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Carol Harrison

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Oct 26, 1936-Aug 3, 2025

Carol June Harrison, 88, of Artesia, New Mexico passed away on August 3, 2025. She was born on October 26, 1936, to Eldon Ford Hall and Beatrice Helen (Biticker) Wilson in Santa Monica, California.

A Graveside Service will be at 10:00 am on Monday, August 11, 2025, at Woodbine Cemetery with Bobby Argo officiating. Pallbearers will be Bubba Maldonado, Tommy Harrison, Nate Smith, Orion Bustamante, Jadeth Campbell, and Buddy Harmon.

Carol enjoyed spending time at the casinos and playing bingo, where she was often very lucky. She had a love for clothes, jewelry, and butterflies. She especially enjoyed eating at Wienerschnitzel. She was a collector of all things. She enjoyed visiting thrift stores, once even finding $1,500 in the pocket of a pair of pants. She was a big fan of Elvis.

Carol is preceded by her husband, Thomas Lee Harrison; father, Eldon Hall; mother, Beatrice Wilson; daughter, Iris Lee Harrison; son, Thomas “Tommy” Adam Harrison; brother, Sonny Hall.

Those left to cherish her memory are her son, Richard “Duke” Lee Harrison (Peggy); daughters Sherrie Kerber; Diana Hobbs; Donna Maldonado; Peggy Renner; wife to Tommy, Susan Harrison; numerous grandchildren and great grandchildren.

AHS welcomes new academic year with pep rally

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Photos by Mike Smith, Artesia Daily Press

Another school year for the Artesia Public Schools started Aug. 7 as kids from all grades transitioned from summer vacation to the classroom.

At Artesia High School, students were introduced to teachers and staffers in a fun way with a pep rally.

History/science teacher Max Rodriguez dressed as a pickle, to the delight of students in attendance.

Some students blew off first day steam with a tug-of-war on the floor of the iconic Red Brick Gym on the Artesia High School campus.

Classes conclude on May 22,2026. More pictures can be found on A .

From hero to human

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Photos and story by Adrian Hedden
Artesia Daily Press
achedden@currentargus.com

National Night Out brings Carlsbad up close with first-responders

Cleo Cordova climbed inside of a Carlsbad police tactical vehicle used by its SWAT team on some of the most dangerous of missions.

But the five-year-old smiled brightly, unafraid of any dangerous criminal or tense situation unfolding.

The vehicle was parked at the Carlsbad Beach area, Saturday, Aug. 9 as part of the annual National Nigh Out event.

Hundreds of children and their parents visited the beach for the event, which allowed them to get an up-close experience with local law enforcement and first-responders.

Aside from the SWAT vehicle Cordova enjoyed, fire trucks, police cruisers and a helicopter used as an ambulance were on hand, along with officers and staff with Eddy County’s various agencies.

Loving Police Chief Michael Bird said National Night Out brings the community together to see police and firefighters outside of the intensity of their day-to-day jobs.

“When you have the community come out, you build trust,” he said. “They get to see us as human beings.”

Loving police Sgt. Trey Thompson said the public’s only interaction with police is usually on “the worst day of their life,” and National Night Out allows them to meet officers in a more positive setting.

“Most of the time when people need the police, it’s a bad situation,” he said. “This is a good situation. It’s nice for the public to see us as more than just a pair of handcuffs and a body cam.”

Ward 1 Carlsbad City Councilor Eddie Rodriguez was in attendance, and said the event humanized law enforcement and created a sense of unity with their constituents.

“It allows the community to see our police and fire departments in a different light – as human, not just superheros.”

Managing Editor Adrian Hedden can be reached at 575-628-5516, or @AdrianHedden on the social media platform X.

State confirms first human West Nile case of year

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Danielle Prokop
Source New Mexico

Health officials confirmed New Mexico’s first human case of West Nile virus Thursday, saying the Valencia County adult who contracted the virus was briefly hospitalized, but has since returned home.

West Nile is a virus spread through mosquito bites between humans, birds and horses. While several species of mosquito can spread the disease, the Culex family of mosquito, which can be found across the state, is the biggest threat. No vaccines exist for people, nor do specific treatments for the infection.

The New Mexico Department of Health previously warned of future infections after mosquitos captured in Bernalillo County tested positive for the virus in early July.

“Our first infection of the year is always a good reminder that West Nile does circulate throughout the state,”New Mexico State Public Health Veterinarian Erin Phipps told Source New Mexico.

In a news release, NMDOH said West Nile virus infection has also been confirmed in three horses in New Mexico this year: two in Lea County and one in Eddy County.

Phipps encouraged measures to reduce mosquito bites: limiting activity at dusk and dawn; wearing loose-fitting long sleeves and pants; and using insect repellent can lower individual risks. The health department recommends using Environmental Protection Agency-approved repellents that contain DEET, picaridin, IR3535 or oil of lemon eucalyptus/para-menthane-diol.

Most infections are asymptomatic, with some people experiencing a headache or mild fever, Phipps said, but about 1% of cases can cause a very severe neurological disease.

“Late summer is the time we expect to see the most West Nile infections so we’re expecting to see more in August and into September,” Phipps said.

New Mexico health officials have reported about 500 cases of West Nile since 2005, with at least one death in all but two years. New Mexico’s most severe outbreak occurred in 2023, with 80 recorded cases and eight deaths.

Reducing mosquito breeding grounds on private property is another tack, saying that any outdoor water bowls or birdbaths should be refilled at least once a week to interrupt any mosquito larvae.

“Any standing water in debris, toys, saucers under potted plants can all catch water and provide locations for mosquitos to breed,” Phipps said.

Why DEI was already dying

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Victor Davis Hanson

President Donald Trump’s executive orders banning Diversity, Equity, Inclusion (DEI)-related racial and gender preferencing have ostensibly doomed the DEI industry.

But DEI was already on its last legs. Half of all Americans no longer approve of racial, ethnic, or gender preferences.

DEI had enjoyed a surge following the death of George Floyd and the subsequent 120 days of nonstop rioting, arson, assaults, killings, and attacks on law enforcement during the summer of 2020.

In those chaotic years, DEI was seen as the answer to racial tensions.

DEI had insidiously replaced the old notion of affirmative action — a 1960s-era government remedy for historical prejudices against black Americans, from the legacy of slavery to Jim Crow segregation.

But during the Obama era, “diversity” superseded affirmative action by offering preferences to many groups well beyond black Americans.

Quite abruptly, Americans began talking in Marxist binaries.

On one side were the supposed 65-70 percent white majority “oppressors” and “victimizers” — often stereotyped as exuding “white privilege,” “white supremacy,” or even “white rage.”

They were juxtaposed to the 25-30% of “diverse” Americans, the so-called “oppressed” and “victimized.”

Yet almost immediately, contradictions and hypocrisies undermined DEI.

First, how does one define “diverse” in an increasingly multiracial, intermarried, assimilated, and integrated society?

DNA badges?

The old one-drop rule of the antebellum South?

Superficial appearance?

To establish racial or ethnic proof of being one-sixteenth, one-fourth, or one-half “non-white,” employers, corporations, and universities would have to become racially obsessed genealogists.

Yet refusing to become racial auditors also would allow racial and ethnic fraudsters — like Senator Elizabeth Warren and would-be new mayor of New York, Zohran Mamdani — to go unchecked.

Warren falsely claimed Native American heritage to leverage a Harvard professorship. Mamdani, an immigrant son of wealthy Indian immigrants from Uganda, tried to game his way into college by claiming he was an African-American.

Second, in 21st-century America, class became increasingly divergent from race.

Mamdani, who promised to tax “affluent” and “whiter” neighborhoods at higher rates, is himself the child of Indian immigrants, the most affluent ethnic group in America.

Why would the children of Barack Obama, Joy Reid, or LeBron James need any special preferences, given the multimillionaire status of their parents?

In other words, one’s superficial appearance no longer necessarily determines one’s income or wealth, nor defines their “privilege” or lack thereof.

Third, DEI is often tied to questions of “reparations.” The current white majority supposedly owes other particular groups financial or entitlement compensation for the sins of the past.

Yet in today’s multiracial and multiethnic society, in which over 50 million residents were not born in the U.S. and many have only recently arrived, what are the particular historical or past grievances that would earn anyone special treatment?

What injustices can recent arrivals from southern Mexico, South Korea, or Chad claim, as they would know little about, and have experienced firsthand nothing prior from Americans, the United States, or its history?

Is the DEI logic that when a Guatemalan steps one foot across the southern border, she is suddenly classified as a victim of white oppression and therefore entitled to preferences in hiring or employment as someone diverse or victimized?

Fourth, does the word “minority” still carry any currency?

In today’s California, the demography breaks down as 40% Latino, 34% White, 16% Asian American or Pacific Islander, 6% Black, and 3% Other — with no significant majority and whites fewer than the Latino “minority.”

Are Latinos the new de facto “majority” and “whites” just one of the four other “minorities?”

Do the other minorities, then, have grievances against Latinos, given that they are the dominant population in the state?

Fifth, when does DEI “proportional representation” apply, and when does it not?

Are whites “overrepresented” among the nation’s university faculties that are reportedly 75% white, when they comprise only about 70% of the population?

Or, are whites “underrepresented” as making up only 55% of all college students and thus in need of DEI action to bump up their numbers?

Black athletes are vastly overrepresented in lucrative and prestigious professional sports. To correct such asymmetries, should Asians and Hispanics be given mandated quotas for quarterback or point guard positions to ensure proper athletic “diversity, equity, and inclusion?”

Sixth, DEI determines good and bad prejudices, as well as correct and incorrect biases. “Affinity” segregationist graduations — black, Hispanic, Asian, and gay — are considered “affirming.”

But would a similar affinity graduation ceremony for European-Americans or Jews be considered “racist?”

Is a Latino-themed house on a California campus — that is de facto segregated — considered “enlightened,” while a European-American dorm would be condemned as incendiary?

In truth, DEI had long ago become corrupt.

It is falling apart under the weight of its own paradoxes and hypocrisies.

It is a perniciously divisive idea — unable to define who qualifies for preference or why, who is overrepresented or not, or when bias is acceptable or unjust.

And it is past time that it goes away.

(Victor Davis Hanson is a distinguished fellow of the Center for American Greatness. He is a classicist and historian at the Hoover Institution, Stanford University, and the author of “The Second World Wars: How the First Global Conflict Was Fought and Won,” from Basic Books. You can reach him by e-mailing authorvdh@gmail.com.)

Artesia Bulldogs football team hold Friday Night Lights as kids play at the Bulldog Bowl

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Eddy County hires new chief of staff

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Staff reports

The Eddy County Board of Commissioners approved the creation of a new Chief of Staff position at its July 29 meeting.

Adrienne Jones – Eddy County’s executive administrative assistant to the county manager since April of 2022 – was appointed to the post.

The Chief of Staff is an executive-level position that serves as an adviser to the county manager, overseeing processes, programs, projects, strategic initiatives and staff performance at the county manager’s direction to support the operational needs of the ounty.

County Manager Mike Gallagher noted Eddy County is a growing community with residents that demand more high-level services and a Board of County Commissioners that desire Eddy County to be a high-achieving organization.

Meeting these needs and goals requires an addition of high-level strategic “muscle” to the organization, he said. Establishing the position is part of the vommission’s bold answer to this need.

As Chief of Staff, one of Jones’ key functions will be to identify opportunities for Eddy County to optimize and innovate processes to create a more intuitive, efficient, full-service user-end experience for residents. In addition, Jones will oversee the vounty’s public information and civic engagement efforts and will serve as the department head of the executive department, which includes the county’s public information officer staff, administration staff, and IPRA administration staff.

Jones holds a master of fine arts degree – a terminal degree in the fields of art production and instruction – from Louisiana State University and has taught at the university level.

Her diverse background also imparts keen insight into the user-end experience of any service-based organization, including the universal principles of results-driven customer service.

“Adrienne is a natural fit for the chief of staff role given her breadth of experience and her relentless commitment to up-leveling the County’s organizational efficiency, internal and external communication, quality of services rendered to residents, and the employee experience within the organization,” Gallagher said.

Jones recalled experiences when her parents took and her siblings to volunteer as early as age 5 at soup kitchens during the holidays in Pittsburgh and Atlanta, and how serving those in need allowed her to breakdown the barriers between “servant and served.”

“My dad made sure we parked on the main street and entered the facility through the front door, as a way of breaking down the imagined barrier between servant and served,” she said.

“After ladling hearty bowls of soup and dispensing thick slices of still-steaming bread to guests, we each found an empty metal folding chair and joined the crowd, sharing soup and conversation.

“The value of showing up wholeheartedly in service, and the privilege of providing dignified customer service to all God’s ‘residents’ was impressed upon us from an early age. It is an example I strive to honor through my actions each day.”

Oil and gas lease sales focused on Eddy County

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Adrian Hedden

Artesia Daily Press

achedden@currentargus.com

Two sales of public land to the oil and gas industry in southeast New Mexico were planned this fall and winter as interest in the region remains high for energy companies empowered by recent policy decisions enacted under the administration of President Donald Trump.

The Permian Basin, shared by New Mexico and West Texas, is the busiest oil and gas field in the U.S., producing about half of U.S. production which was expected to grow to 13.4 million barrels of oil equivalent per day in 2025, according to the U.S. Energy Information Administration.

“Near-term growth in our projections is largely due to increased production in the Permian Basin,” read a July 11 report by the administration.

Here’s what to know about the two upcoming oil and gas land lease sales in the Permian Basin, held by the Bureau of Land Management.

November 2025 – 8,843 acres

The Bureau offered oil and gas lands for auction on 21 parcels of federal public land in New Mexico and Oklahoma for the sale planned for Nov. 6.

Of the lands offered in the sale, 4,484 acres were in Eddy County on nine parcels of land, while the bureau also included 3,838 acres in New Mexico’s northwestern San Juan Basin, spread out among San Juan, McKinley, Rio Arriba and Sandoval counties.

Another 322 acres was offered in the same sale, on four parcels of land in Oklahoma.

The November sale was formally announced Aug. 4, meaning the list of parcels offered at auction was finalized, following a scoping period when residents submitted technical comments on the lands in March, and a public comment period in May.

With the announcement of the final parcel list, the Bureau of Land Management opened its final protest period, allowing those opposed to the sale to provide their reasoning until Sept. 3 on the bureau’s website.

January 2026 – 20,479 acres

Of the 32 parcels on 20,479 acres offered in the bureau’s January 2026 sale, about 95% were in southeast New Mexico – 19,527 acres.

Of that, 94% or 18,403 acres were offered in Eddy County with 1,118 acres offered in Lea County.

The remaining 83-acre portion of the New Mexico sale was split by single parcels in Rio Arriba and Sandoval counties in northwest New Mexico, and another 120 acres were offered for lease in Oklahoma.

The Bureau of Land Management opened the public comment period for the January 2026 sale on Aug. 1, running until Sept. 2. That followed the scoping period in June.

Oil and gas ignites debate

As federal officials sought to offer more public land to the oil and gas industry, the administration of President Donald Trump also worked to rollback regulations it said were stymieing the energy industry and impacting the U.S. economy.

U.S. Environmental Protection Agency Administrator Lee Zeldin announced July 29 that his agency was repealing the 2009 “endangerment finding,” an opinion published by then-EPA administrator Lisa Jackson that listed several greenhouse gases as being known to cause health impacts and that has influenced federal environmental policy in the years since.

Zeldin, in his decision to pull back the finding said such an act would save $54 billion annually in “costly regulations” imposed on industries such as energy and transportation.

Meanwhile, the EPA opted to delay implementing another set of regulations created under the administration of former President Barack Obama specifically targeting methane emissions from the oil and gas industry.

The so-called “methane rule” required operators to retrofit existing facilities with low-emitting valves and use such technology in building new facilities.

Extending the compliance deadline to 18 months after the rule is fully implemented, the EPA said in a statement, would help “unleash” domestic energy and begin creating a more practical regulatory scheme for the industry.

“In an interim final rule, EPA is providing more realistic timelines for owners and operators of new and modified oil and natural gas sources across the country,” the statement read.

Environmental groups in New Mexico said the recent actions would endanger New Mexicans living on the “front lines” of the oil and gas industry, in Permian Basin communities such as Carlsbad and Artesia.

“Any delay in implementation is a delay in making it so that the air quality that countless people rely on daily improves,” said Antoinette Reyes of the Sierra Club Rio Grande Chapter.

But Daniel Turner, executive director of oil and gas industry advocacy group Power the Future, which frequently supports energy production interests in New Mexico, said the EPA was taking the right steps toward encouraging fuel production in the Permian Basin and other domestic regions.

“This is a long overdue and much-needed step toward undoing Obama-era rules that gave power to unelected bureaucrats so they could make sweeping decisions about America’s energy future,” Turner said.

Managing Editor Adrian Hedden can be reached at 575-628-5516, or @AdrianHedden on the social media platform X.

Trout anglers have chance at immortality

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Mike Smith
Carlsbad Current-Argus
msmith@currentargus.com

A Hall of Fame induction awaits any angler who catches five species of trout across the state, a spokesperson for the New Mexico Department of Game and Fish said.

Melissa Garnett said the New Mexico Trout Challenge mirrors two other fishing tests offered by the Department – the Bass Challenge and the New Mexico Master Angler Program.

“The New Mexico Fishing Challenges are a great way to get outdoors exploring New Mexico’s beautiful wild places,” Garnett said in an email.

To qualify for the Trout Challenge Hall of Fame featured on the New Mexico Department of Game and Fish website, Garnett said, a challenge participant must catch five types of trout: Rio Grande Cutthroat, Gila, Brown, Brook and Rainbow.

Garnett said winners receive an additional challenge coin and a certificate along with being featured in the Hall of Fame.

She said the trout challenge is a year-round contest, and last year drew visitors from 13 states.

“The really cool thing about the trout challenge is people are traveling from all over the country to complete their trout challenge,” Garnett said. “We are blessed with a beautiful and diverse wildness and encourage you to get outdoors and explore.”

Garnett said trout fishing is best in clean, cool, running water.

“Mountain streams are a good place to find trout,” she said.

What are the rules?

According to the New Mexico Department of Game and Fish website, challenge participants 12 years and older must have a current New Mexico fishing license. Licenses are not required for New Mexico resident and non-resident anglers 11 years of age or younger.

Garnett said a fishing license can be obtained online at https://onlinesales.wildlife.state.nm.us or by calling 888-248-6866. She said participants also must have a Customer Identification Number (CIN), which is assigned when an applicant for a hunting or fishing license creates an account with the Department of Game and Fish.

Once the challenge is complete, Garnett said, entrants should submit their name, email address, mailing address, fishing license number and CIN along with photos of the species caught to dgf-fishingchallenges@dgf.nm.gov.

She said entrants also must identify the bodies of water where the fish were caught.

Following is a list of record catches in the trout challenge categories.

Cutthroat Trout: Elias Mendoza, 1981, Latir Lakes, 10 pounds, 2 ounces, 24 5/8 inches

Brown Trout: C.T. Colgrove, 1946, Chama River, 20 pounds, 4 ounces, 34¼ inches

Rainbow Trout: Peter Romero, 1999, Santa Cruz Lake, 31 pounds, 12½ ounces, 33½ inches

Gila Trout: Todd Polak, 1999, Gila River, 5 pounds, 8 ounces, 20 inches

Brook Trout: Jack Campbell, 1996, Hidden Lake, 5 pounds, 21 inches

Mike Smith can be reached at 575-628-5546 extension-2361.

Yard of the Week

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For a lush and plush lawn with lots of color and texture, Todd and Laura Mays of 801 Bullock is the place to be. As third generation owners of the property, it didn’t always look like this as it has been a transformation over the course of six years. A colorful mesquite log wrapped in colorful yarn with a backdrop of giant Elephant Ears provide you with a place to swing. Salvia and Butterfly Bush border the yard between the neighbors and provide a soft lavender color and entice the pollinators. The Tiny Art Gallery posted on the corner is especially for children, (adults welcome) with a leave something, take something suggestion. So many things to see and admire and many have a story behind them.

Congratulations and Thank You for all of your hard work.