program are people charged with misdemeanors and nonviolent felonies, excluding those facing drunken-driving charges. The program comes at a time when encampment sweeps around Albuquerque have increased significantly and have  led to an increase in misdemeanor charges like unlawful camping and blocking the sidewalk. The program provides an alternative for a judge who otherwise would have little choice but to dismiss the charges.

In cases involving the unhoused or those with mental illness, misdemeanor citations often lead to jail stays down the line due to missed court hearings. According to a Bernalillo County jail population dashboard, just over 7,000 people were booked on misdemeanor charges in 2025. The competency diversion program is intended to guide people with severe mental illness into services that may include housing, medical needs and appropriate mental health or substance-use treatment.

At the January 6 ceremony announcing the Diversion Court, where upwards of 100 people attended, New Mexico Supreme Court Justice Briana H. Zamora shared her experiences as a trial judge where he observed a decline in the well-being of criminal defendants who returned to her courtroom time and again. Judge Zamora said this:

“At the beginning, especially here at Metro Court, they would come with their family members, their relatives, their friends. … After about 20 or 30 cases, or a few years later, they came alone. They were unhoused and they had no support. [Struggling families would ask to order treatment and services]  and within the constraints of the law, I was unable to do so. … I as a judge, of course, I want to apply the law, but I also want to ensure that justice is done. And without any programs in place, without any place to refer them, my hands were tied. There was nothing I could do, and it just broke my heart to see these families and friends who were desperately trying to help out their loved ones and had no avenue to do so. …” 

Bernalillo County Metro Court Judge Nina Safier is the Presiding Judge for the Diversion Court. She said the criminal competency diversion court is intended to restore services to people caught up for years in the criminal justice system. Judge Safier said this:

“By the time you end up in jail, you have fallen through many cracks. … We have to reconnect people with the services that got pulled from underneath them, because the criminal justice system and jail is not going to help. … As a competency court judge, the most common request I hear is, ‘Judge, we just want them to get help.’ And as Justice Zamora said, the answer before was, ‘That’s not the process.’ Now the process can take on a new direction. You can reconnect with the services that people suffering — our communities are watching, their families want them to get help.”

Judge Safier said a key element of the Diversion Court is trained staff who can help obtain treatment and services for people who otherwise have difficulty navigating the system. She said staff members also can bump people to the head of the line for needed services.

Bennett Baur, the chief public defender for the New Mexico Law Offices of the Public Defender, said he is uncertain how the program will work but applauded the effort to find alternatives to prosecution for people with severe mental illness. Baur said this:

“I think it’s a really good thing for us to look at different ways to address serious behavioral health issues, rather than just depending upon prosecution, jail and prison, which clearly doesn’t work for these folks. … I’m concerned that there may not be enough appropriate treatment, but let’s give this a chance.”

The Administrative Office of the Courts has launched four competency diversion courts since mid-2024. Those courts are  in the 3rd Judicial District in Las Cruces, the 4th Judicial District in Las Vegas, the 1st Judicial District in Santa Fe and the 12th Judicial District in Otero and Lincoln counties.  So far, nearly 60 people statewide have already graduated from the diversion court programs.

The links to the relied upon or quoted news sources are here:

https://www.kob.com/new-mexico/new-pilot-program-aims-to-break-cycle-for-nonviolent-offenders/

https://www.abqjournal.com/news/metro-court-program-offers-new-treatment-options/2955055

https://www.abqjournal.com/news/metro-court-program-aims-to-treat-mentally-ill-defendants/2952594

HOW COMPETENCY DIVERSION COURT WORKS

On December 13, 2025 the Albuquerque Journal published a guest opinion column by Metropolitan Court Judge Nina Safier who is the presiding  judge over the Bernalillo County Metropolitan Court Diversion Court. In her Journal guest column, Judge Safier wrote about how the Diversion Court works and she wrote this in part:

When a defendant’s attorney, the prosecutor or the presiding judge has concerns that a person may be suffering from a mental illness or other conditions — to a degree that prevents them from understanding the criminal proceedings and assisting in their own defense — an evaluation to determine whether they are competent to face prosecution is required by law.

For decades, individuals experiencing mental illness who were charged with nonviolent crimes remained in limbo for extended periods of time while costly professional forensic evaluations were completed. Those evaluations often ended with the conclusion that the individual was legally incompetent to stand trial, and the case was dismissed, foreclosing any further prosecution. In more serious cases, after additional Court determinations regarding dangerousness, cases were transferred to the state’s Behavioral Health Institute for competency restoration treatment, and/or civil commitment might also have been part of the competency process.

 The current forensic competency examination process is expensive, lengthy and only serves the purpose of determining whether a person is competent to stand trial. The process is not designed to connect individuals with treatment or address other needs they may have.

The newly created Competency Diversion Program team will work to identify and screen qualified individuals when they are first booked into the Metropolitan Detention Center on eligible nonviolent charges. That includes individuals with a history of prior competency assessments or those identified by scored intake screenings.

Upon identifying an individual with a documented history of mental illness, the assigned state prosecutor and defense counsel must both agree to refer the case to the pilot program.

After referral to the diversion program, a defendant will not go through the competency evaluation process. Instead, trained staff, called “navigators,” will refer and help participants engage with appropriate services in the areas of housing and medical needs, inpatient or residential treatment, intensive outpatient treatment or community-based treatment for mental health and/or substance use. Participants will voluntarily consent to any behavioral health treatment. It is not court ordered. Competency Diversion program managers will assess and monitor the participant for compliance with those community-based services.

People facing misdemeanor charges will be referred to the program for three to six months, while those facing nonviolent felony charges will be referred for six months to a year. The Court will dismiss the charges if and when individuals successfully complete a needs-based plan developed in collaboration with their navigator and behavioral health provider. Those who fail to remain engaged with program’s requirements will be terminated and the original criminal proceedings will resume.

With funding provided during a special legislative session last year, the diversion pilot program for competency-related cases is up and running in four judicial districts here in New Mexico with promising results. This new approach to helping one of our state’s most vulnerable populations is designed to hold defendants accountable while providing them with meaningful rehabilitation.

Our jail facilities and the criminal justice system were not created to provide long-term care and oversight for those struggling with mental illness. We can and should try to make our communities safer and healthier by helping individuals connect with and receive the services they most need.

In cases involving minor, nonviolent crime, spending extensive time and resources deciding whether someone can understand their criminal charges and participate in their defense is an outdated endeavor. It is time we ask a new question — how can we help meet the needs of this population to prevent them from coming back into the criminal justice system again?

No process is guaranteed to address everyone’s unique circumstances and challenges. This new approach has been created to help encourage and connect people with existing services so they can achieve better outcomes. Reducing arrests while helping individuals is definitely a step in the right direction for Albuquerque.

The link to Judge Nina Safier’s full guest column is here:

https://www.abqjournal.com/opinion/opinion-moving-from-dismissal-to-accountability/2938589

RECALLING THE GUTTING OF NON-PROFIT MENTAL HEALTH CARE PROGRAMS BY GOVERNOR SUSANA MARTINEZ

One of the cruelest things that Republican Governor Suzana Martinez did as Governor was order an “audit” of mental health services by nonprofits in New Mexico. The audit devastated New Mexico’s behavioral health system. In 2013, more than 160,000 New Mexicans received behavioral health services with most of those services funded by Medicaid according to the Human Services Department at the time.

In June 2013, under the direction of Governor Martinez, the Human Services Department cut off Medicaid funding to 15 behavioral health nonprofits operating in New Mexico. The Martinez Administration said that the outside audit showed more than $36 million in overbilling, as well as mismanagement and possible fraud. The audit was false and a politcal hatchet job. The Martinez Human Services Department agency brought in the 5 Arizona providers to take over.

In early 2016, 13 of the 15 nonprofits that were shut down were exonerated of all fraud charges by New Mexico Attorney General Hector Balderas. Even though AG Balderas found no fraud and cleared the nonprofits of fraud, the damage had been done to the nonprofits and many just went out of business. Lawsuits ensued and the Governor Lujan Grisham Administration was stuck settling most of the cases out of court to the tune of millions of taxpayer dollars.

Three of the five Arizona providers brought in by Governor Susana Martinez’s administration in 2013 to replace the New Mexico nonprofits pulled up stakes in New Mexico and the states mental health system never fully recovered.

The freezing of Medicaid funding to 15 providers over false fraud and false overbilling accusations and intentionally gutting the state’s mental health care system can only be described as  cruel and vicious conduct by a political hack. For the past 12 years, the state is still  playing  catch up to fill the void to provide mental health care services to those who desperately need them.

https://www.abqjournal.com/749923/third-arizona-behavioral-health-provider-to-pull-out-of-state.html

EXTENT OF CRISIS 

A recent report  by the New Mexico Justice Reinvestment Working Group astonishingly found that 65% of individuals who enter the state’s criminal justice system have a behavioral health need and that the criminal justice system cannot provide necessary medical  treatment and facilities. According to Kaiser Family Foundation data, New Mexico has one of the nation’s highest suicide rates, and more than one-third of state residents reported anxiety or a depressive disorder in 2023.

Adrian Avila, the chief of staff for the New Mexico  Senate Finance Committee, was tasked with taking the lead on crafting the package after a special session called by Gov. Michelle Lujan Grisham ended with the Democratic-controlled Legislature declining to take up all of the governor’s crime-focused agenda.

Avila went so far as to traveled to Miami Florida  with behavioral health advocates to tour  the  Miami-Dade County  Court diversion program that has drawn accolades for its success. Avila said the “Miami model” would not be totally feasible in New Mexico because the state’s population is not as densely concentrated.

Avila described the package that grew out of countless meetings and negotiations as a “bottom-up” approach to tackling mental health and drug abuse issues across the state.

On February 4, 2025,  Avila told the Senate Finance committee this:

“We’re creating an entire ecosystem here.”

Democrat Majority Floor Leader Peter Wirth of Santa Fe and Republican Senate Minority Floor leader William Sharer of Farmington  jointly sponsored Senate Bill 1 of the behavioral health legislation. On February 4, 2025, they presented their legislation together to the Senate Public Affairs Committee. Several other top Republicans and Democrats  teamed up to carry the bills. Republican Senator Sharer said this of the $1 Billion funding:

“Things are getting worse, not better. … This is a huge, huge amount of money, but also a huge accountability piece. … So this is it.”

2025 POINT-IN-TIME (PIT) REPORT ON CITY’S HOMELESS

On November 17, 2025 the New Mexico Coalition to End Homelessness released the 2025 Point-In-Time (PIT) Report for the numbers of unhoused in Albuquerque. The link to review the entire 62-page 2024 PIT report is here:

https://568ac5c8-a616-4ffa-987e-7f77d5d1e6aa.filesusr.com/ugd/ad7ad8_0b3a57c7ce914d7f9bc94b6ea37be15c.pdf

The highlights of the 2025 Point-In-Time (PIT) Report data as it relates to Albuquerque can be summarized in a nutshell as follows:

2,960 total homeless people were reported in Albuquerque, which broken down is as follows:

  • 1,367 are reported as unsheltered people
  • 1,327 are reported in emergency shelters which is up from 658 in 2011
  • 266 in transitional housing with women more prevalent than men in this type of housing
  • 8% of people reported experiencing homelessness for first time
  • 2,566 total are reported as homeless groups/families in Albuquerque

The PIT  report showed of the 1,367 unsheltered people, 49.8% of them said they were experiencing homelessness for the first time, a “sharp uptick” that may be linked to things such as inflation and repeals of pandemic-era relief programs, including an eviction moratorium.

The 2025 PIT study found nearly 50% of respondents were not from New Mexico.  A majority of transplants said they were from Texas, Arizona or Colorado. About 36% of those respondents said they were not homeless prior to moving to New Mexico.

In the last three years, the city has spent upwards of $300 million on homeless shelters, programs and purchasing and remodeling motels for low-income housing. In 2021, the city acquired the Lovelace Hospital complex on Gibson for $15 million and has spent upwards of $90 million to remodel it into the Gateway shelter.

The fiscal year 2026 approved General Fund budget for the Health, Housing and Homelessness Department is $53.3 million. The sum includes $48 million for strategic support, health and human services, affordable housing, mental health services, emergency shelter services, homeless support services, shelter operations, substance abuse services and $4.2 million for the Gibson Gateway maintenance division.

The Gateway Network consists of 5 shelters costing a staggering $300 Million dollars spent over the last 3  years to assist upwards of 3,000 to 5,000 unhoused.

https://www.abqjournal.com/news/article_42aba680-62c4-4228-95a2-da72df1a34e1.html

https://citydesk.org/2025/09/10/albuquerque-becomes-new-mexicos-homeless-hub-as-gateway-contracts-add-100-beds/?mc_cid=b9e7b25ad7&mc_eid=001367acf1 

2025 ENACTEMENT OF BEHAVIORAL HEALTH PACKAGE

It was during the 2025 New Mexico legislative session that New Mexico’s   behavioral health care system emerged as a major priority as lawmakers grappled with how to reduce violent crime rates, drug abuse and homelessness. A bipartisan approach emerged after interim committee meetings during the summer of 2024 that rejected Governor Lujan Grisham’s proposed legislation for involuntary commit of those who suffer from severe mental illness and who pose a serious risk to themselves and others.  It was an attempt to remodel a fragmented and largely ineffective state behavioral care health system.

During the 2025 New Mexico legislature,  three Senate Bills were enacted:

Senate Bill 1: This bill  created a $1 Billion-dollar  behavioral health trust fund that would be invested by the State Investment Council. A yearly distribution of 5% of the fund’s value.  or $50 million at the start,  would be made to help fund programs statewide.

Senate Bill 2: This bill  appropriated $140 million to the New Mexico  Administrative Office of the Courts and various state agencies to set up a new framework for behavioral health programs statewide.

Senate Bill 3: This bill required regional plans be crafted for providing mental health and substance abuse treatment. The plans would be overseen by the state judicial branch and would include timelines and regional funding priorities.

JUDICIARY IN CHARGE OF NEW MENTAL HEALTH CARE MODEL

Under the enacted legislation, the new mental health care model is placed in charge of the State Judiciary for planning while leaving the state Health Care Authority largely in charge of overseeing funding. This is a dramatic change from the previous  system that largely fell under the executive branch’s jurisdiction.

The enacted legislation increased accountability by requiring regional plans outlining priorities for providing mental health and substance abuse treatment. The new $1 billion trust fund provides at least $50 million of annual funding to support the regional plans, which would largely be overseen by the state’s judiciary.

During the 2024  Special Session, legislators appropriated $3 million to ramp up court-ordered assisted outpatient treatment programs for individuals with mental illness in three judicial districts.

https://www.abqjournal.com/news/article_aa158e90-d9c9-11ef-aa34-477662558954.html

https://newmexicosun.com/stories/669238888-new-mexico-chief-justice-seeks-funds-for-court-modernization-and-security

MENTAL HEALTH COMMITMENTS

During the 2025 legislature, legislation was enacted changing the process for evaluating whether criminal defendants are competent to stand trial. House Bill 4 was enacted and specifically requires that competency evaluators determine whether defendants are dangerous to themselves or others.

After a competency hearing, and if a defendant is found not to be competent, a judge then decides whether the defendant poses a threat. Based on that determination, a defendant would either be ordered to attend an assisted outpatient treatment program or be sent to the state Behavioral Health Institute in Las Vegas, New Mexico.

The enacted Omnibus Crime Package  gives prosecutors more options to involuntarily commit people into a locked psychiatric facility if they are found to be dangerous to themselves or others and unable to stand trial.

Under House Bill 4, when a court determines that a defendant is not competent to proceed in a criminal case the court shall determine if the defendant is dangerous.  A defendant who is not competent is dangerous if the court finds clear and convincing evidence that the defendant presents a serious threat of:

(1) inflicting great bodily harm, as defined in Section 30-1-12 NMSA 1978, on another person;

(2) committing criminal sexual penetration, as provided in Section 30-9-11 NMSA 1978;

(3) committing criminal sexual contact of a minor, as provided in Section 30-9-13 NMSA 1978;

(4) committing abuse of a child, as provided in Subsection D of Section 30-6-1 NMSA 1978;

(5) violating a provision of the Sexual Exploitation of Children Act;

(6) committing human trafficking, as provided in Section 30-52-1 NMSA 1978;

(7) committing a felony involving the use of a firearm; or

(8) committing aggravated arson, as provided in Section 30-17-6 NMSA 1978.

The link to review House Bill 4 is here:

https://legiscan.com/NM/text/HB4/2025

After a competency hearing, and if a defendant is found not to be competent, a judge then decides whether the defendant poses a threat to themselves or others. Based on that determination, a defendant is either ordered to attend an assisted outpatient treatment program or sent to the state Behavioral Health Institute in Las Vegas, New Mexico.

The biggest hurdle in the Behavioral Health legislation was that there was a shortage of available facilities to send those committed for treatment with funding to build such facilities

COMMENTARY AND ANALYSIS

After a full twelve years, at last it can be said that significant, tangible progress is  being made to address the states mental health  and unhoused crisis. It has  been accomplished on two separate levels: establishing  behavioral health clinics and the diversion courts to deal with the mentally ill or drug addicted.

THE UNHOUSED CRISIS 

The unhoused crisis in Albuquerque has only gotten worse over the last few years. The city has built a Gateway network  that includes 5 emergency shelters but many homeless people refuse the city shelter and services. What sticks out is the staggering amount of $300 Million  spent over three years to establish the five Gateway shelter system with upwards of $60 Million a year now being spent to try and provide assistance to so few, estimated to be upwards of 3,000 unhoused identified by the PIT count. The city and charitable providers say the likely actual figure of unhoused is upwards of 5,000 because many are not identified by the PIT survey.

The biggest problem is that  upwards of 75% of the unhoused refuse city services. Complicating matters is the fact that the 2025 PIT study found nearly 50% of respondents were not from New Mexico indicating the the unhoused are migrating to the city.  The blunt reality is Albuquerque is now New Mexico’s capitol for the  homeless service because of referrals made from throughout the state and thanks to Mayor Keller’s 5 integrated shelters known as the GATEWAY system and the Albuquerque City Council acquiescence. The City is managing the homeless who are from far beyond the city’s borders. The City and the State’s unhoused numbers are getting worse and not better after spending millions.

A 2025 report by the city found 30% of individuals experiencing homelessness self-report having a serious mental illness, 25% self-report having a substance use disorder and around 66% experience some form of mental health condition. The biggest problem is that upwards of 75% of the chronic, emergency unhoused simply refuse city services, yet the city continues with spending  millions a year to benefit few.

FORM SPECIALIZED UNIT TO INITIATE MENTAL HEALTH COMMITMENTS

It is likely that the Albuquerque Police Department and the city’s Community Safety Department know who the “frequent flyers” are and who need to be taken immediately off the streets because they pose and immediate threat to themselves and others.  Both departments could and should assist the District Attorney or the City Attorney with civil mental health commitments of the unhoused and file civil mental commitment actions.

The Bernalillo County District Attorney’s Office and the Albuquerque City Attorney’ office  should form specialized unit of at least four attorneys to deal exclusively with civil mental commitment actions in the Metropolitan Court’s new Diversion Court. The state or courts would  provide  funding for  the mental health services provided by the state through the Behavioral Health Trust Fund and  the Behavioral Health Reform Package. The District Attorney should  cross deputized Assistant City Attorney’s, supported with para legals, to initiate mental health commitment to work in unison with the Bernalillo County District Attorney’s Office. Such an arrangement of cross deputization of Assistant City Attorney’s has occurred in the past with the City Attorney’s Metro Court Traffic Court arraignment program that processed at one time 60,000 cases a year negotiating plea agreements.

It is understood The Gateway Shelter on Gibson, which is the former Lovelace Medical Center and Hospital, is still largely vacant and has upwards of 200 patient rooms that are vacant. The Gateway Shelter on Gibson should be utilized for referrals by the Metropolitan Court’s “Diversion Court” with the State providing mental health services to those committed for mental health and substance abuse treatment.

CONCLUSION

With the opening of a  New Behavioral Health Clinic in the city,  and  the launching of the  Metropolitan Criminal Competency Diversion Court, the city stands a fighting change of reducing the number of unhoused on the streets and getting the mentally ill and the drug addicted the health care they so desperately need to turn their lives around and getting them off the streets.

 

Steven Holman Guest Opinion Column: “The City Has Taken Underhanded Efforts To Forcefully Rezone Nearly All Single Family Properties; Homeowners And Community Groups Will Have No Recourse To Prevent Harmful Zoning; Property Taxes Can Be Raised”; Dinelli Commentary: “Only Developers And Investors Can Afford Upzoning Construction!”

With the re-election of Mayor Tim Keller and a new Albuquerque City Council, there is a major controversy emerging within the city and on the Albuquerque City Council involving Mayor Tim Keller, his Planning Department and a few members of the Albuquerque City Council who want to enact blanket amendments to the city’s zoning laws known as the Integrated Development Ordinance (IDO). The IDO changes will mandate “upzoning” of all existing residential properties to the determent of residential property owners who will have no rights to contest or appeal the upgrading. Mayor Keller and City Councilor Tammy Fiebelkorn in particular argue mandated rezoning laws will address what they proclaim to be the city’s “affordable” housing crisis.

What is very disturbing is that overt efforts by organizations and supporters of upzoning are going to great lengths to disparage and attempt to discredit critics of upzoning amendments to the city zoning laws. They go to great lengths to try and influence and counter neighborhood association positions in opposition to upzoning. They have even undertaken to suppress opinions with censorship on social media outlets such as “NEXTDOOR.com” by having the neighborhood app. posts deleted. Consequently,  guest opinion columns in opposition to upzoning have been encouraged and submitted on the issue upzoning for publication on www.PeteDinelli.com.

HOLMAN GUEST OPINION  COLUMN

Steven Holman is a resident of City Council District 7 which the mid heights city council district. The district includes the uptown retail business district including the Commons, Winrock and Coronado Shopping Center. The District boundaries are generally Montgomery Boulevard on the North, I-25 on the West, Lomas on the South and Eubank on the East.

Steven and his husband Jesus decided to permanently set their roots in Albuquerque in 2023 and purchased their first home in the Bel-Air neighborhood. Their first home itself is a small 75 year old adobe-style home to which they’ve been making upgrades and repairs when they can afford them. They are both everyday working-class citizens who have overcome obstacles like poverty and homelessness to achieve their home ownership.

Steven is a strong believer in accountability in government, having been involved in progressive marches in Washington DC against the Iraq War, for Women’s reproductive rights, for Marriage Equality, and with the Occupy and BLM Movements. In writing this piece Steven and Jesus want the voices of local communities and their advocates to not be suppressed or silenced.

Steven Holman submitted the below guest column to be published on www.PeteDinelli.com. He was not compensated for it and his column is being published “free of charge” as a public service.

“The City Has Taken Underhanded Efforts To Forcefully Rezone Nearly All Single Family Properties; Homeowners And Community Groups Will Have No Recourse To Prevent Harmful Zoning; Property Taxes Can Be Raised”

BY: Steven Holman, Albuquerque Home Owner

The City Council agenda for 2026 is stacked with major amendments to the Integrated Development Ordinance (IDO) to allow “Upzoning.” What is harmful is that the City’s Planning Department with the Environmental Planning Commission have covertly slipped massive changes into their recommended IDO amendments sent to the City Council AFTER public notice, AFTER the ability to comment and AFTER their recommendations were officially documented in hearings.

The proposed changes if passed by the City Council would eliminate nearly all existing Single Family Zoning City-Wide and could allow for major property tax increases as a consequence.

THE UNDERHANDED ACTIONS OF THE PLANNING DEPARTMENT FAVORING DEVELOPERS

The Integrated Development Ordinance (IDO) is the city’s zoning laws. This document allows for amendments every two years. First they are voted upon by the Environmental Planning Commission (EPC), then must past the City Council Land Use Planning and Zoning Committee (LUPZ) before a final vote by the full 9-member City Council.

At the final Environmental Planning Commission (EPC) hearing on November 20, 2025, there were two small word changes to “ R-1 Single Family Zoning” contained in the amendments, but no change to the zoning outright.  Nothing was verbally addressed during the meeting either. No major changes were noted in the EPC’s written notice of final recommendations or in official documentation, in fact it still refers  to R-1 Single Family Zoning districts.

However, in the December EPC recommendations to City Council, there is now new language changing the R-1 Residential Single Family Zone District to R-L Residential Low Density. These changes accommodate the increased density of duplexes, triplexes, townhomes, and other housing options. The change in the amendment forces rezoning of most if not all Single Family properties across the entire City.

Two major points on this forced attempt at re-zoning need to be addressed as being detrimental to the public interest and existing homeowners:

  1. The city has violated its own zoning laws by not following the Integrated Development Ordinance’s required process for notice to the public and to allow public hearings for input on proposed changes.
  1. Communities and property owners would be deprived of their right to challenge harmful zoning laws and this change would favor private equity and developers in removing those rights.

When reaching out to City Planning Department, they stated the following:

“The editorial change is shown in the Post-EPC Redline, which is in transit to City Council for review and decision and posted online for public review. As the footnote explains, the change is a “ripple” of the EPC recommendation to allow duplexes and triplexes in the R-1 zone. As the 1 in R-1 signals 1 dwelling unit, the change recognizes that low-density (L) residential dwellings are allowed permissively.  City Council can introduce an amendment to reverse the editorial change or any other EPC-recommended change that is shown in the Post-EPC Redline.”

What this boils down to is that the Planning Department using their power to make small editorial changes in amendments instead decided they could just completely rewrite the entire amendment, forcing a zoning change city-wide. The excuse being given is that a City Councilor could strike it down in later hearings. The Planning Department is also attempting to justify the change by describing R-1 Single Family dwelling units as meaning single use, when city laws already allow for multiple uses in the previous legalization of Casitas.

The amendment changes make it even easier for developers and private equity investors to do what they want, where they want, and how they want because now they will not be required to apply for a zoning change and it will be a permissive use. The city would already have made the change for them, further removing the ability for residents and community organizations to have any input.

The legality of what the Planning Department has slipped through is highly suspect. The Planning Department’s actions will likely lead to a class action lawsuit against the city over the clandestine changes it is making to existing zoning laws, materially altering people’s existing property rights.

The City and the Planning Department by massively updating zoning amendments without following legal processes that require notice to the public and public hearings for input, have demonstrated their outright disrespect and disdain for communities and homeowners.

The city thought the public would not notice and would simply not care.  They were wrong. We definitely did notice.

INCREASED PROPERTY TAX IMPLICATIONS ARE A REAL DANGER

Besides forcing zoning changes on thousands of property owners city-wide, under New Mexico law the zoning changes would also remove the 3% personal property tax cap. That means properties across the city could be reassessed at market rate, which could lead to exponential tax increases for all real property owners and impacting senior citizens and low-income households the most.

The narrative from the city and other groups in allegiance with these zoning changes is that “you shouldn’t worry about your taxes going up, because they believe the Bernalillo County Assessor will simply reassess value based on property use alone.” They are asking you to simply trust that it won’t happen based on a hope, a wish, or a dream but there is absolutely NOTHING in writing as a guarantee. A recent class action lawsuit filed against the Bernalillo County Assessor by property owners, which includes former Bernalillo County District Attorney Kari Brandenberg, for wrongfully reassessing taxes proves that their interpretation is a fallacy.

There is NOTHING in legal language within the IDO amendments that could prevent Bernalillo County from reassessing properties when the 3% tax cap is removed due to these zoning changes. Since these kinds of mass zoning changes are unprecedented, the state law was never intended to address this type of situation.  As such, we need to oppose these kinds of mass zoning changes because of the dangers they present in usurping  laws that protect property owners like the 3% property tax cap.

This is also how you methodically and systematically force low-income people from their homes to gentrify communities. Low income people, especially senior citizens on fixed incomes, do not have the legal or financial resources to fight back against these kinds of decisions being forced upon their communities.

CONTINUED DISTORTIONS ABOUT HOUSING DATA AND THE ATTEMPT TO CONTROL THE NARRATIVE

Mayor Tim Keller, Councilor Tammy Fiebelkorn and the City, and various lobbying  groups declare the amount of general (not affordable) housing inventory needed varies from 55,000 units over 20 years which is based across 5 counties and on a rate of growth we aren’t experiencing, to the most recent quote of 30,000 units by 2040.  What none of them will address is how the city experiencing a reduction in population year over year actually leads to more inventory available and they are not acknowledging the city already has 125,000 to 150,000 “pre-platted” lots for residential development.

So why is there this push for “Upzoning” as a solution, when we already have the tools available to address the need?

It is because Mayor Tim  Keller and City Councilor Tammy  Fiebelkorn believe that a libertarian deregulatory free market handout to developers and private equity investors  will hopefully flood the market with a variety of densifying housing to lower costs.  Studies are beginning to prove this does little to address costs and promotes gentrification in low-income communities.

The issue with housing costs is largely due to the lack of elected officials having the backbone to regulate against price speculation, prevent the monopolization of apartment ownership by out-of-state investment companies like Greystar and end the purchasing of Single-Family Homes by real estate investment interests.

With the word getting out about the dangers of “Upzoning” and as more people contact their elected representatives and more community groups speak in opposition, the city and friends of “Upzoning” have recently turned to damage control tactics in an attempt to retake control of the narrative, including disparaging those who oppose upzoning.. Recent examples of the well scripted attempt to change perception include the following:

  1. The Journal Opinion piece by the city’s Director of Economic Development Max Gruner.
  2. The National Organization and Lobbyist group StrongTowns self-publishing about “IDO myths”
  3. The Greater Albuquerque Association of Realtors (GAAR) published piece in support of “Upzoning”.

What is blatant in these attempts to change the narrative is how they are communicating. They are DICTATING what they believe should be done instead of LISTENING to communities and their needs. What this reflects is that their only concern is compliance instead of inclusion or collaboration.

Councilor Fiebelkorn‘s own hypocrisy and irony must also be called out. She has championed “Upzoning” while lifting up the National Non-Profit Lobbyist group StrongTowns.  However, during her last campaign for re-election she declared Greater Albuquerque Association of Realtors (GAAR) as “dark money” in supporting her write in opponent. Now that StrongTowns are quoting GAAR and are ideologically aligned with them in support of “Upzoning” you would think she would disavow the “dark money” now involved in “Upzoning.”

Let’s clear the air on what these changes and proposals for “Upzoning” have on tap for Albuquerque. The changes are:

  • Forced rezoning city-wide on Single Family Homes that allows for higher property taxation, most impacting seniors and low income families.
  • Removal of community notice, input, and self-determination.
  • No guarantees against private equity/developer price speculation.
  • No mandated affordable housing of any kind.
  • No planning for water or environmental impacts.
  • No measures against monopolization of apartment and rental ownership by major investment corporations.
  • Removal of zoning restrictions that protect historic neighborhoods and sites like The Petroglyphs.
  • No adoption of Anti-Displacement measures.
  • No protection or resources for low-income tenants.
  • No impact studies to determine racial inequity.

The fact that private equity and developers see dollar signs in our neighborhoods hasn’t changed. Forcing mass rezoning simply makes it easier to build, build, build!

A CALL TO ACTION

This is a call to action and your help would be appreciated!

On Monday January 5th, the new Albuquerque City Council will be meeting for the first time and will be electing its new officers. The city council will also be  receiving all the updated amendments from the Environmental Planning Commission (EPC) and the amendments  will  be sent to the City Councils Land Use Planning and Zoning Committee. Hearings before the City Council Land Use Planning and Zoning Committee could happen as early as January 14th.

Please reach out to your city councilor and demand answers to the following questions:

  • Why wasn’t I given notice or the ability to provide comment on this newly proposed amendment changing my zoning?
  • Why is there such a lack of transparency around these changes?
  • Are you demanding an audit and the inspector general to investigate this potentially illegal amendment change?
  • These forced zoning changes remove the 3% property tax cap and could have harmful effects on the taxes of just about everyone, so why is this being quietly pushed through and do you support it?

Most importantly do not be placated by excuses. Demand accountability and demand that these toxic proposals be investigated and not be enacted.

The emails to contact all 9 City Councilors and to voice your opinions are:

bbassan@cabq.gov

joaquinbaca@cabq.gov or bacajoaquin9@gmail.com

kpena@cabq.gov

nrogers@cabq.gov or district6@cabq.gov,

tfiebelkorn@cabq.gov

dchampine@cabq.gov

rgrout@cabq.gov

danlewis@cabq.gov

stelles@cabq.gov

Below is the link to our petition against the proposed amendments:

https://www.change.org/p/stop-the-exclusionary-upzoning-of-mayor-keller-and-councilor-fiebelkorn

Respectfully yours,

Steven Holman, Albuquerque Homeowner

DINELLI COMMENTARY AND ANALYSIS

The proposed amendments to the Integrated Development Ordinance are supposed to address the city’s so called “housing crisis” and to increase affordable housing. The term affordable housing is about as misleading as it gets. It is a term often used by politicians, elected officials and developers to promote their own personal or political agendas to gain support for their positions. When the term “affordable housing” is used by the politicians, elected officials and developer’s, what they actually mean is “subsidized government housing” also known as Section 8 federal subsidized housing.

EXISTING HOMEOWNERS CANNOT AFFORD UPZONING CONSTRUCTION COST

Mayor Tim Keller, his Planning Department and City Councilor Tammy Feibelkorn want to double or triple housing density in established neighborhoods over strenuous objections from property owners and neighborhood associations. They essentially are saying they  want “upzoning  development”  by existing residential property owners to increase density and allow casita, duplex development and townhome development in virtually every established neighborhood in the city. Ostensibly, they believe existing property owners can afford to build on their own properties whether they own the home outright or if there is a mortgage.

Residential  zoning covers 27% of the city’s land and 68% of its properties. City officials have said that 68% of the city’s existing housing is single-family detached homes with 120,000 existing residential lots with already built homes. It allows only single-family homes, which city officials say has contributed to exclusionary patterns and limits housing options for lower-income households. The new rezoning process is designed to loosen those restrictions and allow to double or triple housing development in established neighborhoods.

Two years ago, the Albuquerque City Council approved amendments to the Integrated Development Ordinance (IDO)  that allows for casitas to be built on virtually all existing residential lots zoned as R-1 of upwards of 120,000 homes. The city also offered pre-approved casita architectural plans. The city’s casita development plan has been a total failure with only 14 casitas approved to be built by the City Planning Department.

Simply put, the overwhelming majority of existing homeowners cannot afford the construction costs of a free-standing casita or the conversion of their homes to a duplex or townhome. Construction costs are consistent when it comes to building an entire house or adding a free-standing casita or converting a residence to a duplex or town home. There is no real differentiation between the basic construction costs to construct “affordable housing” and other types of housing.

According to the Homebuilders Digest construction costs cover everything from materials to the actual construction.  In Albuquerque there are four basic categories of construction:

  1. A value-based custom home would start around $175 per square foot. This is a home that would have builder-grade finishes, such as ceramic tile, laminate flooring, basic cabinets, level one granite or quartz, aluminum or builder-grade vinyl windows, value series appliances, and basic plumbing and electrical fixtures.
  2.  A mid-range home would start at around $225 per square foot. Mid-range finishes would include porcelain tile, engineered wood, mid-level cabinets with soft close, level two or three granite or quartz, and a moderate budget for plumbing and electrical fixtures. It would also have premium vinyl or fiberglass windows and higher-end appliances.
  3. A high-end custom home would start at around $275 per square foot. This home would have all high-end custom finishes, fiberglass or wood windows, and professional appliances.
  4. A home with energy efficiency features would range between $200 to $400 per square foot depending on selections for mechanical systems, windows, plumbing and lighting fixtures, cabinets, appliances, flooring, and more.

The link to the relied upon or quoted source is here:

https://www.homebuilderdigest.com/cost-guides/how-much-does-it-cost-to-build-a-house-in-albuquerque/

The minimum hard construction cost to build a 750 square foot free standing casita or convert an existing residence to a duplex by adding on 750 square feet of living space at the value base cost of $175 or the mid-range cost of $225 would between $131,250 (750 square ft. X $175) or $168,750 (750 X $225). The homeowner who does not have the cash savings to pay the construction costs, a second or third mortgage on the residence would be required.

Simply put, only developers and investors who speculate will be able to double or triple density by buying up existing homes for purposes of building casitas or converting residences to a duplex or townhome.  After that is done, the profit motive will be to sell or rent at the highest level and not for affordable housing.

ZONING CHANGES WILL DESTROY NEIGHBORHOODS

Keller, Fiebelkorn and City Planning want to allow apartment development or retail business development (i.e small convenience stores or “bodegas”) on all corner residential lots in all established neighborhoods to benefit developers and to deprive adjacent property owners the right to object and appeal. Such development will no doubt result in magnets for crime and heavy traffic patterns destroying the tranquility, livability and character of established neighborhoods.

Keller and the Planning Department  erroneously believe that increased density will increase affordable housing as they simply ignore the market forces and the profit motive. They argue in essence that “flooding the market” with more housing than what is needed will result in lower cost of housing and make available more housing for sale and rent. It’s a false narrative.

The one thing Albuquerque does have is open space that can be developed. There is no need to increase density in established neighborhoods that will destroy a neighborhood’s character. Sources within the Planning Department have confirmed the city has already “pre-platted” residential development of 125,000 to 150,000 residential lots. If  Mayor Keller, Feibelkorn and City Planning want to allow “upzoning” they should do so only on undeveloped, vacant land and vacant commercial properties and leave existing neighborhoods alone.

EXISTING RESIDENTAIL PROPERTY OWNERS CAN EXPECT PROPERTTY TAX INCREASES LEADING TO GENTRIFICATION

The Bernalillo County property tax code is clear. The taxable value of a property is 33 1/3% of the assessed value as determined by the Bernalillo County Assessor. Under the property tax code, residential property assessments may NOT rise more than 3% per year unless the property changes ownership, is improved or is REZONED. (Emphasis added.)

What should be alarming to all existing residential property owners is that the Planning Department has failed to take into account how the upzoning zoning changes from R-1 to R-L they are proposing will likely change Bernalillo County’s property value assessments and tax assessments.

Rezoning all residential property from R-1 to R-L will affect the property tax cap of 3% and allow for increases in property taxes. Simply put, increasing density increases real property values for tax assessment. Government entities never resist the temptation to increase property taxes and property taxes historically never, ever come down.

The  “upzoning” agenda of the Planning Department and Mayor Tim Keller will  make gentrification an official city policy because real property taxes will soar and lower income property owners will not be able to afford the increase in property taxes and be forced to sell their properties.

One thing is clear, there is absolutely no language in the existing Integrated Development Ordinance amendments that specifically requires affordable housing. There is no language in the proposed amendments that addresses private equity and developer price speculation.

CONCLUSION

The clandestine and sinister changes to the Integrated Development Ordinance (IDO) as identified by Steven Holman in his column are an affront to the general public’s bests interest and their home ownership. The general public needs to voice their concerns loud and clear before the city is simply turned over to developers who will destroy our community and make gentrification a matter of city policy.

City voters and residents are encouraged to contact their city councilors and voice their objections to the proposed amendments and attend city council meetings.

The link to a related column is here:

Steve Holman Guest Opinion Column: “Upzoning” Changes To City Zoning Law Is Corporate Urbanization That Doesn’t Address Housing Costs”

 

Mayor Keller Appoints Deputy Chief Cecily Barker APD Interim Chief; Abq Native And First Female Appointed Interim Chief; Analysis And Commentary: Keller Expected To Announce National Search With Barker Expected To Apply To Be Made Permanent; Will Medina Be Paid To Head Up Search Committee?  

In a New Year’s Eve news release, Mayor Tim Keller announced his appointment of APD Deputy Chief Cecily Barker as Interim APD Chief. Mayor Keller made the interim appointment as the city is expected to conduct a nationwide search for a permanent replacement.

Interim Chief Barker’s appointment came the very day after former APD Chief Harold Medina officially retired and left his office downtown at the main APD headquarters. On December 30, Medina and his wife were escorted to their car by Mayor Keller.  A “celebratory retirement escort” of  APD vehicles and motorcycles with emergency lights on that disrupted traffic then escorted the Medina’s all the way to their home in Corrales.

BIOGRAPHY OF INTERIM CHIEF CECILY BARKER

Cecily Barker was born and raised in Albuquerque, New Mexico. After attending college out of state. Interim Chief Barker has an associate degree in criminal justice and a bachelor’s degree in justice administration. She is also a graduate from the Major Cities Chiefs Association Police Executive Leadership Institute and the Police Executive Training Program.

After attending college, Cecily Barker  returned to Albuquerque and joined the Albuquerque Police Department in 2004.  She is a 21 year veteran of APD who has rose through the ranks during her career at APD.

After graduating from the police academy, Barker served in the Field Services Bureau from 2004-2012. During that time, she held  collateral duties of Gang Suppression Officer, Crisis Intervention Officer and Field Training Officer.

Baker was promoted to Sergeant in 2012 where she served in the Field Services Bureau and later in the Violent Crimes Division as the FASTT, Missing Person and Cold Case Sergeant.

Baker was promoted to Lieutenant in 2017. As a Lieutenant, Cecily Barker served in the Juvenile/Property Crime Division and the Criminalistics Division.

Cecily Barker was promoted to Commander in 2020 and served as the Northwest Area Commander and later as the Chief of Staff.

In 2021, Cecily Barker was promoted to Deputy Chief of the Investigative Bureau where she lead the Criminal Investigations Division, Investigative Services Division and the Scientific Evidence Division.

In October of 2023, Deputy Chief Barker took over the Field Services Bureau where she currently oversees the departments 6 Area Commands.

As Interim Chief  Barker will oversee a police department that employs 1,880 full time employees which includes more than 950 sworn police officers and that has an annual approved budget of $271.5 million dollars. APD employs upwards of 20% of all city hall employees and has the largest budget of all the 27 departments.

The link to review APD’s 2026 approved budget is here:

Click to access fy26-approved-final.pdf

OTHER KELLER APPOINTMENTS  MADE

The Albuquerque  City Charter requires that the Mayor’s  selection and nominations of Chief Administrative Officer (CAO), City Attorney, City Clerk and APD Chief and Chief of the Fire and Rescue Department all be submitted to the Albuquerque City Council for final approval.

Mayor Keller named others to a few  key positions. Keller reappointed Emily Jaramillo to serve as Chief of Albuquerque Fire Rescue.  Lauren Keefe has been  renamed interim City Attorney, and City Clerk Ethan Watson was  renamed as interim city clerk.

Mayor Keller said this of his appointments:

“We are all deeply grateful to the people who choose to serve our community and show up for Albuquerque every day. … As we move through a period of transition, we’re focused on lifting up the next wave of leaders who are ready to carry this work forward so our neighborhoods feel secure, and Albuquerque continues to move ahead. The future of City leadership is already taking shape.”

Links to quoted or relied upon news sources are here:

https://www.abqjournal.com/news/new-year-new-chief-for-albuquerque-police/2952497

https://www.koat.com/article/albuquerque-cecily-barker-police-chief-interim/69896180

https://www.kob.com/new-mexico/albuquerque-gets-new-interim-police-chief-as-top-leaders-change/

https://www.krqe.com/news/albuquerque-metro/albuquerque-mayor-names-interim-police-chief/

NATIONAL SEARCH FOR NEW CHIEF

Mayor Keller has said he will announce his future plans for APD’s new leadership after he is sworn in on January 1 to his third 4 year term as Mayor.  APD has said it is looking for a chief who is “an experienced crime-fighter, has leadership experience, has a working knowledge of the Albuquerque community and is committed to maintaining reforms and trust in the department.”

Mayor Keller must now find a person who will be his third APD Chief. The process could take months. Mayor Keller said this about the process of selecting a new chief:

“You either early on, find somebody and you really want to go with, and then it goes fast. Let’s say three months. … Or you’ve got four or five people that you like, and so you really got to vet them and interview them and get lots of input. Then it pushes it out to, like, nine months.

Mayor Keller said the long process will be all an effort to find someone who “checks every box.” That includes understanding Albuquerque and the challenges the city faces. The main priority, however, is keeping crime on a downward trend. Keller said this:

“[APD Chief Medina] started that process [of keeping crime on a downward trend] , and it has been achieved through technology, through the use of civilians, and through much stronger investigative work. So we want the new chief to be able to build on those, but also come in with some new ideas. … We know we got to look around. … It could be national, in a sense of from another city, but maybe it’s also local. You know, maybe there’s state police or someone from Las Cruces.”

COMMENTARY AND ANALYSIS

Mayor Tim Keller’s appointment of Cecily Barker as APD Interim Chief comes as absolutely no surprise to APD watchers and city hall insiders. Her appointment was 100% expected. Former APD Chief Harold Medina advocated for one of his appointed Deputy Chief’s to take his place saying “I hope that I left a strong bench for mayor to look at and choose.”

Confidential sources have confirmed that former APD Chief Harold  Medina has been grooming Deputy Chief Cecily Barker to be his replacement as Chief for some time. The same sources have said that Mayor Keller has been “champing at the bit” to appoint the first female APD Chief in the city’s history as he has done with the appointment of  Fire Chief Emily Jaramillo.

MEDINA STILL ON PAYROLL

Confidential sources are saying that former APD Chief Harold Medina will still be on the city payroll through August 2026 to allow him to continue to draw his salary and to exhaust all of his accumulated annual leave and sick leave. The practice of allowing retirees to be paid out their accumulated annual and sick leave is a very common practice and is allowed by the city personnel rules and regulations. Retiring employees are carried on city hall books on what is referred to as the “early retirement fund”.  A retiring employee is allowed to draw a salary until annual and sick leave is exhausted or be paid a single lump sum payment for the annual and sick leave. Once the leave is accrued, it is a vested property right and must be paid in full by the city. The biggest advantage to continuing on city payroll is that it applies to an employee’s “high three” years for purposes of calculating full retirement pay.

BARKER HAS NOT SAID IF SHE WILL APPLY

It has not been reported if Interim Chief Cecily Barker will apply to be permanent Chief, but it is more likely than not she will apply. Such a scenario has happened before. Mayor Keller proclaims there will be a national search for a new chief, which is identical to what he said when he fired former APD Chief Geier and eventually appointed APD Chief Harold Medina, who Keller had appointed Interim Chief. The selection process used by Keller that ultimately resulted in the appointment of Harold Medina was considered by many a politcal sham.  Once Medina applied to be appointed Chief, it was a forgone conclusion that Keller would appoint him Chief. The blunt reality is that APD sworn police and in particular the APD Union will resist anyone from outside of APD.

MEDINA’S INFLUENCE OVER MAYOR TIM KELLER

The continuing influence of APD Chief Harold Medina over Mayor Tim Keller cannot be overemphasized.  After all, Keller said “[Chief Medina is] arguably the most important person right now in these times in our city” after Medina ran a red light and caused a crash totaling both vehicles and seriously injuring another driver.  A personal injury lawsuit is still pending against Medina and the City over the car crash. Keller refused calls for Medina’s resignation over the car crash Medina caused.

Although APD Chief Harold Medina is now officially retired, Mayor Keller could appoint Medina  to chair the national search committee for his replacement and even pay him a “consulting fee” for his help in finding a replacement which something many are speculating will happen.

APD NEEDS COMPLETELY NEW LEADERSHIP AND REORGANIZATION

Simply put, APD is a train wreck. It is  top heavy with mid-management and plagued by a DWI dismissal scandal. Keller needs to appoint a new chief and not a Medina loyalist or crony.  Mayor Keller needs to  replace the entire command staff and completely reorganize the department for a new generation of leadership. APD cannot deal with the city’s high crime rates because APD’s sworn personnel is at 950.  As it stands, there are only 350 out of 950  sworn police assigned to the six area commands, broken down into 3 shifts and patrolling the streets responding the thousands of calls for service.

If the entire command staff that Chief Medina has put in place over the last 5 years is not replaced, including all the Deputy Chiefs, there is little to no chance APD will change. APD will revert back to the old ways that brought on the Department of Justice (DOJ)  consent decree that lasted for 10 years with the city paying millions of taxpayer dollars to institute constitutional policing practices.

Hope springs eternal that Mayor Tim Keller will in fact do a national search for a new APD Chief and that the search is not a political sham to replace Harold Medina and not simply meant  to appoint a Medina crony who will continue contact with him and do his bidding.

 

NM National Guard Leaves Emergency Deployment From City; Gov. MLG Blasts Mayor Keller And APD For National Guard’s Failure To Bring Down Crime; Governor As Much To Blame For  National Guard  “Lost Opportunity”  Sending Them To City In Polo Shirts Armed With Mace To Perform “Support Services”; Mayor Keller’s Former CAO Sarita Nair Engages In “Petty Pay Back” Taking Mayor Keller And APD To Task

On March 31, APD Chief Harold Medina sent a letter to Governor Michelle Lujan Grisham requesting that the National Guard be deployed to Albuquerque to assist the Albuquerque Police Department to fulfill “non-law enforcement duties” such as providing security at crime scene perimeters and transporting prisoners. Chief Medina expressed the need to keep APD officers patrolling the streets and not driving prisoners to the Metropolitan Detention Center and not provide  security at city facilities and courthouses. The National Guard would  be used for helping with document filing and organization of APD cases for prosecutors, operating drones and distributing food, water and aid to “vulnerable populations.” The emergency request from APD Chief Harold Medina cited rising violent juvenile crime and the fentanyl epidemic as issues that require immediate intervention.

The link to review the March 31 letter from Medina to the Governor is here:

Click to access 033125-ltr-from-medina-to-gmlg-re-national-guard-67f57cdb7dbc6.pdf

THE GOVERNOR’S EXECUTIVE ORDER

On April 9, in response to Chief Medina’s request, Governor Michelle Lujan Grisham issued her Executive Order declaring an emergency and sending 60 to 70 National Guard troops to aid the Albuquerque Police Department to help fight crime. The Executive Order directed an initial amount of up to $750,000 to be made available for the deployment of guardsmen.

The April 8 Executive Order states  in part:

 “… The emergency request from APD cites the fentanyl epidemic and rising violent juvenile crime as critical issues requiring immediate intervention. Additional support is needed to maintain momentum in addressing these challenges. … [The Executive Order is being issued] in response to ongoing public safety challenges in the city, particularly along the Central Avenue corridor and other specific areas”

In a news release announcing the order Governor Lujan Grisham said this:

“The safety of New Mexicans is my top priority. … By deploying our National Guard to support APD with essential duties, we’re ensuring that trained police officers can focus on what they do best [which is] keeping our communities safe. This partnership represents our commitment to addressing the fentanyl crisis and juvenile crime with every resource at our disposal.”

The governor’s executive order left the timeline for the National Guards presence open-ended but said they would arrive in mid-May and would address “ongoing public safety challenges in the city, particularly along the Central Avenue corridor and other specific areas.”

The governor’s office said the National Guard would  assist in the following specific areas:

  • Scene security and traffic control at critical incidents
  • Medical assistance and humanitarian efforts along Central Avenue
  • Prisoner Transport Unit assistance
  • Transit security enhancement
  • Metro Court security support
  • Aviation/Sunport security assistance
  • Shield Unit case preparation support
  • APD Drone Program operational assistance

National Guard personnel were not armed nor in military uniform but wore black polo shirts and brown pants and carried pepper spray.  The National Guard have no law enforcement authority to arrest and  can not take criminal suspects into custody.

Up to 125 National Guard personnel worked with the APD since June with the total cost going from $750,000 to upwards of $7 million with deployment paid for by the state. The operation made national headlines, in part as a major contrast to President Trump’s  controversial decision to send uniformed National Guard troops to Democrat controlled U.S. cities to fight crime. National Guard troops deployed to those cities by Trump have been armed and in full military uniform.

On December 20, a full six months after the Executive Order was issued, and  $7 million spent, it was  announced that the New Mexico National Guard was leaving its “emergency” deployment with the Albuquerque Police Department. The departure of the National Guard came with absolutely no fanfare. However, the National Guards departure did come after city and state officials argued over a few months over the deployment and whether the National Guards mission was even a success.

NOT THE FIRST TIME

Deploying the National Guard was not the first time Governor Lujan Grisham has declared an emergency over crime in the city and dispatched reinforcements to Albuquerque’s streets. However, it was the very first time she deployed the National Guard and none law enforcement personnel to help.

In 2019, Lujan Grisham dispatched dozens of New Mexico State Police officers to Albuquerque for the Metro Surge Operation after University of New Mexico baseball player Jackson Weller was fatally shot in Nob Hill. That operation came under scrutiny when many of the prosecutions fell apart because the officers, who came from all over the state, didn’t show up to hearings and cases were dismissed.

In September 2023, Lujan Grisham declared a public health emergency over gun violence, spurred by the fatal shooting of an 11-year-old boy. She ordered a firearm ban in public places in Bernalillo County, which was quickly challenged in court and blocked by a federal judge.

FUNCTION AND PURPOSE OF NEW MEXICO NATIONAL GUARD

The New Mexico Army National Guard is a part-time state-based military component that serves a dual mission. Each Guard unit serves under the command of the governor to respond to natural disasters or other state emergencies. In addition, Guard units can be activated to defend the nation when needed.

The National Guard’s main mission is  to respond to domestic emergencies and combat missions. National Guard personnel are state officers exercising state authority. The national guard does not have authority to make any law enforcement arrests and essentially engages in military or marshal law functions when necessary to restore order.

The New Mexico National Guard is the militia of the U.S. state of New Mexico. Comprising the New Mexico Army National Guard and the New Mexico Air National Guard, it is part of the National Guard of the United States, a reserve force under both state and federal jurisdiction.

https://nationalguard.com/new-mexico

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/New_Mexico_National_Guard

SCATHING CRITISISM OF MAYOR KELLER AND CITY BY FORMER KELLER CAO SARITA NAIR

On October 10, NM Development of Workforce Solutions Cabinet Secretary Sarita Nair sent a blistering email to Mayor Tim Keller and City Chief Administrative Officer Samantha Sengel highly critical of the city’s use of the National Guard. Sarita Nair was Mayor Keller’s chief administrative officer during his first term from 2017 to early 2022. The Nair email was obtained by the Albuquerque Journal. In her email, Nair complained of the city’s performance and  decried the lack of data from APD about the National Guard impact on crime.  Nair noted that after undergoing training for the assignment, National Guard personnel began work in June. Nair wrote this:

“Since that time, the National Guard has deployed significant resources, the State Police have engaged in stepped-up enforcement, and members of the Governor’s senior staff have personally engaged to try to make the operation a success. …  Early on, through reports provided by the City, the State learned that, despite some positive movement, the overall impact of the operation did not reflect the substantial investment of State resources.”

Nair referenced a meeting in July during which state officials sought to “discuss the City’s lack of commitment to the National Guard deployment”.  She wrote that Mayor Keller did not even show up to the meeting and wrote:

“Despite Mayor Keller’s unexpected absence, the meeting was productive, and our respective teams left with a renewed dedication to the mission. We agreed that a more proactive presence in the streets of the International District was paramount, whether that be through law enforcement or other personnel. The City reiterated its desire to take the lead on planning and requesting resources. Once again, this did not result in better outcomes.”

Nair wrote that at a follow-up meeting  occurred in September where state officials met with APD Chief Medina and CAO Sengel  “to discuss the lack of progress in improving the emergency conditions, particularly in the International District. The State proposed a plan to focus efforts in a more defined geographic region.”

The city and state agreed to focus on the area bounded by Louisiana on the west, Pennsylvania on the east, Zuni on the south, and Chico on the north. Nair wrote this:

“[The plan was to] saturate the small area in resources, outreach, and services, freeing up law enforcement to do their jobs. The City agreed and stated that it had already begun to use this approach.  The City stated that it already planned to have resource tents at the International District Library to provide resources to people experiencing homelessness. The group agreed that after the crime, litter, encampments, and other illicit activities were addressed in this small area, we could gradually expand the footprint of the operation.

Nair wrote in her October 10 email to Mayor Keller and CAO Sengel:

“We have no reports on whether the streets are cleaner or safer, or if 311 calls have abated. …  [Without any data] the State must rely on its own observations. … Our team regularly travels through the International District. There is not a single street in the focus area that does not have an encampment or hub of illicit activity, as well as litter and other blight … We have witnessed police cars drive past women who were passed out in the street. We have seen no increased outreach or an additional presence of proactive policing. Adding our personnel to ‘business as usual’ was never the idea of the National Guard deployment. But without City leadership, nothing more has happened.”

We are deeply concerned that International District residents will never get the safe streets they deserve if the City cannot address the problems in one quarter of one square mile, even with the investment of significant State resources. The City has simply been unable to articulate a vision for the resources it requested or to implement its side of the operation.”

CITY RESPONDS

On Friday, December 19, APD Spokesman Gilbert Gallegos responded to the Albuquerque Journal regarding Nair’s October 10 email criticisms and said this  in a statement:

“Albuquerque residents did not want a militarized presence of National Guard making arrests in the community. We utilized Guard members in a way that freed up APD officers to do proactive policing and continue the decrease in violent crime”

Gallegos provided  percentages showing that from June 1 through Dec. 15, 2025, there were 46% fewer homicides in the Southeast Area Command, compared to the same period in 2024.  As far as the deployment in June through September, Gallegos provided  the following statistics:

  • 29% increase in felony arrests
  • 39% increase in misdemeanor arrests
  • 5% decrease in property crimes within the Central Corridor
  • 10% decrease in robbery within the Central Corridor
  • 4% decrease in aggravated assaults in the Central Corridor

GOVERNOR LUJAN GRISHAM NOT SATISFIED

On Friday, December 19, Governor Lujan Grisham’s spokesperson issued a statement in response to the Albuquerque Journal questions regarding the National Guard’s deployment to the city and said this:

“The Governor appreciates members of the National Guard who answered the call to assist the Albuquerque Police Department, but she is disappointed that the mission did not achieve a sustained decrease in crime. This is partially due to lax engagement by local partners and also because New Mexico’s criminal justice system too often allows serious offenders back on the streets within days or even hours of an arrest.

The mission could have been more successful if the Keller Administration had engaged in strategy development and shown more initiative in maximizing the governor’s deployment of National Guard resources in the community. A similar mission in Rio Arriba County is having more success because of intensive collaboration and coordination [among]  elected officials and law enforcement agencies to capitalize on the deployment. As for cost, the deployment [in Albuquerque] cost $7 million.”

The governor’s office said data shows more than half of those taken into custody during the operation have been released.

Despite the city’s statistics provided for the Southeast Area Command as proof that the National Guard deployment was a success, Governor Lujan Grisham said she was not satisfied. The Governor went so far as to say the city cherry-picked some statistics, stating

“Until I can drive downtown… or here… without having to stop for a fire, they are not trending in the right direction.”

Governor Lujan Grisham believes city officials missed the opportunity to collaborate with the state and county on new procedures for fighting crime and addressing the homeless crisis. The Governor said this:

“I wrote letters, that sounds passive, but that’s what we do, I put it in writing, sent a letter to Gateway, sent a letter to the mayor, I went to a meeting myself here in Albuquerque and demanded the mayor and chief of police be there.”

The Lujan Grisham emphasized the ongoing crime crisis in Albuquerque and said this:

“I’ll take every opportunity to do that but how many town halls, how many press releases how many radio interviews, how many letters? Is there someone in Albuquerque who isn’t well aware that we have a crime crisis in this city?”

Governor Lujan Grisham shared her personal experiences, witnessing theft and traffic problems, and highlighted the need for better support services for high-risk individuals. She called for an end to the cycle of blame, saying this:

“We have to get off this merry go round, everyone points fingers and to your point did you do enough? I think we did everything I know to do.”

APD CHIEF MEDINA THANKS GOVERNOR AND NATIONAL GUARD

On December 17, APD Chief Harold Medina sent a letter to National Guard Major General  Miguel Aguilar thanking the National Guard for the deployment. Chief Medina said since the arrival of the National Guard members, “crime has continued to go down significantly, making our community safer.”  Medina  wrote “APD, with the National Guard assistance, has been able to divert arrestees from jail to treatment, reducing the administrative strain on APD’s resources.”

Medina wrote in his letter to  National Guard Major General Miguel Aguilar that while the issues related to drug addiction and the unhoused persist in the Central Avenue corridor, federal drug enforcement is needed to address drug trafficking. Medina also called for the Legislature to build on the governor’s efforts to invest in drug and alcohol treatment options. Medina said  he did not see a need for continued deployment, but hoped the National Guard would help the city with humanitarian aid and shelter for the unhoused.

Responding to media  inquiries on the National Guard Deployment, Medina admitted that the rollout could have been better.  Chief Medina said this:

“I think we could have worked on communicating better with the community at the start of this and not played catch-up like we had to. But overall, I think it served a purpose of what we needed.”

Medina said the city thanked the governor for her assistance. Medina added that the issues that led to the National Guard deployment are complex and he said this:

“But did it make Central look better? No, it looks the same. We own that. We know that. But can anybody say it’s a lack of effort of law enforcement? Nobody.”

During the recent mayoral runoff  election campaign, Republican Darren White severely criticized Mayor Keller and the  city’s management of the homeless crisis. White went so far to promise to clear all  encampments “on day one”. On December 9, White lost to Keller in a landslide vote of 58% for Keller to White’s 42%  and Keller was elected to a third four year term.

Medina told the Journal that arresting unhoused individuals isn’t a panacea, especially given that not every unhoused person “needs to be in jail.”  Medina said this:

“Where they need to be is in treatment. Jail isn’t going to kick the problem. And sentences for criminal trespassing and other related misdemeanors last an average 1.4 days and then the individual is released.”

https://www.abqjournal.com/news/gov-slams-albuquerque-leaders-over-results-of-national-guard-help-police-say-crime-fell-during-deployment/2945573

https://www.kob.com/new-mexico/governor-frustrated-with-use-of-national-guard-in-albuquerque/

https://www.krqe.com/news/politics-government/governor-criticizes-albuquerques-mayor-over-usage-of-new-mexico-national-guard/

COMMENTARY AND ANALYSIS

To be perfectly blunt, Governor Michelle Lujan Grisham bears much responsibility for the failure by the National Guard she deployed to Albuquerque to reduce crime and address violent crime.  Her Executive Order deploying the National Guard was as clear as day that the guard was deployed only for the purpose of freeing up APD Officers to concentrate on law enforcement. The National Guard was assigned only to assist in the following areas:

  • Scene security and traffic control at critical incidents
  • Medical assistance and humanitarian efforts along Central Avenue
  • Prisoner Transport Unit assistance
  • Transit security enhancement
  • Metro Court security support
  • Aviation/Sunport security assistance
  • Shield Unit case preparation support
  • APD Drone Program operational assistance

The above duties are not the normal functions of the National Guard. The Governor relegated the National Guard to perform strictly support or clerical services that in no  way could bring down crime nor address the homeless crisis along Central. The National Guard have no cross deputization giving them law enforcement powers and they could not take people in custody nor make arrests. To add insult to injury, the National Guard were not armed nor allowed to wear their military uniforms but wore black polo shirts and brown pants and carried pepper spray.

LOST OPPORTUNITY

Central Avenue starting  East from San Pedro to Eubank and which boarders in part the New Mexico State Fair grounds to the North and the International District to the South has become the “epicenter” of the city’s homeless crisis. Hundreds of homeless, and perhaps thousands over the last few years, illegally camp on the streets and open space and congregate regularly along Central Avenue and side streets and engage in illicit drug use and sales and other crimes, including violent crimes.

The homeless use the streets South and North of Central as a dumping ground for trash and debris and as outdoor latrines to relieve themselves. Businesses along Central have become magnets for the homeless and many have closed while others have spent thousands of dollars to erected fences to keep the homeless out to no avail. The city periodically does sweeps of Central and the side streets to dismantle homeless encampments. The Albuquerque Community Safety division’s outreach to the homeless in the area has failed to reduce the congregating homeless and the illegal camping on streets.

The blunt reality is that an APD Tactical Plan should have been prepared where APD along with the National Guard in full uniform and armed were deployed together with the Albuquerque Community Safety Division officers along Central from San Pedro to Wyoming, especially bordering the State Fair and in the International District.  A major “sweep” of the area  would have made a difference and would have sent a strong message to the community. The National Guard would not have had arrest authority but could have provided protective support functions to APD Officers, the Albuquerque Community Safety Division officers and assisted in ordering the unhoused to  disperse.  APD could have made legitimate arrests on outstanding warrants and perhaps felonies they found. The City’s Solid Waste Division could have also clean up the streets of debris, trash and litter.  After the Tactical Plan was complete and the sweep conducted, the National Guard could have remained stationed along central to patrol the area and prevent the homeless from congregating or returning.  

Instead of participating in legitimate law enforcement activity to respond to a domestic emergency to secure the area along Central  and protect the public the National Guard were relegated to performing clerical functions out of uniform wearing black polo shirts and brown pants and carrying pepper spray all thanks to the Governor’s executive order.

SARITA NAIR SETTLES PERSONAL SCORE WITH KELLER AND MEDINA

What is truly insulting is that Governor Lujan Grisham ostensibly dispatched Work Force Solutions Cabinet Secretary Sarita Nair to ostracize and be critical of Keller and APD. Nair essentially carried out a personal vendetta against Mayor Keller and APD for poor job performance on how the city utilized the National Guard.

It can not be ignored that Sarita Nair was Mayor  Keller’s very first Chief Administrative Officer during Keller’s entire first term from 2017 to early 2022. Before that, she worked for Keller when he was State Auditor heading up a major Division to combat waste, fraud and abuse.  There is no doubt that Sarita Nair was Keller’s closest confident and advisor. She exerted great influence over City Hall, especially over APD and then Deputy Chief Harold Medina, but did not have a very good working relationship with the Albuquerque City Council.

As Chief Administrative Officer (CAO) for the City, Nair work very closely with then Deputy Chief Harold Medina and she oversaw APD functions and budgets. It was Sarita Nair who worked with Harold Medina to orchestrate the removal of former APD Chief Michael Geier to get Medina appointed APD Chief.

After Keller was elected to a second term in 2021, the newly elected City Council  demanded that Keller re-submit the name of Sarita Nair for advise and consent as Chief Administrative Officer by the City Council. Confidential sources reported that Nair no longer had the support nor confidence of at least 5 city councilors to get confirmed. The problem was Mayor Keller declined to advocate for her re-appointment as CAO. Nair terminated her employment with Keller upset with his failure to go to her defense.

Sarita Nair is supposed to be addressing the state’s employment woes as the State’s Labor Secretary but instead was given authority to oversee the National Guard Deployment, a responsibility that should have been that of the Secretary of Homeland Security. Sarita Nair no doubt relished the opportunity to take on her former boss Mayor Tim Keller to try and embarrass him as well as Harold Medina, especially in an election year.

FINAL COMMENT

The bottom line, Governor Michell Lujan Grisham bears as much responsibility and blame as Mayor Tim Keller and APD for what can only be considered as a failed effort to get a handle on crime along Central and in the International District by use of the New Mexico National Guard. It was a $7 million dollar lost opportunity.

Gov. MLG Deploys National Guard To City At Request Of APD Chief Harold Medina To Help With Crime; National Guard Will “Wear Polo Shirts And Be Unarmed” Instead Of Uniforms; Clear Abuse Of National Guard Resources; Keller And Medina Need To Order APD Management To Get The Hell Out From Behind Their Desks An Patrol Streets Of The City And Do What Is Being Requested Of The National Guard