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Heinrich, Lujan commit to Ruidoso flood disaster relief and preparation

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Todd Fuqua
Alamogordo News
tfuqua@elritomedia.com

RUIDOSO – Days after the most destructive flood in Ruidoso’s history, New Mexico’s U.S. Sens. Martin Heinrich and Ben Ray Lujan were given a tour of the worst-affected areas, from the Upper Canyon to Ruidoso Downs Racetrack.

The driving tour on Friday included Ruidoso Mayor Lynn Crawford, village councilors Rafael Salas, Joseph Eby, Susan Lutterman, Darren Hooker, Village Emergency Manager Eric Quellar, Village Manager Ron Sena, Lincoln County Commission Chair Mark Fischer and Lincoln County Manager Jason Burns.

Heinrich and Lujan expressed their commitment to seeing the area receive all the funding and planning it needs to recover from – and prepare for – flooding of this magnitude.

“When you see the videos that were posted, that alone was incredible, but you don’t get a sense of depth across the watershed and across the community,” Heinrich said. “To be here on the ground and see the scale of what needs to be rebuilt gives you a sense that we’re going to be in this for the long term.”

The flooding left three dead, 7-year-old Sebastian Trotter and his 4-year-old sister Charlotte Trotter, as well as an adult male identified as Benjamin Timothy Feagin. All were swept into the water from the Riverview RV Park.

The deceased children’s parents, Sebastian and Stephanie Trotter, were injured and treated in an El Paso hospital. Sebastain Trotter is a soldier stationed at Fort Bliss.

Ruidoso Village Manager Ron Sena, right, greets Senator Martin Heinrich, July 12, during a legislative tour of the flood damage in Ruidoso. Todd Fuqua | Alamogordo News

The latest damage estimates from Emergency Management indicate as many as 200 homes were damaged or destroyed by Tuesday’s flooding, with that number likely to rise as officials continue surveying the area.

Mayor Lynn Crawford told reporters at a news briefing at the Village Emergency Operations Center Wednesday that several other people were hurt badly enough that they had to be hospitalized at Lincoln County Medical Center. He said all were in stable condition Wednesday morning.

New Mexico Gov. Michelle Lujan Grisham on Thursday requested and was granted a federal disaster declaration, mobilizing resources through the Federal Emergency Management Administration for life-saving measures and immediate recovery.

Additional requests made by the governor for relief funds to pay for rebuilding homes and other properties in Ruidoso, along with temporary housing, supplies and debris removal were under review as of Friday.

The ferocity and volume of the fast-flowing current shocked even longtime residents who have lived here through many monsoon seasons and had seen the Rio Ruidoso do serious damage before.

The damage seen during Friday’s driving tour was stark. In the Upper Canyon, where spires of chimneys remain as the only remnants of homes that once stood among clear-cut hills, mud and debris had cut through the remaining structures along the river and road crews toiled to fix bridges and clear roads torn up by the violence of the deluge.

The ruins of a house along the Ruidoso River is seen in Ruidoso’s Upper Canyon, July 11. Todd Fuqua | Alamogordo News

Officials also saw the devastation at Ruidoso Downs Racetrack, where floodwaters crested at 20 feet and flooded the entire infield, track and barn area, forcing the track to close and move the remainder of its race meet to Albuquerque Downs.

Sen. Lujan said the flooding is a reminder that fires and floods go hand in hand, and that the two should be viewed as a single event.

“Looking at how FEMA (Federal Emergency Management Agency) has looked at these situations, it’s clear to see that we need to amend a chapter in the FEMA charter that combines fire and flood,” Lujan said. “It’s also a matter of years, not just one year. When the fire and flood first happens, you might get some waivers and support that first period. But then next year there’s another flood and there’s a whole other study and they treat it like it’s a different event, but this is one event, and that’s how it should be treated.”

Tuesday’s flood was the result of rains that fell on the burn scar from the 2024 South Fork fire, with the ground unable to absorb the rushing water. The flooding surpassed even last year’s devastating floods that followed the South Fork and Salt fires.

“As someone who is a former engineer,” Heinrich said, “I can see that we need laws in place to build to where we are now, not just rebuild what was there before. This watershed has changed, the climate has changed, and we need to build something that can survive the floods we’re seeing.”

Todd Fuqua is Assistant Editor for the Alamogordo News and can be reached on Instagram at @toadfox1.

Stepping up

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Photos and story by Adrian Hedden
Carlsbad Current-Argus
achedden@currentargus.com

Carlsbad’s Head Start parents offer summer events amid uncertainty for federally funded preschool

Brittany Dye looked out at the gathering of children as she turned the page in her book “Muddy Paws.”

She was reading the children’s book on the banks of the Pecos River to a group of students from Carlsbad’s Head Start preschool program administered by the Southeast New Mexico Community Action Corporation.

The program was temporarily shuttered and thrust into confusion by federal funding cuts this spring, leading to the furlough of 135 local employees between Eddy and Chaves counties on May 22, and the suspension of the preschool program many parents have come to depend on.

The nonprofit program, which relies on federal grant funding, provides preschool for 659 children at five centers in Carlsbad, Artesia, Roswell and Dexter.

In June, funds began trickling back and the organization’s executive director, Sherra Hester, said the program will likely return in August as normal with a “skeleton crew.” Enrollments were being accepted as of June 31.

“It’s a relief as far as being a parent,” Dye said. “A lot of people depend on it and early childhood education. Hopefully, everything will go back to normal.”

But Hester said the program may look “a little different” than before as she expected to operate with a smaller staff.

Head Start also may contend with new federal guidelines for diversity, equity and inclusion (DEI) practices, Hester said, which could impact how teaching practices are tailored to students from different backgrounds. The administration of President Donald Trump called on all federal agencies to end such practices or face steep financial penalties.

“The best thing is we’re bringing staff back,” Hester said. “We’re going to start cranking away on things we left a month ago. It’s hard to imagine there’s any room for waste. Every penny is counted.”

‘I was about in tears’

Hester said it was unclear how much program funding or staff levels would be reduced but she maintained that an operating budget would be in place for the program by August.

The funding reductions and furloughs came amid continuing actions by the Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE), helmed initially by billionaire Elon Musk who since stepped down from the federal government and an administration-wide effort to reduce government spending.

Cuts to the nationwide Head Start program were suggested in March by U.S. Secretary of Health and Human Services Robert F. Kennedy Jr.

In a March 27 press release by his department, Kennedy did not name Head Start specifically but said HHS would cut $1.8 billion in costs, targeting programs Kennedy labeled as “wasteful” and “inefficient.”

“Over time, bureaucracies like HHS become wasteful and inefficient even when most of their staff are dedicated and competent civil servants,” Kennedy said in the release. “This overhaul will be a win-win for taxpayers and for those that HHS serves.”

Although the connection between Head Start and HHS’s planned restructuring was murky, the release coincided with southeast New Mexico’s Head Start being placed on furlough with little explanation, Hester said.

After pressure from Congress and supporters of Head Start, Kennedy appeared to backtrack the following month and said during a May 14 congressional hearing the federal government would maintain some funding for Head Start.

In a May 17 statement, a week before Head Start workers in Carlsbad were furloughed, Kennedy said he intended to fund the program he described as crucial to educating low-income students and supporting their families.

“I am committed to protecting the promise of Head Start, as envisioned by my uncle who created the program 60 years ago …. And I will ensure that the next generation of families living in poverty have access to this vital program that offers what they need to thrive.”

Although Kennedy credited his uncle, President John F. Kennedy, with “envisioning” Head Start, the program was created as part of President Lyndon B. Johnson’s “war on poverty” in 1965, about two years after Kennedy was assassinated.

Despite the reversal, several Head Start programs across the country, including in southeast New Mexico, faced staff furloughs over the summer – and in the case of Carlsbad, restricted access to the building on San Jose Boulevard for summer programming.

In response to the cuts, Dye, 27, and a group of parents on Carlsbad’s Head Start Parents Committee began hosting events throughout the summer, including weekly story times held at the Lake Carlsbad Beach Park area in lieu of the summer preschool. The story times and other volunteer events provide “in-kind” hours used to help fund the program.

Due to inclement weather during the summer rainy season, Dye said the weekly story times – held every Thursday at 6 p.m. – were moved to the Pecos River Recreation Center. The center is owned and operated by the City of Carlsbad.

The federal government provides about 80% of the funding for Head Start, through the Department of Health and Human Services. The other 20% comes from in-kind hours, which are assigned a different dollar value each year to provide the matching funds. Dye said with the summer programs alone, the parents had generated 69 hours as of July 1.

Another $500 was earned just in direct donations from local organizations and individuals, Dye said. Little Caesars provided pizzas for the events, which Dye said attracted heavy support from the community.

“I was about in tears,” she said of the moment she heard the program might be cut. “We just had to power through it.”

What is Head Start?

Southeast New Mexico Community Action operates Head Start programs funded through the unique combination of federal dollars and volunteer hours in Carlsbad, Artesia and Roswell. Head Start programs are similarly structured across the U.S., operated through the Office of Head Start in Washington, D.C.

Since being launched in 1965, the programs have operated in every state through 1,600 agencies, according to Head Start’s website.

The preschools are intended to provide life skills to young children up to the age of four and provide a respite for many working parents. Students are trained in basics such as tying their shoes and brushing their teeth and assisted with other tasks young children can struggle with such as reading and counting.

Even more beneficial, Dye said, is the opportunity for socialization Head Start offers the children.

“The kids that come through there, they’re knowledgeable,” Dye said, referring to her 4-year-old daughter Ariyah Monroe. “She’s much more social.”

Dye is also raising her 7-year-old sister Adeline Heater, and 9-year-old son Elijah Monroe, and said that being able to ensure her youngest gets a good education at the start of her childhood was invaluable amid the chaos of raising three children.

“They’re too smart to just be sitting at home. There’s not a lot of places for them to go,” Dye said.

The debate for New Mexico’s Head Start funding entered the halls of Congress in the weeks after the cuts were proposed.

U.S. Sen. Martin Heinrich (D-NM), who said he participated in the program as a child, criticized the Trump administration for suggesting funding cuts.

Heinrich and Sen. Ben Ray Lujan (D-NM) signed an April letter to Kennedy, demanding he unfreeze Head Start funding, hire back laid-off workers and continue to support early childhood education for those in need.

“The Administration has a legal and moral obligation to disburse Head Start funds to programs and to uphold the program’s promise to provide high-quality early education services to low-income children and families across this country,” read the letter. “There is no justifiable reason for the delay in funding we have seen over the last two months, and you have refused to offer any kind of explanation.”

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

G&F offers awards for big fish

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Mike Smith
Carlsbad Current-Argus
msmith@currentargus.com

Some anglers set out to catch a lot of fish, or maybe a variety of species – and some just want to land a big one. The New Mexico Department of Game and Fish has a fishing challenge just for them, the Master Angler Award Program.

Unlike the department’s Bass Challenge and Trout Challenge – both programs require catches of several specific species – the Master Angler program recognizes the biggest catch in any of 26 categories.

“The Master Angler awards anglers for a big catch, instead of focusing on catching a group of fishes,” said Game and Fish spokesperson Melissa Garnett. “This is a size challenge.”

Garnett said the New Mexico Master Angler Program challenges anglers with catching one or all of 26 fish species outlined in the official rules of the program, which can be found at the Game and Fish website.

“To participate in the New Mexico Master Angler Program, you do not have to be a resident of New Mexico,” Garnett said.

She said fish must be caught legally in New Mexico’s public waters. Fish caught in privately owned bodies of water where anglers are charged for fishing are not eligible.

To be entered, the weight and measure of each catch and a photo must be submitted along with an official application that can be found at https://wildlife.dgf.nm.gov/fishing/fishing-challenges/record-fish-award/. The webpage also includes a list of record catches for the various species.

Applications, along with a list of minimum lengths for entries and a list of past winners, also can be found on the Master Angler Award webpage https://wildlife.dgf.nm.gov/fishing/fishing-challenges/new-mexico-master-angler/

Garnett said anyone meeting the required minimum length of any one of the 26 species listed by the Department of Game and Fish is eligible to win.

“Because this is a size-based challenge, it matters how you measure your catch and take your photo. We need a clear photo of a total length,” Garnett said.

Once verified, the winner will receive a certificate and a listing in the Master Angler Hall of Fame under the species of fish that was caught.

There is no limit on the number of fish that can be submitted for the challenge, according to the application.

Garnett said the Master Angler Program and the Bass and Trout Challenges are opportunities for people to get outdoors.

“(The purpose is) to promote bass and trout fishing opportunities in New Mexico and encourage anglers to branch out and discover new fishing waters and species,” she said.

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

Foundations

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Ty Houghtaling

Every congregation has some form of government. Our church is a mix of democratic and staff led principles. We elect deacons from within the congregation, we vote as a congregation on major decisions like hiring pastors or making significant facility changes. We have some “what you must be to belong to our congregation” expectations, or better said, what it means to join our church to be a member. We do not have to operate like a for profit business or like many nonprofit organizations operate. We have monthly “business” meetings open to all members where we evaluate our budget, talk about ministry efforts, ask questions about day-to-day activities, etc. Our style of governance has a long history within Baptist churches in general. We have a constitution and a set of by-laws that has changed over the years not unlike our own American Constitution and Bill of Rights. Sometimes we forget policies or find ourselves making decisions without first making sure we are abiding by our constitution. It isn’t supposed to be complicated but unfortunately it can be. Why do need these processes to be the church? That’s a great question that speaks to the heart of the foundation of every congregation. 1 Corinthians 14 has much to say about corporate worship culminating in verse 40, “But everything should be done in a fitting and orderly way”.  Churches need organization to some degree so that our times of worship are orderly without confusion. So, churches form some version of governing bodies within the congregation to ensure that they operate orderly. Which style is most comfortable to you? Is it elder led churches with a version of democratic processes? How are the elders selected, who qualifies, and what role does the membership play, would be good questions to ask. Maybe you would prefer an even more layered approach to the local church where leaders are selected from within the denomination and provided by the hierarchical structure already established by the church’s traditions? At some point if you get involved in your church, you’ll encounter these questions, my suggestion is start with this simple truth: the church is the body of Christ, He is the head, people are the body (Col 1:18, Eph 4:12-16, Rom 12:4-5, Eph 5:30). You have probably said or heard someone say, “I can have church anywhere!”. I might split hairs here, but the truth is we can’t have church without people, scripture says “For where two or three are gathered in my name, there am I with them” Matt 18:20. So if you wanna have church, build on that foundation first, two or three gathering in the name of Jesus is at its most basic level, church.

Trump challenges the unconquerable Seminole Nation

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Mary Sanchez

For centuries white men have looked at land occupied by indigenous people and reached to grab it for their own intentions. The Trump administration, through the complicity of Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis and his sidekick attorney general, are simply the latest of such men.

They’ve made a serious miscalculation.

Alligator Alcatraz has caused President Donald Trump, DeSantis, and others within the MAGA establishment to become giddy in recent days. Alligator Alcatraz has been tagged to Florida land repurposed as a 3,000-bed immigrant detention center.

It sits deep in the Everglades, which is sacred Seminole land.

Trump recently visited the detention center, camera crews in tow. He walked inside the giant white tents, inspecting rows of chain link cages, stacks of bunk beds ready for the inmates, immigrants targeted for deportation.

Trump sat for a press conference where he joked about teaching migrants who might try to escape how to elude hungry alligators (by running zig zag, which wildlife experts do not recommend).

Among the protesters lining the area in recent days are Seminole and Miccosukee tribal members. Many think of Indians as relics of the past, as peoples struggling with alcoholism, poverty and life on reservations – or more empathetically, as noble warriors who fought long campaigns against those who wanted to decimate their culture.

Meet the Seminoles of Florida. Their wars never end.

Perhaps more than any other indigenous group in the world, the Seminoles have deftly navigated the terrain of keeping their culture intact, while also adapting to a modernizing world.

The tribe is a global empire. In 2007, it purchased the Hard Rock enterprise of restaurants, hotels, and casinos for $965 million. Hard Rock operates in 70 countries.

The Seminole of Florida never signed a peace treaty. When attacked, segments of the tribe pressed deeper into the Everglades, and survived. Resilience is in their DNA.

And now, their tribal leadership is speaking out against Alligator Alcatraz.

It’s not the first time. In the 1970s, the land was scoped out to become a massive international airport. The tribe was part of the opposition that nixed the expansion.

Leadership of the Seminole Tribe of Florida, the Seminole Nation of Oklahoma and the Miccosukee Tribe of Florida are all on record against the detention center.

Marcellus Osceola Jr., the chairman of the Seminole Tribe of Florida issued this statement on July 2: “Hundreds of members of the Seminole Tribe of Florida have reached out to express their deep concerns about further development of the Everglades Jetport site which they view as sacred land and critical to the Florida Everglades ecosystem. Their opposition is based on the need to protect and preserve the Everglades, as well as the Seminole culture and our way of life.”

He has clout Trump will understand.

The Seminole Tribe of Florida pays the state billions in revenue, part of an agreement through their gaming. They invented tribal gaming, beginning with bingo on one of Florida’s multiple reservation lands.

For now, the protests are focused on the land, the fact that it is sacred to the tribes and well-grounded concerns about the prison’s ecological impact on the Everglades.

But there’s another thread, yet untapped. It could swell the opposition with a force Trump has never faced: the power of the world’s indigenous peoples.

A majority of the people who have been detained under the Trump administration’s push for mass deportations are at least in part, indigenous. To be Mexican is to be a mix of indigenous and Spanish. Colonialization, the attempted decimation of first peoples, is a global story. It is entwined with the history of every Spanish-speaking nation in the world.

Many of those people have tried to migrate in recent decades to the U.S., forced by climate change, government corruption, the violence of drug cartels and the human will to live freely.

Indeed, many of the 59,000 immigrants currently detained speak Spanish as a second language, if at all.

They are indigenous or multiracial people from Guatemala, Mexico, El Salvador, Nicaragua, and other nations.

If the Seminole begin seeing the detainees as fellow indigenous, the plight of these migrants will take on additional meaning.

The tribe has protected fleeing people before. Prior to the Civil War, escaped slaves were accepted into the tribe.

The Seminole have proven unconquerable. They’ve persisted through conquistadors, two Indian wars, slavery, the Civil War, the Great Depression, and more recent efforts to decimate their lands by draining the Everglades.

They have persevered through the centuries, navigating around significant adversaries, through a deep connection to land that Trump is eyeing with a joyful glint.

The Everglades protected the Seminole. Bet on the Seminole to protect the Everglades, and quite possibly, anyone sent there against their will.

(Readers can reach Mary Sanchez at msanchezcolumn@gmail.com and follow her on Twitter @msanchezcolumn.)

Summer rains don’t hurt fishing

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Information and photos provided by New Mexico Department of Game and Fish

Fishing for some of New Mexico’s favorite species have been unhampered by the summer monsoons as conditions are reported fair to good across parts of the state.

In southeast New Mexico, fishing for catfish was fair to good using chicken liver at Carlsbad Municipal Lake.

Near Dexter at Lake Van, fishing for catfish was good using chicken breast with cherry Kool-Aid.

Fishing for walleye was good using white curly-tailed grubs at Santa Rosa Lake.

In southern New Mexico, fishing for striped bass was good using umbrella rigs at Elephant Butte Lake. Fishing for walleye and white bass was good using chartreuse pink Berkley Flicker Shad.

In Northern New Mexico, fishing for trout along the Pecos River was fair to good using Panther Martin spinners and Rooster Tails and very good when using gold Super Duper lures.

At Conchas Lake, fishing for white bass was slow to fair using jerkbaits. Fishing for walleye was fair to good using purple crankbaits.

This fishing report, provided by the Department of Game and Fish, has been generated from the best information available from area officers and anglers. Conditions encountered after the report is compiled may differ, as stream, lake and weather conditions alter fish and angler activities.

Ruidoso Downs race meet moves

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Staff Reports

All American Futurity to be run Sept. 1 at Albuquerque Downs

Ruidoso Downs Racetrack will run the 2025 All American Futurity, Derby and Oaks at Albuquerque Downs on Labor Day again this year, track owner Johnny Trotter announced Thursday.

“Under our current circumstances we are grateful to Albuquerque Downs owner Paul Blanchard that he has graciously offered to host the All American again,” Trotter said. “The recent events are unfortunate for everyone associated with Ruidoso Downs, but we are happy to announce that our signature race will have the opportunity to move forward this year.”

This marks the second straight year that the All American races have been moved from their home at Ruidoso Downs. The racetrack and property suffered significant damage from the flooding event that occurred on July 8 which made the current racing season impossible to continue.

Crews at Ruidoso Downs have began cleaning up the massive mud and debris caused by Tuesday’s flooding event. The infield at Ruidoso Downs sustained more 10 ten feet of water at the height of the flash flood destroying the jockey’s quarters, scoreboard, timing mechanisms and other necessary equipment needed to operate horse racing.

Flooding in the barn area contributed to the death of one racehorse, according to Ruidoso Downs General Manager Rick Baugh.

“That’s one horse out of 1,800 that were back there,” Baugh said. “Every other horse is accounted for. None are missing.”

The Rainbow Futurity, Oaks, Derby, Invitational, and Juvenile were scheduled to be run this weekend, while the Zia Futurity and Derby were set to be run July 19-20. Trotter said all purses for those races will now be equally distributed among all the qualifiers.

While remaining Ruidoso Downs schedule will be run in Albuquerque for the second year in a row, Trotter reported he is determined to bring horse racing back to Ruidoso Downs.

“After having met with Governor Michelle Luhan Grisham today, we remain confident that there we will be horse racing again at Ruidoso Downs in 2026,” Trotter said. “We have been assured that corrective measures will be taken by the state of New Mexico to improve flood control. However, we did need to make an immediate decision about this year’s All American on behalf of our horse owners and trainers and that’s what we are announcing today.”

Trials for the $1 million All American Futurity for two-year-olds at 440-yards will be held August 4 and 5. Trials for the American Derby and All American Oaks for three-year-olds at 440-yards will be Aug. 6. The fastest times in those trial races will advance to the finals on Labor Day, Sept. 1, at Albuquerque Downs.

Along with a full race card, there will be five stakes races on Labor Day, including the All American Futurity, All American Derby, All American Oaks, All American Invitational and All American Juvenile.

Meanwhile, Ruidoso Downs will continue to host the two major horse sales including the New Mexico Breed Sale on Aug. 8 and 9, and the All American Select Sale Aug. 29 and 30 at the Ruidoso Downs Sales Pavilion.

The Casey Donahue concert scheduled for July 26 will continue at Ruidoso Downs Racetrack as scheduled. The annual Ruidoso Downs Hall of Fame Banquet will be held in the Turf Club at Ruidoso Downs on Aug. 7th. Other events that were on the racing calendar for the Ruidoso Downs racing season are to be determined.

The latest information about Ruidoso Downs Racetrack including racing and events can be found at www.raceruidoso.com.

Artesia considers city administrator position

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Rebecca Hauschild
For the Artesia Daily Press

The Artesia City Council is considering a proposal to create a new management position intended to streamline oversight of city departments, improve interdepartmental coordination, and assist the mayor with administrative duties.

The proposal was first discussed during the council’s June 24 meeting and again on July 8. No decision was made.

District 3 Councilor Michael Bundt said the proposal would help ease the burden on Artesia Mayor Jon Henry, who is responsible for overseeing municipal operations, including personnel matters. Bundt said the position could also involve collaboration with city councilors, keeping them informed of upcoming activities and potential votes at their bi-monthly meetings.

The council also discussed – and rejected – the possibility of creating the position of city manager, which would entail a major overhaul of the city’s management structure.

“We’re not ready to jump to city manager,” said Henry who also serves as state representative for District 54, which includes Eddy, Chaves and Otero counties. “It’s a big change. How do we make this fit Artesia and what we’re trying to do as a city?”

Bundt spoke in favor of hiring a city administrator.

“I fall heavily on (a) city administrator position,” he said. “At this point I think it’s really important for us. It will help council. It will help me understand more about the city and what is going on. I think it will result in a better-informed council that will make better decisions.”

District 2 City Councilor Jarrod Moreau agreed administrative help is needed but said the city should add administrators or directors for individual departments, rather than one person to oversee all activities. That would lighten the mayor’s load, Moreau said, with less alteration to the city’s current administrative structure.

Council members agreed to move forward with drafting job descriptions for a city administrator and for additional department director roles.

Other business

The council discussed the possible consolidation of the human resources and safety coordinator roles, as well as a proposed wage increase for the city’s lowest pay classification from $15 per hour to $15.25 per hour. Councilors agreed to review classification and pay-scale data for the upcoming budget cycle before making any decisions.

The Artesia Arts Council will hold the Wild West Fest July 18 in downtown Artesia featuring a Michael Martin Murphy concert at 6 p.m. Our Lady of Grace Catholic Church will hold its Fall Fiesta 5k Run/Walk from 7 a.m. to 10 a.m. Sept. 20.

City investigates complaints about police department

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Adrian Hedden
Carlsbad Current-Argus
achedden@currentargus.com

Amid two lawsuits and a series of complaints by former officers and employees alleging a “hostile work environment” at the Carlsbad Police Department, city officials plan to hire an attorney from outside the city’s administration to lead an investigation.

Mayor Rick Lopez said on June 27 the city would be working with the New Mexico Municipal League to find counsel for the investigation. City attorney Denise Madrid Boyea is handling the pending lawsuits, Lopez said.

Complaints have centered around allegations against Carlsbad Police Chief Jessie Rodriguez, a longtime officer in Carlsbad who was promoted to the top spot in December 2024, replacing former Chief Shane Skinner after a vote by the Carlsbad City Council.

Lopez said Rodriguez will remain chief throughout the investigation. The mayor said he was confident Rodriguez will ultimately retain his position.

“He’ll stay in position until the investigation tells me otherwise,” Lopez sad. “I do not have enough evidence to remove him.”

While Lopez would not comment on the specific allegations, the mayor said the investigation was largely tied to a pair of lawsuits filed recently against the city and the police department.

The first, filed March 26 by former police dispatcher Gina Styring, alleged a series of “sex scandals” at the department involving Skinner and others and a situation where Styring was asked by Rodriguez to take a polygraph test when she denied having sex with an officer, Omar Lopez.

Styring’s attorney, Curtis Waldo of Waldo Gubernick Law Advocates in Houston, described the alleged scandals as making “Caligula-era imperial Rome look like Saved by the Bell.”

Saved by the Bell was a family-friendly TV sitcom that was popular during the 1990s.

Throughout the complaint, Waldo described a “boys will be boys” atmosphere in which officers, including Skinner, had sexual affairs with co-workers and received only “slaps on the wrist” when caught.

Waldo said Styring was wrongfully terminated after she brought up the issue at a meeting of the department. The attorney said Styring is entitled to monetary damages to be assessed at trial for lost wages and mental anguish.

“We want to clamp down on the sexism that is rampant at the department,” Waldo said in an interview with the Current-Argus.

About two months later, on May 29, another suit was filed by a group of former officers including Eunice Police Chief Danny Garrett, who formerly served as a Hobbs police officer and was at one point a “probationary employee” of the Carlsbad department, Lopez said, although he was unsure exactly when.

Other officers joining the suit were former Captain Andy Carver; Drug Task Force Chief Devon Stinson; 16-year officer John Sneathen; 14-year officer Matt Langlitz; and former-Officer Richard Cage, all of whom resigned due to a “hostile work environment,” according to the complaint.

The plaintiffs in that case asked for a judge to rule the Carlsbad Police Department unfit to protect the public, arguing that the 70-officer department had a staffing deficit of as many as 36 vacant positions as of May 27. Others were allegedly planning to leave the department for similar reasons, read the complaint.

The Eddy County Sheriff’s Office should be tasked with policing Carlsbad city limits until police staffing numbers can be restored, the lawsuit suggested.

Tom Martin, a Carlsbad lawyer representing the Carlsbad Police Union declined to comment on the case or the city’s investigation.

Lopez said the inquiry will rely on interviews with “anyone who has a complaint” about the police department.

“Everything isn’t just he said, she said. There are details that need to be figured out,” Lopez said. “If it truly is the case that people quit because of a hostile work environment, that’s a serious issue.”

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

Happy 4th of July

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Photos and story by Marshall Mecham
Artesia Daily Press
marshallmecham21@gmail.com

Artesia holds first-ever drone show for the Fourth of July

Fourth of July weekend in Artesia this year featured the city’s first-ever drone show to ring in the nation’s independence, along with a series of patriotic events.

The festivities started with the annual Star-Spangled 5K dash on Friday, July 4, at 7 a.m.

The race was hosted by Executive director of Artesia Arts Council Jessica Addington, and Victor Adonis emerged as the winner.

The 5K was followed by the MainStreet USA Parade at 9 a.m., displaying a variety of decorated vehicles, including an Eddy County Fire & Rescue truck, three trucks representing First Methodist Church, two vehicles representing the Moose Lodge and multiple vehicles decorated with U.S. flags.

Other festivities displayed throughout the weekend were pickleball, volleyball, cornhole and disc golf tournaments.

It all culminated in the City’s first-ever Custom Drone Show. The show was on Saturday, July 5, at Jaycee Park shortly after 9 p.m., and lasted 13 minutes.

It featured the HF Sinclair Corporation, Southeast New Mexico College and the New Mexico flag.

The show also displayed images of both green and red chilies. The year 1905 was made visible, which represents the year Artesia was founded.

The Artesia Bulldogs logo was displayed with the light-up drones, along with the number 32 to signify the state number of championships the high school football team has won.