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Tag: Santa Fe

  • Home sales are heating up in these greater Houston ZIP codes – Houston Agent Magazine

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    Nearly all of the top ZIP Codes for greater Houston home sales are in the suburbs and beyond, according to the Q4 2025 ZIP Watch from the Houston Association of REALTORS®.

    The association tracked the top 10 ZIP codes with the greatest year-over-year increases in home sales and found that 77484 — Waller — was the hottest in the entire Houston metro area, with home sales increasing 102.2% compared to the fourth quarter of 2024. The typical home there had an average sales price of $310,165 and spent 55 days on the market.

    That ZIP was followed by 77532 (Crosby), where sales increased 79.1% year over year with an average sales price of $260,629; 77521 (Baytown), where sales increased 77.5% with an average sales price of $266,675; and 77554 (the west end of Galveston Island), where sales increased 52% with an average sales price of $784,120. That ZIP was one of only three on HAR’s list with an average sales price greater than the Houston metro average, reported by the association as $425,535 for the fourth quarter.

    Also on HAR’s list were 77551 (Galveston), 77065 (northwest Houston/Jersey Village), 77578 (Manvel), 77510 (Santa Fe), 77336 (Huffman) and 77316 (Montgomery).

    The top 10 hottest ZIP codes in greater Houston (Chart courtesy of HAR).

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    Emily Marek

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  • Santa Fe tackles rental rates with first-in-US minimum wage approach

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    SANTA FE, N.M. (AP) — Santa Fe has long referred to itself as “The City Different” for its distinct atmosphere and a blending of cultures that stretches back centuries. Now, it’s trying something different — something officials hope will prevent a cultural erosion as residents are priced out of their homes.

    It’s the first city in the United States to directly link wages to housing affordability, aiming to counter high rents by tying minimum wage increases to consumer prices as well as fair market rental prices.

    Many see the new ordinance as a big step forward for workers, but Mayor Alan Webber also sees it as an important tool for addressing an affordability crisis that threatens the very fabric of Santa Fe.

    “The purpose is to make a serious difference in assuring that people who work here can live here,” he said. “Santa Fe’s history and culture is really reflected in the diversity of our people. It’s that diversity that we’re trying to preserve.”

    Santa Fe is not alone. Rising rents and housing prices have squeezed households nationwide, leaving many with less income to pay for other necessities. Experts say the financial pressure on renter households has increased compared to pre-pandemic conditions.

    How the ordinance works

    Santa Fe’s minimum wage will increase to $17.50 starting in 2027. The annual increase historically has been tied to consumer prices, but going forward a new blended formula will be used to calculate the annual increase, with the Consumer Price Index making up one half and fair market rent data making up the other.

    There’s a 5% cap in case costs skyrocket, and if consumer prices or rents tank in any particular year, the minimum wage will not be reduced.

    Santa Fe first adopted a living wage in 2002. The ordinance has been expanded over the years and the mission this time was to deal with median housing prices and rental costs that were far above any other major market in New Mexico.

    University of New Mexico finance professor Reilly White presented the city with 25 years of data that showed changes in fair market rents and consumer prices. He said people earning minimum wage were falling behind.

    “It became clear that any index that was made had to be duly weighted in favor of some of this real estate side and some of the cost of living side,” White said.

    Crafting the ordinance was like threading a needle, the mayor said, explaining that the aim was to benefit workers while not overly burdening the mom-and-pop shops that are the backbone of Santa Fe’s economy.

    Who benefits

    About 9,000 workers will see a bump in wages once the ordinance kicks in. That’s about 20% of the city’s workforce.

    Diego Ortiz will be among them. The 42-year-old father has called Santa Fe home for nearly three decades, working construction jobs to support his family.

    Choosing between paying rent, buying groceries and helping his children is a constant worry. He also talked about wanting his children to be able to focus on their studies. His son is having to delay school so he can work and save money, he said.

    “If there’s economic stability where we can get a good wage with the sweat of our brow, then we’re going to be able to pay our rent, pay our bills, or get a house,” he said. “Our families will be better and that will be a big change.”

    According to the National Low Income Housing Coalition, the lowest income renters are disproportionately Black, Native American and Latino.

    “Raising the minimum wage is an important thing to do in terms of affordability. Certainly part of the problem is an income problem,” said Dan Emmanuel, a senior researcher with the coalition. But he also warned that raising wages wouldn’t address affordability for seniors or those with disabilities who are not part of the workforce but make up a large share of low-income renters.

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    Providing an income boost to a subset of the population also won’t necessarily resolve the underlying shortage of housing that’s driving up prices overall, said Issi Romem, an economist and fellow at the Terner Center for Housing Innovation at the University of California-Berkeley.

    That’s why Santa Fe officials say they’re working to permit more homes and apartment units.

    On the edge of town, leasing flags whipped in the wind Wednesday as construction crews were busy building new complexes with adjacent swaths of dirt cleared for more. Mayor Webber said the uptick in permitting already is paying off — rental prices grew by just 0.5% this year.

    Santa Fe also is counting on revenue from a so-called mansion tax, which targets home sales over $1 million, to fuel a trust fund for affordable housing projects.

    Webber said the stakes are high and the city must tackle affordability from every angle.

    “Can the people who work here afford to live here?” he asked. “Can we keep Santa Fe diverse? Can we continue to be ‘The City Different’ in spite of the economic pressures that are at work?”

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  • 2 killed in wrong-way crash on northbound I-25 near 6th Avenue

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    Two people were killed early Friday morning after a motorist driving in the wrong direction in the northbound lanes of Interstate 25 collided with another vehicle just south of 6th Avenue in Denver.

    Both motorists were pronounced dead at the scene of the crash, which was reported to police just before 3 a.m., the Denver Police Department said on social media. There were no passengers in either vehicle.

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  • Crowded race for one Santa Fe school board seat; second seat appears unopposed

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    One of the two Santa Fe school board members up for reelection appears to be on a glide path to return to office unopposed while another will face two or possibly three challengers.

    The filing deadline was Tuesday for candidates seeking to run in the Nov. 4 election. A spokesperson for the Santa Fe County Clerk’s Office, which oversees local elections, said ballots had not yet been finalized but will be in the coming days.

    Santa Fe Public Schools’ District 3, which includes essentially everything in the school district north of Agua Fría Street, appears to still be an uncontested race for board Vice President Kate Noble. While William “Bill” Adams, who according to his campaign filing lives south of Santa Fe, sought to challenge her, he was disqualified because he lives in District 2 and not 3, County Clerk Katharine Clark said Friday.

    102620ElCaminoReal_67.JPG (copy)

    Jack Lain, principal at El Camino Real Academy in 2020, gets spare laptops for students during the first day of hybrid schooling during the pandemic. Lain is running for a seat on the Santa Fe Public Schools board.

    The District 5 seat, representing a midtown area stretching from Agua Fría Street south to Interstate 25, and east along Cerrillos Road from Airport Road to St. Michael’s Drive, has summoned four contenders, although it’s possible only three of them will make the ballot.

    The three confirmed candidates are former El Camino Real Academy principal and longtime educator Jack Lain — who will appear on the ballot under his legal name Jakob Lain; Juan Blea, a writer, educator, and former city and state employee; and Lynn Gardner Heffron, who was appointed to serve in the board seat for the past year following previous board president Sascha Guinn Anderson’s departure June 2024 to study to become an Episcopal priest in Austin, Texas.

    Juan Blea

    Juan Blea, left, and his wife, Cherelle Blea.

    The fourth District 5 candidate, who might not appear on the November ballot, is Brenda Colburn, who filed her candidacy by the deadline but said she may be disqualified based on a “technicality.”

    “I was so late to the game,” she said in a phone call Friday morning. “And I didn’t know what all the rules were.”

    Colburn, a local real estate agent, said she wasn’t informed by the County Clerk’s Office when she filed that she needed to set up a candidate bank account, leaving her confused the following day when the lack of an account impeded her from finalizing her candidacy information.

    At that point it was too late for the candidate who didn’t even “plan on taking funds,” an idea she said would “keep me more honest” and one she didn’t think would be a big deal.

    “I’m not running a full-blown campaign,” she said. “It’s just for school board.”

    Despite her expectation that the lack of a candidate bank account would disqualify her, the County Clerk’s website listed her candidacy as “qualified” by Friday afternoon after appearing as “pending” in the morning.

    “The ball is in her court,” Clark wrote in a text message Friday afternoon, adding the state Secretary of State’s Office advised her to qualify candidates like Colburn that “qualify on our end.” Colburn, Clark added, had at least through the weekend to decide her “course of action.”

    As a Native Hawaiian who moved from there to New Mexico in 2017, Colburn said her last-minute decision was the product of a heated discussion with her friends about the woes of New Mexico. She called her new home a beautiful state where people suffer, children don’t receive the education they deserve, and a lack of industry and cheap housing seem to indicate things will not improve fast enough.

    Her proposal to her friends: “You go file in your county and I’ll file in mine.” Her friends did not follow through on the proposition, but she was “completely serious” about it.

    Despite what might be a failed bid, Colburn said she might consider running next time, owing to what she called corrupt public officials and conditions for youth that reminded her of a “troubled” upbringing in Hawaii without ample social support.

    “I speak this from experience because … I grew up like that,” she said. “I want to see better for my community and for this state.”

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  • Who pays to fix America’s aging dams? Cities, states and strapped owners

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    Across the United States, more than 121,000 dams quietly shape daily life by supplying water, generating hydropower and providing flood control. But according to the National Performance of Dams Program, on average about 10 dams fail each year.Sometimes these failures have devastating, even deadly consequences. Many are aging, high-hazard structures in need of costly repairs, and the Hearst Television National Investigative Unit found money is scarce and owners are often left footing the bill.Behind a locked gate and up a winding road in Santa Fe, New Mexico, is the nearly 100-year-old McClure Dam. It supplies up to half of Santa Fe’s drinking water and is owned by the city. “This is a high hazard dam,” John Del Mar said as he looked out at the dam. Del Mar is an Engineering Section Supervisor with the City of Santa Fe Water Division. “The current rated condition from the state engineer’s office is poor for this dam,” Del Mar said. “That stemmed from some analysis that was done back in 2018.”Because this dam was built 100 years ago, there’s uncertainty in how it was built, so the dam was given the rating of “poor condition.” It’s also high hazard, meaning lives and property would be at risk if it failed. “We have to manage them as a public asset, part of our utility system, and once we know of problems, we’re obligated to fix them. So that’s what sets us on the course of this kind of a repair,” Del Mar said.Del Mar said the dam could cost $20-$30 million to repair. The city of Santa Fe is already in the midst of repairing the Nichols Dam downstream as well. That project costs roughly $20 million. To fund the projects, Santa Fe is dipping into funds they have, proposing raising utility rates and tapping into state funding—options many owners don’t have.Private dam owners struggle to get repair funds Just north of Santa Fe lies Las Vegas, New Mexico. There, Storrie Lake is known to locals as a place to camp, boat and fish. But for cattle rancher Michael Quintana, the lake is more important to him.”We’re in the business of capturing as much water in our lake as we can so we can use it for agriculture purposes,” Quintana said.Quintana is one of the owners of the Storrie Lake Dam, a crucial part of the state highway.”If we were to lose our dam, it would be a huge inconvenience for people to try to get to the Northern part of the state,” Quintana said.But he recently received unfortunate news from state dam officials.”They downrated our dam. Right now, it’s in poor condition,” Quintana said.Roughly 62% of U.S. dams are privately owned, leaving many owners like Quintana responsible for repairs.”There’s a lot of fear in having that ownership for the fact that we lack a lot of ability to fund the maintenance on a dam,” Quintana said. Estimated repairs are about $75 million—far beyond what the owners can afford. Looking for outside sources, the owners are reaching out for help securing funding through sources like local lawmakers.They have sought state help and applied to FEMA’s National Dam Safety Program as well. National funding gap remains largeUsing FEMA’s online money allocation data, the Hearst Television National Investigative Unit has discovered that since 2019, New Mexico has received about $3.7 million from FEMA’s National Dam Safety Program.”Money is always limited and there is often not enough to go around,” said Sushil Chaudhary, chief of the Dam Safety Program in New Mexico.Nationwide, FEMA has allocated roughly $304 million over six years across all 50 states. The Association of State Dam Safety Officials estimated in their 2025 report that it will take $165 billion to fix the nation’s non-federal dams.Chaudhary expressed another problem he feels his department and many around the country deal with: small staff sizes. In New Mexico, 10 staff members, seven of whom are inspectors, oversee about 300 non-federal dams. They have the third-best ratio of dams to staff of any state.Nationwide, roughly 530 state dam officials monitor more than 117,000 non-federally owned dams. Inspection responsibilities fall upon the federal government for the other 3% of dams that are federally owned.Working with the Hearst Television Data Team, the National Investigative Unit found that 25% of high hazard dams have not been inspected in the past five years or do not have record of a last inspection date. A high hazard dam would cause loss of life if it were to fail.Right now, there are roughly 2,600 high hazard dams in poor or unsatisfactory condition across the country. Dams in poor condition have a safety deficiency, and dams in unsatisfactory condition require immediate or emergency repair.But that could be an undercount. The most up-to-date records gathered by the Hearst Television National Investigative Unit and Hearst Television Data Team indicate that 67% of dams don’t have a condition rating. Of those, 4,000 are high hazard dams.Chaudhary said they get behind on inspections at times because they have other responsibilities.”We also need to perform the analysis that we need for regulatory purposes,” Chaudhary said. “We cannot rely on dam owners to do the analysis all the time. So we have to do our own.”Chaudhary circled back on the statistic that about 10 dams fail every year.”If you look at that data, the failure is not slowing down. So failure will keep happening. The dams are getting older. With that, various components of the dams deteriorate. While we cannot prevent failure of the dams, we can manage risk. We can save lives. We can do things that allow us to save lives and property,” Chaudhary said.Dams near youCurious if any of these dams with late inspections are near you? The Hearst Television data team has built a tool that allows you to see all of the dams in your area and learn whether any are in unsatisfactory or poor condition. Simply search your address or town name in the box below, and the map will populate with any dams near you, their latest condition rating and when they were last inspected.This story was shot and edited by Hearst National Investigative Photojournalist Reid Bolton.PHNjcmlwdCB0eXBlPSJ0ZXh0L2phdmFzY3JpcHQiPiFmdW5jdGlvbigpeyJ1c2Ugc3RyaWN0Ijt3aW5kb3cuYWRkRXZlbnRMaXN0ZW5lcigibWVzc2FnZSIsKGZ1bmN0aW9uKGUpe2lmKHZvaWQgMCE9PWUuZGF0YVsiZGF0YXdyYXBwZXItaGVpZ2h0Il0pe3ZhciB0PWRvY3VtZW50LnF1ZXJ5U2VsZWN0b3JBbGwoImlmcmFtZSIpO2Zvcih2YXIgYSBpbiBlLmRhdGFbImRhdGF3cmFwcGVyLWhlaWdodCJdKWZvcih2YXIgcj0wO3I8dC5sZW5ndGg7cisrKXtpZih0W3JdLmNvbnRlbnRXaW5kb3c9PT1lLnNvdXJjZSl0W3JdLnN0eWxlLmhlaWdodD1lLmRhdGFbImRhdGF3cmFwcGVyLWhlaWdodCJdW2FdKyJweCJ9fX0pKX0oKTs8L3NjcmlwdD4=

    Across the United States, more than 121,000 dams quietly shape daily life by supplying water, generating hydropower and providing flood control. But according to the National Performance of Dams Program, on average about 10 dams fail each year.

    Sometimes these failures have devastating, even deadly consequences. Many are aging, high-hazard structures in need of costly repairs, and the Hearst Television National Investigative Unit found money is scarce and owners are often left footing the bill.

    Behind a locked gate and up a winding road in Santa Fe, New Mexico, is the nearly 100-year-old McClure Dam. It supplies up to half of Santa Fe’s drinking water and is owned by the city.

    “This is a high hazard dam,” John Del Mar said as he looked out at the dam.

    Del Mar is an Engineering Section Supervisor with the City of Santa Fe Water Division.

    “The current rated condition from the state engineer’s office is poor for this dam,” Del Mar said. “That stemmed from some analysis that was done back in 2018.”

    Because this dam was built 100 years ago, there’s uncertainty in how it was built, so the dam was given the rating of “poor condition.” It’s also high hazard, meaning lives and property would be at risk if it failed.

    “We have to manage them as a public asset, part of our utility system, and once we know of problems, we’re obligated to fix them. So that’s what sets us on the course of this kind of a repair,” Del Mar said.

    Del Mar said the dam could cost $20-$30 million to repair.

    The city of Santa Fe is already in the midst of repairing the Nichols Dam downstream as well. That project costs roughly $20 million. To fund the projects, Santa Fe is dipping into funds they have, proposing raising utility rates and tapping into state funding—options many owners don’t have.

    Private dam owners struggle to get repair funds

    Just north of Santa Fe lies Las Vegas, New Mexico. There, Storrie Lake is known to locals as a place to camp, boat and fish. But for cattle rancher Michael Quintana, the lake is more important to him.

    “We’re in the business of capturing as much water in our lake as we can so we can use it for agriculture purposes,” Quintana said.

    Quintana is one of the owners of the Storrie Lake Dam, a crucial part of the state highway.

    “If we were to lose our dam, it would be a huge inconvenience for people to try to get to the Northern part of the state,” Quintana said.

    But he recently received unfortunate news from state dam officials.

    “They downrated our dam. Right now, it’s in poor condition,” Quintana said.

    Roughly 62% of U.S. dams are privately owned, leaving many owners like Quintana responsible for repairs.

    “There’s a lot of fear in having that ownership for the fact that we lack a lot of ability to fund the maintenance on a dam,” Quintana said. Estimated repairs are about $75 million—far beyond what the owners can afford. Looking for outside sources, the owners are reaching out for help securing funding through sources like local lawmakers.

    They have sought state help and applied to FEMA’s National Dam Safety Program as well.

    National funding gap remains large

    Using FEMA’s online money allocation data, the Hearst Television National Investigative Unit has discovered that since 2019, New Mexico has received about $3.7 million from FEMA’s National Dam Safety Program.

    “Money is always limited and there is often not enough to go around,” said Sushil Chaudhary, chief of the Dam Safety Program in New Mexico.

    Nationwide, FEMA has allocated roughly $304 million over six years across all 50 states. The Association of State Dam Safety Officials estimated in their 2025 report that it will take $165 billion to fix the nation’s non-federal dams.

    Chaudhary expressed another problem he feels his department and many around the country deal with: small staff sizes. In New Mexico, 10 staff members, seven of whom are inspectors, oversee about 300 non-federal dams. They have the third-best ratio of dams to staff of any state.

    Nationwide, roughly 530 state dam officials monitor more than 117,000 non-federally owned dams. Inspection responsibilities fall upon the federal government for the other 3% of dams that are federally owned.

    Working with the Hearst Television Data Team, the National Investigative Unit found that 25% of high hazard dams have not been inspected in the past five years or do not have record of a last inspection date. A high hazard dam would cause loss of life if it were to fail.

    Right now, there are roughly 2,600 high hazard dams in poor or unsatisfactory condition across the country. Dams in poor condition have a safety deficiency, and dams in unsatisfactory condition require immediate or emergency repair.

    But that could be an undercount. The most up-to-date records gathered by the Hearst Television National Investigative Unit and Hearst Television Data Team indicate that 67% of dams don’t have a condition rating. Of those, 4,000 are high hazard dams.

    Chaudhary said they get behind on inspections at times because they have other responsibilities.

    “We also need to perform the analysis that we need for regulatory purposes,” Chaudhary said. “We cannot rely on dam owners to do the analysis all the time. So we have to do our own.”

    Chaudhary circled back on the statistic that about 10 dams fail every year.

    “If you look at that data, the failure is not slowing down. So failure will keep happening. The dams are getting older. With that, various components of the dams deteriorate. While we cannot prevent failure of the dams, we can manage risk. We can save lives. We can do things that allow us to save lives and property,” Chaudhary said.

    Dams near you

    Curious if any of these dams with late inspections are near you? The Hearst Television data team has built a tool that allows you to see all of the dams in your area and learn whether any are in unsatisfactory or poor condition.

    Simply search your address or town name in the box below, and the map will populate with any dams near you, their latest condition rating and when they were last inspected.

    This story was shot and edited by Hearst National Investigative Photojournalist Reid Bolton.

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  • Santa Fe County commissioners approve high-profile solar energy project near Eldorado

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    Santa Fe County commissioners have given the green light to a high-profile and controversial solar and battery energy storage facility that has divided opinion in the region and generated heated opposition in the Eldorado area.

    The commission’s 4-1 vote Tuesday to approve the Rancho Viejo Solar project is likely not the end of the story — opponents have said they plan to appeal the approval to state District Court.

    The project comes as New Mexico aims to make a shift to clean energy and away from coal and gas, and commissioners who voted to support the project cited the need to get renewable energy projects online to combat climate change.

    “I think that this project is much, much, much safer than the alternative — the alternative would be a 332-home development, with 332 potential fire hazards,” said Commissioner Hank Hughes, who is a resident of Eldorado and made the motion at Tuesday’s meeting to approve the proposal.

    He added, “I think this is the right decision. We are living in a climate crisis. … This is so much safer than fossil fuels.”

    The commission’s decision comes after a public hearing earlier this month that featured more than 20 hours of testimony. When the roll-call vote played out, at least one person in the audience cried out in frustration. Rancho Viejo Solar, proposed by Northern Virginia-based AES Corp., has drawn fierce opposition from residents concerned about impact on property values and the risk of fire from battery cells overheating.

    Company lauds vote

    Aiming to generate 96 megawatts of power and roughly 45 megawatts of battery storage, the project would cover 680 acres of a roughly 800-acre parcel and include a solar facility, a 1-acre collector substation, a 3-acre battery storage system and a 2.3-mile generation line about four miles east of La Cienega.

    Public Service Company of New Mexico is the intended client for the project.

    Joshua Mayer, senior development manager for AES, said in a statement the vote is “an essential step toward delivering safe, reliable, and affordable energy to the local grid as energy demand continues to rise, while directly advancing New Mexico’s clean energy goals.”

    081225_GC_]RanchoViejo02rgb.jpg (copy)

    Joshua Mayer, senior development manager for AES, listens to concerned citizens speak about on the Rancho Viejo Solar project during Day 2 of a hearing at the Santa Fe County Commission chamber earlier this month. The public hearing featured over 20 hours of testimony on the project before commissioners approved the site Tuesday.

    The county Planning Commission approved a conditional use permit for Rancho Viejo Solar earlier this year, a decision project opponents appealed to county commissioners. In an interview earlier this month, leaders with the Clean Energy Coalition of Santa Fe County, an organization that opposes the solar project and has about 2,000 members, said the group intended to appeal if the commissioners opted to uphold the Planning Commission’s decision.

    The vehement pushback has been a source of frustration for the project’s supporters, who say it could generate enough electricity to carry roughly the entire residential power load of Santa Fe and would mark a significant move in the state’s clean energy transition.

    Commissioners sound off

    Commissioner Lisa Cacari Stone was the lone member of the board to vote against Rancho Viejo Solar. In her comments ahead of the vote, she indicated she has concerns about safety, technology and about the application overall.

    Lisa Cacari Stone headshot

    Lisa Cacari Stone

    “There is the importance of the public health impact. The proximity of this large-scale project to neighborhoods and Rancho Viejo continues to create potential hazards and can be very detrimental to all those in the area,” Cacari Stone said.

    “My vote is not against solar energy,” she added. “It is against this particular proposal by AES because it does not meet — based on the evidence I’ve reviewed, written submissions and testimonies — the highest standards we owe all of our communities.”

    Commissioner Justin Greene, who is among the candidates running to be the next mayor of Santa Fe and who voted to support the project, noted some of the conditions with which AES will need to comply, including increasing the distance between battery containers in the interest of reducing fire risk.

    Justin Greene

    Justin Greene

    “We get calls for environmentalism and sustainability, and we are answering that call by creating a project and helping a project that will power Santa Fe and Santa Fe County,” Greene said.

    Some commissioners noted county officials as well as third-party technical experts recommended approval of the conditional use permit.

    “The environmental benefits of this are very important to me as an environmentalist myself and as someone with a 7-year-old child who will inherit our future,” Commissioner Adam Fulton Johnson said. “Projects like this are critical to meeting our renewable energy goals and replacing retired coal plants.”

    ‘It will go to District Court’

    Lee Zlotoff, who helms the Clean Energy Coalition of Santa Fe County, said in an interview earlier this month the organization has raised more than $50,000 and is prepared to go to court if the commissioners approve the land use permit. He noted his group is “in this for the long haul.”

    “The fight’s not over,” said Randy Coleman, the organization’s vice president, confirming Tuesday the group plans to file an appeal.

    081125_MS_AES Hearing Protest_003.JPG (copy)

    John Lee, left, and Pat Czeto stand outside with protest signs ahead of a public hearing on the Rancho Viejo Solar project in August 2025. The Clean Energy Coalition of Santa Fe County, an organization that opposes the solar project and has about 2,000 members, said the group intended to appeal if the commissioners opted to uphold the Planning Commission’s decision.

    Selma Eikelenboom, a resident of Ranchos San Marcos who lives near the project site, was unsurprised by the outcome Thursday, but said she is confident the matter will end up in court.

    An opponent of the project, she said she has spent three years studying AES’ proposal but, as a party with standing before the county commissioners, had only an hour to make her case.

    “It’s a shame, but it’s not over till the fat lady sings, as they say, and it means it will go to District Court,” Eikelenboom said.

    ‘A great precedent’

    After the meeting, Robert Cordingley, president of the nonprofit 350 Santa Fe, said the Rancho Viejo Solar hearing process can serve as a template moving forward for advocates who are pushing to get such projects approved.

    “We think this will set a great precedent and a template for future battery storage and solar farm projects, not just in Santa Fe County but in the state as a whole,” Cordingley said.

    Glenn Schiffbauer, executive director of the Santa Fe Green Chamber of Commerce, has also supported Rancho Viejo Solar through the lengthy process alongside groups like the Sierra Club’s Rio Grande Chapter.

    “It’s a good day,” Schiffbauer said. “For me and my organization, I think it was really good to see the county of Santa Fe take advantage of the opportunity that was presented to them to lead in renewable energy generation. … This was the first big one. Rather than doing nothing, which is usually the easier way, they did something, and now we have a template going forward.”

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  • New Mexico governor rescinds emergency health order that suspended gun rights in playgrounds

    New Mexico governor rescinds emergency health order that suspended gun rights in playgrounds

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    SANTA FE, N.M. (AP) — Gov. Michelle Lujan Grisham announced Wednesday that she has ended an emergency public health order that suspended the right to carry guns at public parks and playgrounds in New Mexico’s largest metro area.

    The original public health order in September 2023 ignited a furor of public protests, prompted Republican calls for the governor’s impeachment and widened divisions among top Democratic officials. It also sought to strengthen oversight of firearms sales and monitor illicit drug use at public schools through the testing of wastewater — before expiring on Saturday without renewal.

    “I have decided to allow the public health order to expire, but our fight to protect New Mexico communities from the dangers posed by guns and illegal drugs will continue,” Lujan Grisham said.

    She described strides toward reducing gun violence through gun buy-back programs, increased arrests, the distribution of free gun-storage locks and a larger inmate population at a county detention facility in Albuquerque.

    The governor’s initial order would have suspended gun-carry rights in most public places in the Albuquerque area, but was scaled back to public parks and playgrounds with an exception to ensure access to a municipal shooting range park. Lujan Grisham said she was responding to a series of shootings around the state that left children dead.

    Gun rights advocates filed an array of lawsuits and court motions aimed at blocking gun restrictions that they say would deprive Albuquerque-area residents of 2nd Amendment rights to carry in public for self-defense. The implications for pending lawsuits in federal court were unclear.

    The standoff was one of many in the wake of a 2022 U.S. Supreme Court decision expanding gun rights, as leaders in politically liberal-leaning states explore new avenues for restrictions.

    The gun restrictions were tied to a statistical threshold for violent crime that applied only to Albuquerque and the surrounding area.

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  • Special farm for sale is one-of-a-kind in New Mexico. See the ‘biodynamic’ estate

    Special farm for sale is one-of-a-kind in New Mexico. See the ‘biodynamic’ estate

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    A dynamic farm has landed on the real estate market near Santa Fe, New Mexico, and it’s a ginormous, rare opportunity to own something that no one else in the state owns.

    It’s a Demeter-certified Biodynamic organic farm, and it’s the only one in the Land of Enchantment.

    It’s listed for $16 million

    “The Abiquiu Valley Farm, north of Santa Fe, is one of New Mexico’s most significant properties,” the listing on Sotheby’s International Realty says.

    “With over 240 majestic acres along the banks of the Chama River consisting of a private riverfront bosque, fertile pastureland and natural ponds, this tranquil oasis has stunning views of the Sangre de Cristo Mountains and the Pedernal that drew O’Keeffe to the Southwest.”

    Abiquiu Valley Farm is the only Demeter-certified Biodynamic organic farm in entire state of New Mexico. Estate near Santa Fe is for sale.
    Abiquiu Valley Farm is the only Demeter-certified Biodynamic organic farm in entire state of New Mexico. Estate near Santa Fe is for sale. Mediakingsmen for Sotheby’s International Realty

    So what is a Demeter-certified Biodynamic organic farm?

    It’s a property that grows organic produce certified by Demeter USA, the oldest ecological certification organization in the world, which was named after the Greek goddess of agriculture, the Demeter USA website says.

    “(The Abiquiu Valley Farm) produces medicinal herbs, alfalfa, and other forage crops. The property benefits from solar power generation; geothermal radiant heating and cooling for all the residences; reverse-osmosis water filtration for the homes, the barns, and the paddocks; and water from wells, acequia irrigation rights, ponds, and the river,” the listing says.

    Of course, there are other special aspects of the farm too — like the glitz of having actress Marsha Mason as a former owner.

    There are 240 acres along the banks of the Chama River.
    There are 240 acres along the banks of the Chama River. Mediakingsmen for Sotheby’s International Realty

    But check out these features:

    • 6,500-square-foot primary house

    • 3,500-square-foot guest house

    • Art barn with a cathedral-style adobe

    • 10-stall Morton barn

    There is also a bosque that is considered “a birdwatcher’s paradise.”

    The listing is held by Laurie Hilton of Sotheby’s International Realty – Santa Fe Brokerage.

    The kitchen in the $6 million New Mexico listing.
    The kitchen in the $6 million New Mexico listing. Mediakingsmen for Sotheby’s International Realty

    There’s a 6,500-square-foot primary house and 3,500-square-foot guest house.
    There’s a 6,500-square-foot primary house and 3,500-square-foot guest house. Mediakingsmen for Sotheby’s International Realty

    TJ Macías is a Real-Time national sports reporter for McClatchy based out of the Dallas/Fort Worth Metroplex. Formerly, TJ covered the Dallas Mavericks and Texas Rangers beat for numerous media outlets including 24/7 Sports and Mavs Maven (Sports Illustrated). Twitter: @TayloredSiren

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    TJ Macias

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  • Alec Baldwin’s involuntary manslaughter trial begins with jury selection

    Alec Baldwin’s involuntary manslaughter trial begins with jury selection

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    Alec Baldwin’s trial in the shooting of a cinematographer begins Tuesday with the selection of jurors who will be tasked with deciding whether the actor is guilty of involuntary manslaughter.Getting chosen to serve in a trial of such a major star accused of such a major crime would be unusual even in Los Angeles or Baldwin’s hometown of New York. But it will be essentially an unheard-of experience for those who are picked as jurors in Santa Fe, New Mexico, though in recent years the state has increasingly become a hub of Hollywood production.Baldwin and his wife Hilaria arrived at the courthouse Tuesday with their youngest child, Ilaria Catalina Irena Baldwin. The couple have seven children, ranging in ages from 1 to 10.Baldwin, 66, could get up to 18 months in prison if jurors unanimously decide to convict him. The jurors are tasked with deciding whether Baldwin committed the felony when, during a rehearsal in October 2021, a revolver went off while he was pointing it at cinematographer Halyna Hutchins, killing her and wounding director Joel Souza. They were on the set of the Western film “Rust,” at Bonanza Creek Ranch some 18 miles from where the trial is being held.Baldwin has said the gun fired accidentally after he followed instructions to point it toward Hutchins, who was behind the camera. Unaware that the gun contained a live round, Baldwin said he pulled back the hammer — not the trigger — and it fired.The star of “30 Rock” and “The Hunt for Red October” made his first appearance in the courtroom on Monday, when Judge Mary Marlowe Sommer, in a significant victory for the defense, ruled at a pretrial hearing that Baldwin’s role as a co-producer on “Rust” isn’t relevant to the trial.On Tuesday, 79 people will be questioned and narrowed down. “It’s a process where both sides get to ask really specific questions of jurors,” John Day, a legal expert with sister station KOAT, said.He added, questions will come after some extensive research by both the prosecution and the defense.”Like, looked up their social media posts to see if they’ve said anything about this trial, or about guns in general, or Alec Baldwin in particular,” Day said.Candidates will also be grouped up in a 50-minute selection to ensure a faster process. Something that differed from Hannah Gutierrez-Reed’s trial. Twelve jurors and four alternates were selected in her case.”They were feeling pretty strongly that she had one job, and she didn’t do it,” Day said. “Her job was to make sure that there was no live ammunition on the set and that the guns didn’t have anything that was going to hurt someone.”That means finding the perfect juror will be key in a limited amount of time. “The ultimate juror is someone who can say, ‘I might know about the case, but I don’t have an opinion,’” Day said.However, certain ideas may be favored.For the prosecutions, the team will be looking closely at gun safety.”You’re going to want people on the jury who are familiar with gun safety issues, right?” Day said. “Who knows about gun safety, and who is going to be skeptical of somebody pointing a gun at someone without knowing what’s in it.”As for the defense, attorneys will closely look at movie set protocols.”You’re going to want people who would agree that a film is not like real life,” he said. “That if you’re an actor on a film set and someone hands you a gun and says it’s safe, there’s no reason to think otherwise.”But each side can only reject a certain number of potential jurors. “People that can kick off or they can say, ‘we’re not going to take that person for this reason,’” Day said. “It’s a process of narrowing down a large pool into a much smaller pool of jurors and alternates.”Jury selection will begin Tuesday morning at the Santa Fe County Courthouse. Opening statements are expected Wednesday.The Associated Press contributed to this report.

    Alec Baldwin’s trial in the shooting of a cinematographer begins Tuesday with the selection of jurors who will be tasked with deciding whether the actor is guilty of involuntary manslaughter.

    Getting chosen to serve in a trial of such a major star accused of such a major crime would be unusual even in Los Angeles or Baldwin’s hometown of New York. But it will be essentially an unheard-of experience for those who are picked as jurors in Santa Fe, New Mexico, though in recent years the state has increasingly become a hub of Hollywood production.

    Baldwin and his wife Hilaria arrived at the courthouse Tuesday with their youngest child, Ilaria Catalina Irena Baldwin. The couple have seven children, ranging in ages from 1 to 10.

    Baldwin, 66, could get up to 18 months in prison if jurors unanimously decide to convict him. The jurors are tasked with deciding whether Baldwin committed the felony when, during a rehearsal in October 2021, a revolver went off while he was pointing it at cinematographer Halyna Hutchins, killing her and wounding director Joel Souza. They were on the set of the Western film “Rust,” at Bonanza Creek Ranch some 18 miles from where the trial is being held.

    Baldwin has said the gun fired accidentally after he followed instructions to point it toward Hutchins, who was behind the camera. Unaware that the gun contained a live round, Baldwin said he pulled back the hammer — not the trigger — and it fired.

    The star of “30 Rock” and “The Hunt for Red October” made his first appearance in the courtroom on Monday, when Judge Mary Marlowe Sommer, in a significant victory for the defense, ruled at a pretrial hearing that Baldwin’s role as a co-producer on “Rust” isn’t relevant to the trial.

    On Tuesday, 79 people will be questioned and narrowed down.

    “It’s a process where both sides get to ask really specific questions of jurors,” John Day, a legal expert with sister station KOAT, said.

    He added, questions will come after some extensive research by both the prosecution and the defense.

    “Like, [they may have] looked up their social media posts to see if they’ve said anything about this trial, or about guns in general, or Alec Baldwin in particular,” Day said.

    Candidates will also be grouped up in a 50-minute selection to ensure a faster process.

    Something that differed from Hannah Gutierrez-Reed’s trial. Twelve jurors and four alternates were selected in her case.

    “They were feeling pretty strongly that she had one job, and she didn’t do it,” Day said. “Her job was to make sure that there was no live ammunition on the set and that the guns didn’t have anything that was going to hurt someone.”

    That means finding the perfect juror will be key in a limited amount of time.

    “The ultimate juror is someone who can say, ‘I might know about the case, but I don’t have an opinion,’” Day said.

    However, certain ideas may be favored.

    For the prosecutions, the team will be looking closely at gun safety.

    “You’re going to want people on the jury who are familiar with gun safety issues, right?” Day said. “Who knows about gun safety, and who is going to be skeptical of somebody pointing a gun at someone without knowing what’s in it.”

    As for the defense, attorneys will closely look at movie set protocols.

    “You’re going to want people who would agree that a film is not like real life,” he said. “That if you’re an actor on a film set and someone hands you a gun and says it’s safe, there’s no reason to think otherwise.”

    But each side can only reject a certain number of potential jurors.

    “People that [the teams] can kick off or [that] they can say, ‘we’re not going to take that person for this reason,’” Day said. “It’s a process of narrowing down a large pool into a much smaller pool of jurors and alternates.”

    Jury selection will begin Tuesday morning at the Santa Fe County Courthouse. Opening statements are expected Wednesday.

    The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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  • Hyundai Motor earns iF Design Awards for 10th straight year

    Hyundai Motor earns iF Design Awards for 10th straight year

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    For the 10th year in a row, Hyundai Motor Company has been awarded iF Design Award honors, this time for the brand’s IONIQ 5 N and all-new SANTA FE in the Product category, and the SANTA FE XRT Concept vehicle in the Professional Concepts class. The company also won several other iF Design Awards across a range of categories. 

    Winning multiple iF Design Awards further demonstrates Hyundai Motor’s design and technology excellence and raises its profile as an innovation leader. Achieving top honors across the world’s most respected design awards, as Hyundai has in recent years, proves its global design competitiveness.

    “We feel a tremendous sense of honor to receive acknowledgment from the iF Design Awards for these significant vehicles and innovations,” said SangYup Lee, executive vice president and head of Hyundai and Genesis Global Design. “This recognition serves as a testament to the exceptional dedication exhibited by our team of visionary designers, who poured their unwavering passion and commitment into this project, alongside our collaborative engineers at the R&D center. It highlights the remarkable competitiveness of Hyundai’s design identity within the global market.”

    Among the winners, IONIQ 5 N represents a new segment of driver-focused high-performance electric vehicles (EVs) through new technologies and elevated racetrack capability, signaling the first step in Hyundai N’s electrification strategy. It combines the standard IONIQ 5’s Electric Global Modular Platform (E-GMP) with N’s motorsport-bred technologies and leverages N’s expertise from electrified ‘Rolling Labs’ to maximize the EV’s high-performance capabilities. IONIQ 5 N has been highly praised in the media as ‘groundbreaking’, a ‘game-changer’, and the ‘benchmark’ for high-performance EVs. IONIQ 5 N also won Top Gear’s 2024 Car of the Year Award.

    Alongside the IONIQ 5 N, launched in 2023, the fifth-generation Hyundai SANTA FE enhances the mid-size SUV’s city-friendly, adventure-ready appeal with a class-leading, terrace-like living space made possible by its longer wheelbase and larger tailgate opening. The longer wheelbase also allows the new model to offer enhanced third-row seating. 

    Since its debut 23 years ago, this iconic SUV has won the hearts of millions of customers around the world. The all-new model’s bold and powerful identity – which encompasses the boundless outdoors and the urban landscape – is expected to establish an unrivaled presence in the mid-size SUV market. 

    The SANTA FE XRT Concept, which made its debut alongside SANTA FE in 2023, is designed to cater to the diverse needs of outdoor enthusiasts. The XRT Concept can handle challenging terrain with confidence and ease, offering versatile utility for outdoor lifestyles. While the SANTA FE Calligraphy trim is tailored to premium urban lifestyles, the XRT Concept is designed to ignite the ultimate adventure spirit and focuses on unleashing the desires of those seeking the thrill of the wild.

    iF Design lauded several other Hyundai Motor submissions, including N Mode: Infotainment System for High-Performance (User Interface), HMGICS Safety Management Robot (Professional Concept), HMG Driving Experience Center, Hyundai Customer Experience Center Yokohama and FIFA Museum presented by Hyundai (Interior Architecture). The company’s first heritage campaign, Hyundai Heritage: PONY Exhibition, and associated initiatives were also honored in the Communication category.

    All award-winning entries are presented on www.ifdesign.com and published in the iF Design App.

    The iF Design Awards were founded in 1954 by iF International Forum Design GmbH in Hanover, one of the world’s leading independent design institutions. Each year around 10,800 designs from 72 nations are considered for the awards, which honor and celebrate winners in 81 categories across nine disciplines: Product, Communication, Packaging, Service Design, Architecture, Interior Architecture, User Experience (UX), User Interface (UI) and Professional Concepts. To win an iF Design Award requires passing a rigorous two-stage selection process adjudicated by renowned design experts, signifying a design’s contemporary relevance and global impact.

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    Gadgets Magazine 17

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  • Weapons Supervisor In Alec Baldwin’s Fatal Movie Set Incident Found Guilty

    Weapons Supervisor In Alec Baldwin’s Fatal Movie Set Incident Found Guilty

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    ‘Rust’ weapons supervisor, Hannah Gutierrez-Reed, was found guilty of involuntary manslaughter in the Alec Baldwin movie set shooting.

    According to the Associated Press, a jury declared her responsible for the death of cinematographer Halyna Hutchins.

    As previously reported, Baldwin fired the weapon that ultimately killed Hutchins during a rehearsal. In January, he pleaded not guilty during his indictment. His trial is set to begin this July.

    RELATED: Baldwin Pleads Not Guilty To Involuntary Manslaughter Charge In ‘Rust’ Shooting

    What’s Next For Hannah Gutierrez-Reed?

    Gutierrez-Reed faced an additional charge of tampering with evidence but dodged that conviction due to insufficient proof.

    The judge ordered deputies to arrest the 26-year-old after the verdict was read. Her lawyer, Jason Bowles, said Gutierrez-Reed will appeal the court’s decisions.

    She faces up to 18 months in prison and a $5,000 fine. But Judge Mary Marlowe Somer has not set a sentencing date, per AP.

    For context, Alec Baldwin pointed a gun at Hutchins during a rehearsal for the “Rust” movie filmed in New Mexico. The firearm discharged and hit the cinematographer and director, Joel Souza. Souza survived his injuries.

    “We end exactly where we began — in the pursuit of justice for Halyna Hutchins,” prosecutor Kari Morrissey stated. “Hannah Gutierrez failed to maintain firearms safety, making a fatal accident willful and foreseeable. Never checked the rounds, to pull them out to shake them. I mean, if she’d have done that this wouldn’t have happened.”

    And What About Alec Baldwin?

    Meanwhile, Gutierrez-Reed’s defense attorney attempted to blame Baldwin solely.

    “It was not in the script for Mr. Baldwin to point the weapon. She didn’t know that Mr. Baldwin was going to do what he did,” the defense lawyer said.

    At trial, Bowles played a video outtake of Baldwin firing a revolver loaded with blanks in addition to a shot after a director says “cut.”

    The defense attorney argued, “You had a production company on a shoestring budget, an A-list actor that was really running the show. At the end, they had somebody they could all blame.” 

    Baldwin initially claimed he pulled back the hammer, but not the trigger and the gun fired. Analytics proved otherwise.

    Prosecutor Morrissey closed her arguments by describing “constant, never-ending safety failures” on the Santa Fe set and Gutierrez-Reed’s “astonishing lack of diligence” with firearm safety.

    RELATED: Alec Baldwin Says ‘Rust’ Shooting Has Cost Him Five Jobs

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    Carmen Jones

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  • A Politician Who Loved Being Courted

    A Politician Who Loved Being Courted

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    Every so often, someone asks me who my favorite politicians to write about over the years have been. I always place Bill Richardson, the longtime congressman and former governor of New Mexico, near the top of my list. I once mentioned this to Richardson himself.

    “How high on the list?” he immediately wanted to know. “Top 10? Top three? I get competitive, you know.”

    Richardson died in his sleep on Friday, at age 75. I will miss covering this man, the two-term Democratic governor, seven-term congressman, United Nations ambassador, energy secretary, crisis diplomat, occasional mischief magnet, and freelance hostage negotiator who even holds the Guinness World Record for the politician who’s shaken the most hands—13,392—in an eight-hour period.

    “Make sure you mention that Guinness World Record thing,” Richardson urged me the first time I wrote about him, in 2003. “The handshake record is important to me.”

    Why? I asked. “Because it shows that I love politics,” he replied. “And I do love politics. I love to campaign. I love parades. I don’t believe I’m pretentious. I’m very earthy.”

    But why was the fact that he loved politics important?

    “Because I’m sick of all these politicians these days who are always trying to convince you that they are not really politicians,” Richardson went on. I had noticed this phenomenon as well, and it holds up: that the slickest and most unctuous people you encounter in politics are often the ones who spend the most energy trying to convince you they hate politics and are in fact “not professional politicians.”

    “I don’t mind being called a ‘professional politician,’” Richardson added. “It’s better than being an amateur, right?”

    Richardson was an original. Born to a Mexican mother and an American businessman, he spent much of his childhood in Mexico City and identified strongly as Latino. He served as chair of the Congressional Hispanic Caucus in the 1980s and was the only Latino governor in America during his two terms in Santa Fe. Richardson spoke often about how his dual ethnic and cultural identities placed him in advantageous and sometimes awkward positions—“between worlds” (which he’d use as the title of his 2005 memoir).

    His identities also placed Richardson in big demand as probably the most prominent Latino elected official in the country at the time. He absolutely loved being in big demand, and was milking his coveted status as much as possible when I first encountered him. That September, all of the 2004 Democratic candidates for president—John Kerry, Howard Dean, John Edwards, etc.—were straining to pay respects to Richardson after a debate in Albuquerque.

    I was working for the Washington Post Style section at the time, and I found Richardson’s full-frontal “love of the game” quite winning. He was over-the-top and unabashed about the enjoyment he derived from the parade of candidates coming before him. “It’s fun to get your ring kissed,” Richardson told me that night, though he might not have said ring.

    We were walking into a post-debate reception for another candidate, Senator Joe Lieberman. Like most of the Democratic VIPs in Albuquerque that night, Lieberman was an old friend of Richardson’s; they’d worked together on the 1992 Democratic Party platform committee.

    “I wore this to curry favor with you,” Lieberman told Richardson, pointing to a New Mexico pin on his jacket. “You also saw that I spoke a little Spanish in [the debate].”

    “I thought that was Yiddish,” Richardson said. Lieberman then got everyone’s attention and offered a toast to El Jefe.

    Richardson let me ride around with him in the back of his SUV while he tried to hit post-debate receptions for all of the candidates. I noted that he’d instructed the state police driver to keep going faster and faster on Interstate 40—the vehicle hit 110 miles an hour at one point. When I mentioned the triple-digit speed in my story, it caused a bit of a controversy in New Mexico. Ralph Nader made a stink. (“If he will do this with a reporter in the car,” Nader said, according to the Associated Press, “what will they do when there’s no reporter in the car?”)

    The next time I saw Richardson, a few months later, he shook his head at me and tried to deny that the vehicle was going 110.  I held my ground.

    “Oh, whatever. Fuck it,” Richardson said. “That was fun, wasn’t it?”

    Richardson ran for president in 2008, but he quit after finishing fourth in both Iowa and New Hampshire. I had since moved on to The New York Times and used to run into him on the campaign circuit. A few weeks after he dropped out, I went down to Santa Fe to interview him about the lengths that the two remaining Democratic candidates—Barack Obama and Hillary Clinton—were going to in an attempt to win his endorsement. Another Bill Richardson primary! What could be more fun?

    “Oh, the full-court press is on like you wouldn’t believe,” he told me. The “political anthropology” of this was quite interesting too, he added. “Barack is very precise,” like a “surgical bomb,” Richardson said. “The Clintons are more like a carpet bomb.” He relished my interest in the pursuit of him.

    “I want to make it clear that I’m not annoyed by any of this,” Richardson said of the repeated overtures he was getting from the candidates and their various emissaries. I quoted him saying this in the Times, but not what I said in response to him in the moment: “No shit, governor.”

    I’ll admit that the notion of a pol who loves the game seems quite at odds with the tenor of politics today. People now routinely toss out phrases like our democracy is at stake and existential threat to America, and it’s not necessarily overheated. Fun? Not so much.

    But thinking about Richardson makes me nostalgic for campaigns and election nights that did not feel so much like political Russian roulette. Presidency or prison? Suspend the Constitution or preserve it? Let’s face it: Death threats, mug shots, insurrections, and white supremacists are supreme buzzkills.

    Richardson made it clear to me that he’d loved running for president—it was one of the best times of his life, he said—and he missed the experience of it almost as soon as he got out. But what he really wanted was, you know, the job. “I would have been a good president,” he said in Santa Fe in 2008. “I still believe that. Please put that in there, okay?”

    If nothing else, the Clinton-Obama courtship was a nice cushion for Richardson as he tried to ease back into life in the relative quiet of his governor’s office. It also, he said, might get him a gig in the next administration. Richardson was 60 at the time and said he envisioned “a few more chapters” for himself in public life. Richardson told me he would have loved to be someone’s running mate or secretary of state.

    “I’m not pining for it, and if it doesn’t happen, I’ve had a great life,” he told me. “I’m at peace with myself.”

    He wound up endorsing Obama, who, after he was elected, nominated Richardson to be his secretary of commerce—only to have Richardson withdraw over allegations of improper business dealings as governor (no charges were filed).

    Richardson devoted the last stage of his career to his work as a troubleshooting diplomat and crisis negotiator. He would speak to thugs or warlords, drop into the most treacherous sectors of the globe—North Korea, Myanmar—if he thought it might help secure the release of a hostage.  Among the many tributes to Richardson this past weekend from the highest levels (Joe Biden, Obama, the Clintons), I was struck most by the ones from some of the people who knew directly the ordeals he worked to end: the basketball star Brittney Griner and the Washington Post journalist Jason Rezaian, who called Richardson “a giant—the first giant—in American hostage diplomacy.”

    The last time I saw Richardson was a few years ago, in the pre-pandemic Donald Trump years—maybe 2018 or 2019. We had breakfast at the Hay-Adams hotel, near the White House. I remember asking him what he called himself those days, what he considered his current job title to be.

    Richardson shrugged. “‘Humanitarian,’ maybe?” he said. But he worried that it sounded pretentious.

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  • Santa Fe Contemporary Basks In Breathtaking Surroundings Of New Mexico

    Santa Fe Contemporary Basks In Breathtaking Surroundings Of New Mexico

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    Juniper and pinon trees dot the open rolling terrain. Mountaintops stretch along the far horizon. Beyond them, the setting sun leaves pink and gold traces across the darkening sky.

    This contemporary adobe set on 1.2 acres in Santa Fe, New Mexico, makes the most of privacy, views and new construction convenience. Completed in 2020, it is in the Compound at Monte Sereno, a luxury development about a 5-minute drive from downtown Santa Fe.

    The wellness and sustainable living community, with walking trails throughout, attracts second-home owners, couples and some retirees, says listing agent Mark Banham of Barker Realty. “A good mixture of all types of folks—doctors to ranchers.”

    A brick-paved courtyard with a fountain sits just through the single-level home’s entrance gates. Low walls shelter the grounds immediately surrounding the Santa Fe-style residence. The space and a second courtyard act as an expansion of the indoor living areas and include an outdoor fireplace with seating, built-in grills and multiple lounging areas.

    “Santa Fe is all about bringing the outside in,” Banham says, “since we enjoy entertaining/eating outside five-plus months out of the year.”

    Inside the more than 2,800-square-foot home, wood beam-topped living areas including an open-concept kitchen and dining space flow into one another. A raised-hearth fireplace anchors the living room.

    Large glass doors access outdoor entertainment areas and bring in views of the Sangre de Cristo Mountains, which Banham describes as “simply magical—especially known for the orange glow when the sun is setting.”

    A center island provides casual dining space in the kitchen, which is outfitted with Wolf, Sub-Zero and Miele appliances, stone counters and a built-in bar. The butler’s pantry is equipped with a wine fridge.

    Views continue in the primary suite. A corner fireplace, wood-plank floors and a closet with built-ins are among the features.

    There are two additional en-suite bedrooms, a powder room, laundry room and two-car garage.

    Other premium features of this property include plaster walls, beamed ceilings, in-floor radiant heat, refrigerated air, gated access, an oversized heated two-car garage with cabinetry, half-bath for guests, and a handsome laundry/mudroom.

    The listing price for 3104 Monte Sereno Drive is $2.7 million. Banham envisions a couple or single person buying the property as a primary or secondary home.

    “A great lock and leave given ‘The Compound at Monte Sereno’ is gated,” he says. “The only requirement to being a part of our ‘city different’ is kindness.”

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    Lauren Beale, Contributor

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  • Set Your Sights On These U.S. Luxury Properties Featuring Stunning Views

    Set Your Sights On These U.S. Luxury Properties Featuring Stunning Views

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    While a home with exceptional architecture showcases the great creative and innovative strides that humankind can achieve, a home with exceptional views showcases our limits—after all, there is perhaps no greater architect than mother nature.

    Of course, truly superlative homes are those that combine the best of human and natural designs or, as famed linguist, Mario Pei, once said, “good architecture lets nature in.”

    From the New York City skyline to the Pacific Ocean, these four luxury properties are a welcome sight.

    Santa Fe, New Mexico

    Price: $2.85 Million

    As a city perched along the foothills of the Sangre de Cristo Mountain Range, Santa Fe is well-supplied with far-reaching views. Many luxury homes in the area, like this 5,100 square foot Pueblo Revival adobe, can house unimpeded vistas from just about anywhere on the property. In true Santa Fe fashion, the Southwestern estate highlights traditional adobe elements. Coved viga ceilings, nichos and kiva fireplaces add a sense of artistry to the interior while wood columns, rounded parapets and clay-toned exterior achieve a similar natural refinement.

    Built in 2005, the two-structure estate consists of a four-bedroom main house and a two-bedroom guest house set on an 8.58-acre hilltop lot. With views that stretch from east to west, light from the famous New Mexico sunrises and sunsets blankets the property and the surrounding scenery.

    New York City

    Price: $2.15 Million

    In Manhattan, the higher up you go, the better the views, and with a 44th-floor address, this two-bedroom, two-bathroom luxury apartment certainly is a sight to behold. Located on West 42nd Street in the Orion Condominium, this Midtown residence sits just blocks away from iconic landmarks like the Empire State Building and Rockefeller Center. Floor-to-ceiling windows frame the cityscape and the Hudson River.

    An open floor plan creates an airy sense of space. As a full-service condominium, the Orion has a full-time concierge and live-in superintendent. Exclusive amenities include a fully staffed gym, three roof decks and a pool.

    Telluride, Colorado

    Price: $12.75 Million

    Thanks to Telluride’s mountainside location, you don’t have to leave downtown to get dramatic views. Set just a block-and-a-half off the main street, this redeveloped historic townhome, known as ‘The Senate,’ was first built in the late 1800s, although by the current looks of it, you would think the 5,600-square-foot residence was finished yesterday.

    Designed with surroundings in mind, the home features removable glass doors for direct sights of Box Canyon and the San Juan Mountains. Interiors were also given equal care, with luxury touches such as whitewashed Larch ceilings, French white oak floors and a two-sided Venatino marble fireplace. A spacious top-floor deck with a firepit and a hot tub showcase views of snowcapped mountains and downtown streets.

    Palos Verdes, California

    Price: $4.4 Million

    High on the hill, the views from this Palos Verdes home rival some of the best in the Greater Los Angeles area. Encompassing the bright blue waters of the Pacific Ocean, the twinkling lights of the city and San Gabriel Mountains, the vista is a triple threat not often found in the South Bay. A wraparound deck allows for easy access to the West Coast panorama.

    Covering 3,200 square feet, the Malaga Cove home has recently received numerous renovations, including full remodels of the kitchen and bathrooms. In addition to the five bedrooms, the California residence also fits an office, studio space and wine cellar. Thick wood beams along the cathedral ceilings make for a beach bungalow feel while boutique subway tile, minimalist fireplaces and hardwood floors add a touch of elegance.

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  • Special prosecutors appointed in Baldwin set shooting case

    Special prosecutors appointed in Baldwin set shooting case

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    SANTA FE, N.M. (AP) — Santa Fe’s district attorney has appointed two veteran New Mexico lawyers to serve as the new special prosecutors in the manslaughter case against Alec Baldwin and a weapons supervisor in the fatal shooting of a cinematographer during a 2021 movie rehearsal.

    The appointment of Kari Morrissey and Jason Lewis to the positions will allow District Attorney Mary Carmack-Altwies to focus on New Mexico’s “broader public safety needs,” her spokesperson Heather Brewer said in a statement Wednesday.

    The original special prosecutor, Andrea Reeb, resigned earlier in the wake of missteps in the filing of initial charges against Baldwin and objections that Reeb’s role as a state legislator created conflicting responsibilities.

    Carmack-Altwies subsequently had been preparing to appoint a new special prosecutor and also guide the complex case as co-counsel.

    But Judge Mary Marlowe Sommer said on Monday the district attorney should either lead the case on her own or turn it over entirely to another prosecutor.

    Baldwin and movie armorer Hannah Gutierrez-Reed have pleaded not guilty to charges of involuntary manslaughter in the shooting death of cinematographer Halyna Hutchins. The charges carry a maximum penalty of 18 months in prison and fines.

    Hutchins died shortly after being wounded Oct. 21, 2021, during rehearsals for the Western film “Rust” at a ranch on the outskirts of Santa Fe. Baldwin was pointing a pistol at Hutchins when the gun went off, killing her and wounding the director, Joel Souza.

    A defense attorney for Gutierrez-Reed objected to Carmack-Altwies’ earlier plans to serve as co-counsel, arguing it would be illegal under New Mexico law and fundamentally unfair to a 25-year-old defendant with limited financial resources.

    Brewer said the appointment of Morrisey and Lewis, with their “extensive experience and trial expertise, will allow the state to pursue justice for Halyna Hutchins and ensure that in New Mexico everyone is held accountable under the law.”

    A weekslong preliminary hearing in May will decide whether evidence against Baldwin and Gutierrez-Reed is sufficient to proceed to trial.

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  • $8.5 Million Santa Fe Mansion Honors New Mexico’s Classic Architecture

    $8.5 Million Santa Fe Mansion Honors New Mexico’s Classic Architecture

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    This New Mexico adobe house surrounded by national forest, pine trees and rock outcroppings takes in awe-inspiring mountain views during daylight. Once darkness settles, a field of city lights comes to life in the basin below.

    It’s a 24/7 feast for the eyes.

    Set in a gated Santa Fe neighborhood of large estates, the mansion’s 3.4-acre site ensures privacy and plenty of elbow room.

    MORE FROM FORBESInside A Carpinteria, California, Estate Set Amid An Orchard-And Limitless Guacamole

    “This home is one of the largest single-level homes in Santa Fe Summit and spans two lots,” says Ginger Clarke of Barker Realty who, with Catie Ish of the same firm, holds the listing.

    The 11,405-square-foot residence pays tribute to the vernacular architecture of the region. The classic Santa Fe style incorporates flagstone floors, stone fireplaces and viga (wood beam) and latilla (slatted wood) ceilings. Materials include polished plaster walls, stone and adobe clay.

    “The architecture and custom finishes throughout this home, honor the traditional Santa Fe style,” Clarke says.

    The house is entered through a gated forecourt. Sidelights and upper windows at both ends of the two-story entry hall bring in natural light.

    This central space opens visually to the dining room and steps down to the living room. Wall niches, another nod to the architectural roots, add visual interest.

    A high-beam ceiling tops the living room, which has a stone floor. A wide two-sided fireplace with a floating-style hearth is surrounded by a wall of stone. Wooden ceilings continue in the formal dining room.

    The large center island in the kitchen has a sink, prep space and bar seating. Topped by an arched beam ceiling, it features stainless-steel appliances. The adjacent breakfast room offers further space for casual dining.

    There are four generous-sized bedrooms, some with fireplaces, and an attached guest casita. The primary suite contains a showroom-style dressing room.

    Other amenities include an elevator, two flex rooms and a separate exercise room with a current-driven swimming pool.

    Covered lanai and space terrace with a fireplace and outdoor hot tub provide additional room for lounging or al fresco dining.

    MORE FROM FORBESVegas Colors Up To Ultra-High Luxury Homes

    The asking price for 1432 Old Sunset Trail, Santa Fe, New Mexico, is US $8.5 million. The property is about five miles from downtown Santa Fe.

    “Because this home is located in … a ‘destination city,’ the seller is likely to have buyer interest from a global market,” Clarke says. The “home may attract a family who wants to make Santa Fe the ‘hub’ for holiday family gatherings.”

    Barker Realty is an exclusive member of Forbes Global Properties, a consumer marketplace and membership network of elite brokerages selling the world’s most luxurious homes.

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  • Dream Catcher Foundation Hosts Online Charity Art Exhibition & Auction Supported by Indigenous Celebrities

    Dream Catcher Foundation Hosts Online Charity Art Exhibition & Auction Supported by Indigenous Celebrities

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    Peace Love Art: Indigenous Collective — Supporting Indigenous Contemporary Artists and Causes Throughout the U.S. and Canada

    Press Release


    Oct 31, 2022 09:00 EDT

    Dream Catcher Foundation (https://www.dreamcatcherfdn.org) is hosting the first annual Peace Love Art: Indigenous Collective – an online charity art exhibition and auction from Nov. 1 through 20, 2022. Over 110 contemporary Native American and First Nations artists throughout North America will display and auction 225 works including paintings, drawings, pottery, sculpture, jewelry, beadwork, fashion, and more. The event launches Nov. 1, 2022 at 10 a.m. EST and bidding will be open until Nov. 20, 2022 at 10 p.m. EST. The link to the event is https://PeaceLoveArt.givesmart.com.

    “We are excited to showcase and support Native and Indigenous artists and charities that are on the front line of causes that are important to Indigenous communities,” said professional cyclist and Dream Catcher Foundation co-founder Shayna Powless (Oneida Tribe of Wisconsin). Shayna’s fiancée and co-founder, Buffalo Bills Defensive Lineman Eli Ankou (Ojibwe – Dokis First Nation, Ottawa) added “Our foundation started as a way to impact and inspire Indigenous communities and youth through sports, but over the past year we expanded our platform to support other causes that are critical to Indigenous peoples.”

    Eli and Shayna recruited other well-known Native American and First Nations celebrities and leaders to expand the Dream Catcher Foundation’s platform and reach. The “Dream Catcher Council” was created and includes actress/model Ashley Callingbull (Cree First Nations), actress Alyssa Wapanatâhk (Cree), MLB Pitcher Brandon Bailey (Chickasaw), singer/actor Brooke Simpson (Haliwa-Saponi), musician Cody Coyote (Ojibwe), actor Eugene Brave Rock (Kainai Nation Blackfoot), professional volleyball player Lauren Schad (Cheyenne River Sioux), professional lacrosse player Lyle Thompson (Onondaga Nation), professional basketball player Michael Linklater (Nehiyaw/Cree), pro cyclist Neilson Powless (Cherokee & Oneida), and storyteller Sarain Fox (Anishinaabe from Batchawana First Nation).

    Eugene Brave Rock, best known for his starring role as “The Chief” in Wonder Woman is not only passionate about Indigenous art, but recognizes there are many worthy causes that are critical to Native communities, including his own passion for preserving Indigenous languages through the Oki Language Project. “Native and First Nation artists do such a great job reinforcing and preserving the culture of our various peoples” said Gene. “This event not only helps share the amazing work of talented artists, but the proceeds from any sales are shared equally among the artists and charities, including Dream Catcher Foundation, Oki Language Project, and others.”

    Dream Catcher Foundation (www.dreamcatcherfdn.org) operates under A+C Foundation (Athletes/Artists + Causes), a 501(c)(3) public charity.

    Source: Dream Catcher Foundation

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  • Governor voids territorial orders targeting Native Americans

    Governor voids territorial orders targeting Native Americans

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    ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. — New Mexico’s governor on Monday voided four pre-statehood proclamations that targeted Native Americans during what was a tumultuous time across the western frontier as federal soldiers tried to defeat Navajos, Apaches and others.

    Gov. Michelle Lujan Grisham described the 19th century proclamations by former territorial governors as offensive, saying rescinding the proclamations would help to heal old wounds and strengthen bonds with Native American communities.

    “The government of New Mexico has not always respected the importance and sovereignty of our Native American citizens, and our history is sadly stained with cruel mistreatment of Native Americans,” Lujan Grisham wrote in an executive order issued on Indigenous Peoples Day.

    Lujan Grisham, a Democrat who is running for reelection, pointed to counties within the territory that once offered bounties for scalps of Apache men and women.

    Marches, protests and celebrations were held around the U.S. to mark Indigenous Peoples Day. In New Mexico’s capital of Santa Fe, people walked with banners aimed at raising awareness about missing and slain Native Americans. Demonstrators left paint splattered on a monument of Kit Carson, who had a role in the death of hundreds of Native Americans during the colonization of the West.

    A celebration in Flagstaff, Arizona, focused on youth who talked about how Indigenous people have contributed to the community. A group of Hopi children performed a Corn Dance in front of City Hall.

    In New Mexico, the unwinding of the past proclamations was spurred by Colorado Gov. Jared Polis’ move in 2021 to rescind an 1864 order by one of that state’s territorial governors that eventually led to the Sand Creek Massacre, when U.S. troops killed more than 200 Native Americans in one of Colorado’s darkest and most fraught historic moments.

    A search for similar documents led Valerie Rangel, the city of Santa Fe’s appointed historian, to a book of newspaper clippings in the archives of the Huntington Library in California. It represented the most complete collection of New Mexico’s territorial proclamations.

    Two of the proclamations voided by Lujan Grisham were issued in 1851 by James S. Calhoun, New Mexico’s first territorial governor. They directed Native Americans to be excluded from official census counts and authorized militias to “pursue and attack any hostile tribe” that was said to be entering settlements for the purpose of plundering.

    Proclamations issued nearly two decades later by Governors Robert B. Mitchell and William A. Pile declared certain tribes as outlaws and authorized New Mexico residents to commit violence against them.

    “I started looking at the history surrounding the proclamations — was there an impact, did it really fuel hate?” said Rangel, whose roots include Apache and Navajo.

    Through her research, she found several bounties for scalping, with some counties going so far as to pay for newspaper advertisements in states beyond New Mexico to solicit people for the efforts. New Mexico became a U.S. state in January 1912.

    Rangel shared her findings with tribal and state officials. She’s among those pushing for this part of New Mexico’s history to be included in school curriculums.

    “I’d like to see more communication with tribes and have them be the source of the history that’s being learned,” she said.

    New Mexico is home to nearly two dozen tribal nations and pueblos, with Native Americans making up more than 12% of the population.

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  • Catholic School Installs Active Shooter Response System to Protect Students and Staff

    Catholic School Installs Active Shooter Response System to Protect Students and Staff

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    Press Release



    updated: Aug 10, 2018

    St. Mary Catholic School in Newton, KS has installed the SafeDefend Active Shooter Response System. Responding to recent school shooting tragedies, Principal Philip Stutey and his safety team had vetted numerous approaches to increase the security of their students and staff. After much review, the decision to adopt the SafeDefend system was an easy one. 

    The SafeDefend Active Shooter Response System was developed by a former elementary principal. As a father of three and with 475 students under his watch, Jeff Green realized that schools were not addressing the four critical areas needed to protect students and staff. Those four priorities were:

    1)      reducing law enforcement response time

    2)      ensuring law enforcement and staff had real-time crisis information

    3)      providing the ability for staff to effectively manage the crisis until help arrives

    4)      realizing the biggest threat to our schools is already inside the building

    SafeDefend utilizes multiple ways of communication in a crisis. Police and staff are immediately notified of the location of the crisis through text and email, a 911 call is placed, sirens notify all staff and visitors, and staff are provided with tools and training to survive the crisis until help arrives. Staff can utilize the tools to escape and evade, provide protection, and respond to trauma. SafeDefend is protecting students and staff in school districts across the country.

    “Traditional methods for protecting our students and staff fail us. Current and former students are the most likely threats and will be in the building. Law enforcement and staff need critical, accurate information to perform effectively.” – Jeff Green, Founder and President of SafeDefend

    Mr. Philip Stutey concurs: “SafeDefend supports our mission statement of meeting the needs of our school community spiritually, academically, emotionally and physically by providing the security needed in today’s world. Schools have safeguards against fire and weather issues but have been behind in protecting against an active intruder. No other company or product that we found offers the protection, law enforcement compatibility, empowerment of staff and peace of mind to our community like SafeDefend.”

    St. Mary Catholic School is located in Newton, KS and is part of the Wichita, KS Diocese.

    Media Contacts:

    St Mary Catholic School
    Mr. Philip Stutey, Principal
    (316) 282-1974
    pstutey@smcsnewton.org

    SafeDefend, LLC
    Jeff Green, President
    www.safedefend.com
    (913) 856-2800
    jeff@safedefend.com

    Source: SafeDefend, LLC

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