Politics / Current Events

Runoff Rule a Major Factor in ABQ Special Election

November 20, 2013

I can only assume that both Janice Arnold-Jones and Bud Shaver each wish that they had never heard the other's name.

Everything that happened in Albuquerque's special election - and I do mean everything, especially the overwhelming defeat of the carpetbaggers' anti-women/anti-choice/and-science abortion ban - came down to the District 7 run-off. Without the less-than-50% runoff rule and the city council race that fell under those terms, the vote on the Albuquerque late-term abortion ban would have been a mail-in election only...

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High Stakes, Low Turnout Elections

November 18, 2013

Local politics was overshadowed by non-stop Washington dramas this fall, but important trends emerged and decisions were made in New Mexico and the Paso del Norte borderland that will chart the identity and destiny of the region for years to come. Yet in various contests, it was a distinct minority of the electorate that shaped future courses...

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Destruction of Public Education Continues Apace

November 18, 2013

Hanna the Great met with teachers in Albuquerque last week, and guess what, they didn’t like the new step toward privatizing New Mexico education one darn bit. I wonder why. Despite objections from educators, ed. administrators throughout the state, and lawmakers on both sides of the aisle, PED says the student and teacher evaluation program is going forward at double speed. “We don’t give a tortilla for what you think.”...

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CVNM’s 2013 Conservation Scorecard: Legislative actions to protect our water were the exception

November 15, 2013

Today, we unveiled the statewide 2013 Conservation Scorecard. The Scorecard reflects the deep disagreement over the management of our state’s scarce water supplies.

As our population grows and water supplies dwindle—exacerbated by the growing effects of climate change—we must work even harder to keep the water we have clean. Sadly, the votes tell the story: legislative actions to proactively protect our water were the exception, not the rule...

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Brook’s suspension warranted but Governor’s stance hypocritical

November 14, 2013

The suspension of Albuquerque Public Schools superintendent Winston Brooks last week for disparaging tweets against state education-designate Hanna Skandera was the right thing to do, but Governor Susan Martinez’s public remarks about the matter contradict her own inaction toward a high-ranking member of her own administration for a far worse offense against a woman...

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The High Cost of Candy: Death Toll Climbs in Factory Disaster

November 14, 2013

The fatal toll from the October 24 explosion and partial building collapse at a Mexican border candy factory now stands at eight workers.  The death of Miguel Armando Reyes Castro was announced this week after the critically injured worker succumbed in a Guadalajara hospital where he had been transferred for treatment of severe burns sustained from the pre-Halloween disaster that struck the Dulces Blueberry factory hundreds of miles to the north in Ciudad Juarez.

The Blueberry plant manufactures Sunrise Confections candy products which are sold in large retail outlets in the United States for El Paso-based Mount Franklin Foods, which in turn is a subsidiary of the Elamex company.  Blueberry’s workers are not directly employed by the candy maker, instead laboring for the ELI labor sub-contracting agency...

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Health Reform In The Cross Fire

November 13, 2013

As the Federal Exchange continues to frustrate all of us, we are also seeing other aspects of the ACA surface and become the fodder of attacks and misinformation.  While some benefits started early in 2010, other, more complex changes specifically related to the infrastructure of insurance reform start now that is causing further angst.  But then, as we see, it’s easy to blame everything on the ACA...

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Whistleblower Solidarity

November 12, 2013

So what about the Veterans of our country the day after the parades and the backslaps? The country returns to business as usual where veterans take their own lives at a rate of nearly one an hour, every hour, of every day.  Since the U.S. engagement with Afghanistan in 2001 and Iraq in 2003, roughly 2.5 million service members have fought in two bloody wars, many through multiple deployments, leaving a wake of wrecked lives that ripple through every pocket of our society...

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Movement Against Standardized Tests Resurges

November 11, 2013

The national wave of resistance to standardized testing continues this week, with teachers in Chicago launching a campaign to push back against the tests they see as a "major drain on classroom time, undermine education, and stand in stark contrast to the proven student assessment tools" developed by classroom teachers...

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Across the Ethnic Divide

November 9, 2013

The headlines are all too familiar to a New Mexican: Cop shoots, kills unarmed suspect. It has happened so often in Albuquerque that the FBI is now investigating the city police department at the request of the city council. But the headlines of the past week are not from New Mexico but from a small California city 10 miles from where I have been temporarily living.

At 3:14 p.m. on Tuesday, Oct. 24, two Sonoma County sheriff’s deputies radioed that they had spotted a suspicious person. Ten seconds later, the suspect had been fatally shot...

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