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City spends thousands on water well fix

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Rebecca Hauschild
For the Artesia Daily Press

Drilling for a new groundwater well in Artesia was at a standstill due to an “unheard of” mishap at the site, the contractor reported to city councilors during their June 10 meeting.

The Bulldog water well project on the west side of Artesia is headed by Albuquerque-based Souder Miller & Associates, which conducts similar projects throughout southern New Mexico, including Carlsbad and Roswell. The drilling problem could add thousands of dollars to the cost of the project, according to Matt Earthman, a geologist with Souder Miller & Associates.

Earthman said drilling began on May 14 and the mishap occurred at a depth of 640 feet, when crews encountered what at first was a “minor” case of “loss of circulation.”

Typically, drilling fluid – often referred to as “mud” – is pumped down the drill string to cool and lubricate the drill bit while carrying rock cuttings back to the surface, Earthman said. At the Bulldog well, the fluid began seeping into the surrounding underground rock formation instead of returning to the surface.

This can happen when the pressure of the drilling fluid exceeds the formation’s ability to contain it, allowing the fluid to escape into natural fractures, cracks, or porous zones within the rock and reducing the fluid’s pressure at it is pumped underground, the geologist said.

To address the initial loss of circulation, the drilling team applied a “loss control material” intended to block the drilling mud from escaping into the surrounding formation.

Earthman said the measure initially appeared to be effective. However, at a depth of 740 feet, the crew encountered another area that again began drawing fluid into the formation and circulation was lost entirely.

The drilling tools were stuck in the hole, Earthman said. After 60 hours of labor to free the drill, he said, contractors resumed the operation with additional loss-control measures but the formation absorbed approximately 500 barrels of mud almost immediately.

“This is an unheard-of circumstance,” Earthman said. “The driller said they have not seen this level of circulation loss in this shallow of a hole.”

The councilors, per the contractor’s suggestion, opted to have the contractor continue drilling and as soon as circulation is lost, inject cement to harden the hole, and continue drilling down through it.

Earthman said the operation could be conducted up to three times and still may not fix the problem. He said it could cost $61,000 for each attempt, or $187,000 if all three attempts are needed.

The second option was to partially case the hole which mitigates some of the risk of losing the tooling again. The third option was abandoning the hole and selecting another location at least 1,000 feet away.

“We’re less than 100 feet to hit the top of the aquifer formation,” Earthman said. “Then we would case it and go another 200 feet and that’s where we’ll get the water production.”

Other business

Byron Landfair, the city’s director of development and infrastructure, reported that improvements to 26th Street are moving to the next phase – new paving on the retainer wall.

Landfair also said the water-line replacement project on Grant Avenue is close to all the tie-ins, and the South 2nd Street and Richardson Avenue rehab project is complete. Pickleball courts were prepped for slab last week and should be in concrete this week, he said.

The city of Artesia will hold a drone exhibition instead of fireworks on the Fourth of July but Police Chief Kirk Roberts said police don’t expect the event to inhibit the use of fireworks in neighborhoods around town.

“Please be smart about it” Roberts said. “Don’t drink and set off fireworks.”

The council accepted the donation of a 1950 Dodge Stake Bed Truck from C. Brewer & Co. LLC. Brewer Oil Co. was established in Artesia in 1958 and the donated truck was the company’s original delivery vehicle. The truck will eventually be on display at the Artesia Historical Museum & Art Center.

The council also voted to donate a 2013 Chevy Tahoe used by the Artesia Police Department to the New Mexico Military Institute Police Department in Roswell.

Romance of a Summer Picnic

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Debbie Nix
For the Alamogordo News

What a forgotten treat a summer picnic is as well as being such a simple but deeply intimate gesture of care and love. Not just for sweethearts, but also a sweet surprise for your favorite lunch mate when one on one time comes at such a premium.

The formula for a picnic is so quite simple. First and foremost, portability. Choices that are easy to pack, not bulky and will not require a lot of on-site assembly. Think pre-assembled handheld wraps, salad bowls and my personal favorite, deli chicken salad stuffed pita pockets. Any kind of sandwich travels best if the wrap, bread slice or pita pockets is first generously buttered, then add mayonnaise or mustard. This keeps the sandwich from getting soggy. And, no matter what I use to stuff my sandwich with, I always add pepperoncini pepper rings for that bit of zing. Use a paper towel to blot the moisture from the peppers before adding.

A deli potato or macaroni salad is an easy grab and go addition. My go to pick is the new red potato mayonnaise-based option then I add a generous sprinkle or two of dill to take it up a notch. The addition of big juicy red seedless grapes and a crisp sliced Granny Smith apple rounds out our light summer picnic.

If you really want to impress the taste buds, the addition of my girlfriend Leanne’s banana nut chocolate chip bread really shows how much you care. A special gourmet touch of whipped cream cheese to spread on your pre-sliced bread makes it unforgettable. It’s moist, fresh and sturdy enough to pack for a portable picnic meal.

A few things to pack from a picnic pro: Plates, forks, a knife for cutting and one for spreading, small cutting board, trash sack, salt, pepper, cloth napkins for that special touch, a large tablecloth or quilt. Frozen freezer packs to keep things chilled in an insulated carrier. Wine glasses, corkscrew and my personal picnic favorite, Noisy Water Tighty Whitey crisp white wine, and last but not least, a playlist ready to set the mood.

Leanne’s Banana Nut Chocolate Chip Bread

*Cream together:

1/2 C. Butter

1/4 C. Shortening

11/2 C. Sugar

2 Lg. Eggs

1 tsp. Vanilla

*Add:

4-6 Smashed ripe bananas

1 tsp. Baking soda

1 tsp. Salt

2 C. Flour

1/2 C. Buttermilk

*Fold in:

1 C. Mini semi sweet chocolate chips

1 C. Chopped walnuts

Pour into lightly greased loaf pan or tube pan. Bake at 350 degrees for one hour until tender to the touch. Don’t over-bake. Freezes well.

For holiday bread: Add 1/2 cup each of green and red minced candied cherries

Debbie Nix, longtime Ruidoso resident,

column contributor, lifecoach and foodie

Lifecoach@zianet.com

Artesia boys’ basketball starts Bulldog team camp with victory over El Paso High School  

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Marshall Mecham  

Coming fresh off a state championship run, the Artesia boys’ basketball team claimed victory again over the El Paso Tigers 60-50 in the first game of the annual Artesia Team Camp.  

After not scoring the first two minutes and falling behind 3-0, the Bulldogs went on an 11-0 run.  

Senior center Clay Kincaid, 6’8’’, started the game off strong by scoring the first four points, including a slam dunk. Senior guard Charlie Campbell, 6’3’’, then scored 10 of the next 11 points, including three triples.  

Campbell finished the half with 14 points, as Artesia held a 35-24 lead. He took on a traditional point guard role in the second half by getting many of his teammates involved in the scoring act, like second-year Bulldog Braylon Vega.  

After scoring just three points in the first half, Vega scored the first five in the second. Artesia built up a 53-33 lead with less than 10 minutes to go in the game. This prompted head coach Michael Mondragon to give his starters a rest. 

Following the substitutions, the Tigers climbed its way back by going on an 11-0 run to cut the deficit to single digits. Turnovers and missed shots from point-blank range are what hurt the Bulldogs during this run. Mondragon put his starters back in to finish the game, and it paid off, as they maintained the lead.  

Kincaid hit a free throw to end the scoring drought and followed it up with a blocked shot on the defensive end. The game was capped off with a steal by Campbell, who threw a behind-the-back pass to Vega for the finish at the rim. Despite Artesia having all its players return from last year’s state championship team, there was a new face in the lineup.  

Mondragon said Diego Morales is a player who has a chance at making the varsity roster for the 2025-26 season.  

“He’s one of the new guys that played today,” Mondragon said. “I see Diego Morales being another one we add into there.”  

The Bulldogs have had summer workouts to prepare for tournaments and the upcoming season.  

“We go in the mornings from 11 to 12:30,” Mondragon said. “Last weekend, we were in Oklahoma. This weekend, we have ours and then next week in Las Cruces and then we’ll finish up in Portales.”  

Ever since Mondragon became the head coach for Artesia, he has made the Bulldog team camp an annual tournament.  

“Since I’ve been here, we’ve had it,” Mondragon said.  

“It was kind of here before that, when I played in high school and it went away and then we brought it back once I got the head job here, back 11 years ago.”  

There are multiple businesses who have helped shape the camp to be successful, and Mondragon said he is thankful for it all.  

“I just really want to thank the Moose Lodge. I want to thank BSN sports,” Mondragon said. “They’re a big part of what we do this weekend.”  

Artesia will be back in action at the Mayfield team camp at Mayfield High School in Las Cruces, New Mexico, from Friday, June 20, to Saturday, June 21.

Artesia Senior Center honors elected representatives with luncheon

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Photos provided by the City of Artesia

June 12, the Artesia Senior Center recognized state and local elected officials for their help with funding activities and functions for center, said City of Artesia spokesperson Luke Burns.

From Left: Artesia Senior Center supervisor Caryle Goss, State Sen. Jim Townsend and City of Artesia clerk/treasurer Summer Valverde.

Artesia District 1 City Councilor Ignacio “Nacho” Mariscal.

Artesia District 2 City Councilor George Mullen.

‘Abysmal’ turnout blamed for hospital levy’s defeat

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Adrian Hedden
Artesia Daily Press
ahedden@elritomedia.com

A tax levy that produced about $7 million in revenue for Artesia General Hospital last year was rejected by voters in a June 3 mail-in election as hospital leaders sought a four-year renewal.

Officials with the Artesia Special Hospital District blamed the levy’s defeat on low voter turnout in the special election and hoped to see the levy reinstated via in-person ballots in November’s regular election. The levy was established when the hospital district was created in 1979 and had been renewed by voters every four years until this month’s rejection.

The levy is collected by the hospital district, which functions as a government agency, similar to a school district, and as such is allowed to place the levy on the ballot for voters. The funds are used to support operational costs at the hospital, which serves patients throughout Eddy County and in Chaves County.

The hospital district will need approval from Eddy County to put the matter before voters a second time this year.

The levy charges 2.70 per every $1,000 of a property owner’s net taxable property value for those within the district – defined in state statute as “the Artesia public,” which is most land within the city of Artesia.

Voters rejected the levy despite a heavy public relations campaign conducted in the city in the weeks leading up to the election. Eddy County Commissioners voted June 10 to canvass the results: 638 against and 605 for the levy’s renewal.

That meant only 1,243 Artesia voters returned their ballots to the Eddy County Clerk’s Office during the May 6 to June 3 voting period. That’s out of about 10,000 ballots that were sent out, said Jarrod Moreau, chair of the Artesia Special Hospital District.

He said the results were disappointing but explained that the mill levy does not expire until the end of the year, and an affirmative vote in November could revive it in time for funding in 2026.

He said the levy provided between $4 million and $7 million annually to the district over the past four to eight years.

“We were all disappointed. It was advised that we do a mail-in because we all thought it was a home-run thing, and we thought we could save some taxpayer money,” Moreau said. “The next thing to do is run it again in the regular election.”

The last time the levy was up for renewal, in 2021, Moreau said it passed by 400 votes which he said was the approximate difference in turnout between that in-person election and this year’s mail-in ballot.

He also said there may have been some misperception that supporting the mill levy meant raising taxes. Moreau countered that it would keep a tax in place, one he said is mostly – about 80% to 90% – paid by larger corporations such as oil and gas companies, rather than the local residents voting in the election.

Moreau also said the mill levy was not intended to fund a proposed project by the Special Hospital District to build a new hospital campus on the north side of town, replacing its existing main facility with a “state-of-the-art” health facility and potentially adjacent land for affordable housing.

“People ask if this is for that. This (the levy) is status quo for what we’ve been doing for the past 40-plus years,” Moreau said.

Hospital Chief Financial Officer Cory Yates said the turnout was “abysmal” and should the levy be defeated a second time in November the hospital planned to continue driving its revenue by expanding its options and health care offerings throughout southeast New Mexico.

That includes adding providers and specialists for general surgery, urology and family practice, she said.

The mill levy funds operational costs, including salaries for medical personnel and recruiting of specialists. Having those expenses largely covered by the mill levy, Yates said, allows the hospital to focus more of its revenue on infrastructure and capital investments.

Yates said the hospital is “always looking” for new lines of service and ways to bring new providers to the community. “Our intent is to increase access, so we can increase revenue to replace some of the mill levy money.”

Director of Public Relations Khushroo Ghadiali said supporting the levy, and the hospital’s overall operations, means improving rural health care in southern New Mexico and preventing patients from having to travel long distances.

“It’s an investment for Artesia’s local health care. It keeps medical services local, so they don’t have to travel out of town,” he said. “It helps the hospital perform.”

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

Boutique offers affordability for customers

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Mike Smith
Artesia Daily Press
msmith@currentargus.com

Long before Alexis Archunde opened her new clothing and jewelry store in Artesia, “affordable” was a key word in her approach to business.

“I wanted everyone to be able to afford my shop,” said Archunde, 35, whose Limitless Unique Boutique opened March 25 at 315 W. Washington Ave. “I’m a frugal mom.”

The store is new but Archunde’s appreciation for affordability dates back at least to 2020 when she was selling online for a company called Paparazzi Accessories, and a single mom thanked her for selling $5 jewelry.

“She said, ‘Thank you for offering something affordable,’ Alexis recalled. “I remember crying. There is a need for affordability.”

A 2007 graduate of Artesia High School, Alexis attended New Mexico Junior College in Hobbs but moved on without earning a degree.

She returned to Artesia, where she and future husband Christopher had their first child in 2013.

“We agreed I would be a stay-at-home mom,” she said. “Sitting still and not working was an adjustment.”

Later, in search of extra income, Alexis undertook a multi-level marketing venture selling jewelry and scented wax bars and warmers. After that, she signed on with Paparazzi Accessories.

“I loved it, it was fun,” Archunde said.

Her encounter with a single mom who appreciated affordable jewelry prompted Archunde to create an online boutique featuring clothing and jewelry, which in turn planted the seed for a brick-and-mortar store.

“I started small with my group. It grew to 1,700 members. I remember when I had 60,” she said. “I got community support from Artesia. Artesia is one of the best places to have a small business.”

In November 2024 she found what she decided was the perfect location for her store when she drove past an office park that had a vacant corner suite.

“I envisioned my shop here,” she said. “It needed a lot of cosmetic work.”

She drove to the Sherwin-Williams store, bought a can of paint, and Limitless Unique Boutique was on its way.

“It took me about four months to renovate and I was doing it myself,” Archunde said.

Besides painting, she pulled up the old carpet and added new patio rugs.

“What it looks like today is what I envisioned. If you have a dream, you can accomplish it with hard work,” Archunde said.

She said the shop offers merchandise ranging in price from $2 to $25, including clothing, jewelry, and custom-made hats that are made right in the store.

“You can design your own hat and walk out with it,” Archunde said.

Limitless Unique Boutique is open from 11 a.m. until 6 p.m. Monday, Tuesday, Thursday and Friday. The store is closed Wednesdays for family time, Archunde said.

“Saturdays are on a ‘when available’ schedule right now because of summer,” she said. “But I post in my (Limitless Unique Boutique) group on Facebook a heads-up when I’m there. When I am, it’s 9 a.m. to noon.”

Husband Christopher, who works as branch manager for Q2 Artificial Lift Services in Carlsbad, provided support as she accomplished her dream, Alexis said.

The couple has two children, 11-year-old Zayden and 4-year-old Luka.

Luke Burns, spokesman for the city of Artesia, said Archunde’s store is a welcome addition to the city’s retail scene, reflecting a “can-do” business culture.

“It’s exciting to see people turn their passion into a small business and to see how it adds to our community in the process,” Burns said.

Mike Smith can be followed on X @mikesmithartesianm.

The rogue’s new gallery of left-wing scoundrels

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Victor Davis Hanson

The entire career of race-baiter Al Sharpton was founded on falsehoods about the Tawana Brawley scam.

Nearly everything the left told us about the Trayvon Martin fight was false.

The “hands up, don’t shoot” Ferguson fable and the Covington Kids myth were quickly exposed.

The Duke Lacrosse and Jussie Smollett melodramas were laughable.

Russian “collusion,” “laptop” disinformation, and Joe Biden “fit as a fiddle” gaslighting were utter lies.

But more recently, the hard left lost its mind championing a host of violent, unsavory characters.

The illegal alien and El Salvadorian national, Kilmar Abrego Garcia, was portrayed as a victim of unfair deportation in the left’s larger, losing war for open borders.

Abrego Garcia became a “Maryland Man”: a supposed poor victim of Trump overreach.

He was constructed as a family man engaged in construction to feed his family, who somehow forgot to become “documented” and was deported.

In truth, Garcia is now facing felony indictments for human trafficking. He was a likely MS-13 gang member, a violent and bullying woman-beater, and rarely employed gainfully in construction.

Luigi Mangione was a rich, spoiled kid who dabbled in Jacobin politics.

Posing as a revolutionary, Mangione ambushed Brian Thompson, the CEO of UnitedHealthcare. He murdered him in cold blood near a New York hotel.

Instantly, some on the left embraced Mangione as a revolutionary hero who delivered justice to a supposedly greedy corporate capitalist.

Mohammed Sabry Soliman, like Garcia, was a violent illegal alien. He bragged about his hatred of Jews in general and Israel in particular.

So Soliman made some Molotov cocktails and tried to incinerate Jewish marchers advocating on behalf of Israeli hostages still held by Hamas.

Soliman’s wife and five children, to whom Soliman filmed a video explaining his dedication to violent jihad, were also illegal aliens.

Soliman may well have preferred to burn Jews to remind us of the fires of the Holocaust ovens.

In the mind of the mainstream liberal media, the Soliman family was cruelly detained by the evil Trump administration that was considering returning the illegal aliens to their Middle East homes.

But recently, during the LA riots, the left went completely crazy as the entire Democrat Party and California state officials sided with violent protesters and illegal aliens.

The open border rioters soon got the message that left-wing California officials were on their side.

So, throngs began burning cars. Illegal aliens waved Mexican flags and burned American flags.

Protesters spat on law enforcement and pelted them with rocks, firecrackers, and concrete blocks.

Stores were looted. Critical freeways were swarmed and shut down.

And for what?

To protest the legal efforts of ICE to serve deportation warrants to a few hundred of some 10-12 million illegal aliens who had illegally swarmed into the U.S. during the Biden administration’s four-year destruction of immigration law.

California Governor Gavin Newsom damned the federal immigration efforts as “chaotic” and “reckless” and seemed obsessed only with Trump.

Then Newsom dared ICE to arrest him.

Like some antebellum, neo-Confederate, states’ rights activist, Newsom threatened to withhold California’s federal income taxes from the federal government — a possible felony.

Los Angeles Mayor Karen Bass — recently infamous for junketing in Ghana while Pacific Palisades burned down — warned ICE that “We will not stand for this.”

What did her threat mean? Did she intend to use force to support the street thugs against her fellow American officers?

California Democrat Congresswoman Norma Torres screamed at overwhelmed ICE agents seeking to issue arrest warrants with the obscene threat, “Get the f*** out of LA!”

As the mob violence increased and public outrage grew, a desperate and now embarrassed Newsom could only double down on his obsessions with Trump.

What has caused Newsom’s Trump Derangement Syndrome?

Is it because Trump called out the National Guard and Marines to aid an overwhelmed Los Angeles Police Department to stop the violence that left-wing officials and the media had appeased?

In sum, is the left once again trying to commit political suicide?

Polls showed overwhelming public support for deporting those who illegally entered and reside in the U.S., especially the nearly half a million believed criminals.

Trump’s own most supportive demographic in recent polls has been Hispanics. Like all Americans, they are appalled by violent thugs and illegal aliens waving Mexican flags who have no wish to return to Mexico while burning American flags as they demand illegally to stay in the U.S.

The more the incoherent left claimed the protests were “peaceful” and damned the Trump administration for sending them help, the more the violence continued.

And the more the public was relieved that Trump was trying to stop the riots.

Democrats currently lack sane and effective leaders.

But that is no excuse to swoon over creepy gang-bangers, spoiled-brat assassins, antisemitic burners of Jews, and illegal aliens breaking the law and damning America — while waving Mexican flags.

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.

Eddy County questions ‘sanctuary’ list inclusion

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Adrian Hedden
Carlsbad Current-Argus
achedden@currentargus.com

The federal government’s designation of Eddy County as a “sanctuary” for undocumented immigrants drew pushback from county commissioners during their Tuesday, June 10, meeting as local officials maintained they were supportive of President Donald Trump’s hard-line stance on immigration.

A list published Thursday, May 29, by the Department of Homeland Security of so-called “sanctuary communities” across the U.S. included Eddy, Chaves, Lincoln and Otero counties, along with 19 other counties in New Mexico and the cities of Santa Fe and Albuquerque.

The list was removed from the department’s website by the following Monday, but Eddy County’s inclusion ignited confusion and concern among local leaders in the conservative southeast corner of the state.

It was unclear if removing the list from the website altered the apparent “sanctuary” status of the counties in New Mexico, and what the specific criteria were for inclusion or what the county’s presence on the list entailed.

In a statement released with the list, U.S. Secretary of Homeland Security Kristi Noem said that “sanctuary city politicians” are putting Americans and local police in danger while protecting “violent criminal illegal aliens.”

Each jurisdiction on the list was to receive a “formal notification” of its non-compliance with federal immigration policy and violations of federal statutes, according to the Department of Homeland Security news release.

District 4 Commissioner Bo Bowen said when the list was publicized, the county “immediately” contacted the Department of Homeland Security for clarity and requested Eddy County be removed.

“There was a list that DHS released that identified some cities and counties as not cooperating with the federal government. Eddy County was on that list. I received a bunch of messages regarding this, and asking why Eddy County was a sanctuary county,” Bowen said. “We took action right away. There wasn’t a whole lot to their criteria for the list.”

He pointed to a resolution passed unanimously by the county commission on Dec. 17, 2024, expressly supportive of then President-elect Donald Trump’s agenda to increase border security and deport more undocumented migrants.

Bowen said the county supported the federal government’s work to remove “illegal criminals” and “send them back with (Immigration and Customs Enforcement).”

“We felt very confident that’s what Eddy County wanted,” Bowen said.

Eddy County Sheriff Matt Hutchinson, who released a statement decrying the county’s inclusion on the list in the days after it was published, said at the meeting that the sheriff’s office intended to support any law enforcement agency in efforts to maintain border security.

“We all saw what was posted and what was said online. The sheriff’s office will abide and help any law enforcement agency, regardless of the acronym. My job as sheriff is to verify the charges,” Hutchinson said.

He said as of Tuesday, that there were 28 people with undocumented immigration status in custody at the Eddy County Detention Center.

Detention Center Warden Billy Massingill said all the arrestees were brought to the jail on other charges, such as drunken driving or battery, before their immigration status was determined. He said no arrests were made due to immigration status alone.

“They already had criminal and state charges. No one is coming in just because of their non-citizenship,” Massingill said.

Bowen said that despite what he called an “error” in including Eddy County on the list, he still supported Trump and Noem’s agenda to crack down on undocumented immigration.

“I think this was a situation of misinformation being put out. I think that you can still stand behind somebody without blindly agreeing with everything they put out, and this is an example of that,” Bowen said. “It was our responsibility to reach out and make sure this error was corrected so everybody knows where we stand.”

Other business

The Eddy County Commission also voted to canvass the results of a special election for the Artesia Special Hospital District’s mill levy, which provided $7 million to the hospital last year. There were 638 votes against and 605 votes for the levy. It is put to a vote for renewal every four years, and this was the first time the levy was voted down since 1979.

Commissioners also approved a new policy intended to standardize procedures for county departments to follow in dealing with grants. The policy included regulations for grant applications and approvals, outlining procedures and reporting requirements. Finance Director Roberta Gonzales said the county did not have a defined grant policy before the vote.

Another policy was approved to allow county department heads to fund “discretionary expenses” not covered under county policy but needed, as Commission Chair Sarah Cordova said, when “things come up.”

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

Artesians gather for Oil Patch Market

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Photos by Mike Smith, Artesia Daily Press

Artesia Mainstreet presented its monthly Oil Patch Market this past Saturday at the Derrick Floor. Bakers, crafters, and food trucks were part of the fun.

The markets are held monthly. For more information contact Artesia Mainstreet at 575-703-0841.

Sondra Bailey from Carlsbad sold baked goods and car leather fresheners.

An example of Sondra Bailey’s leather fresheners and baked goods sold at the Oil Patch Market.

Mary Pettus of Sun Country Homes and Gardens stands near homemade pecans.

Sydnie Faver of Pecos Petals stands with some homemade flowers.

Yvonne Wright-Padilla of Cherie Glowe was on hand at the Oil Patch Market.

Becky (left) and Randy Ingraham sold custom made crosses at the Oil Patch Market.

Escape and return

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Cal Thomas

CAM RANH, Vietnam – The story sounds like a “Mission Impossible” script.

Fifty years ago, near the end of the Vietnam war as North Vietnamese troops headed south, the director of the Cam Ranh Christian Orphanage, Pastor Nguyen Xuan Ha – known to everyone as Mr. Ha – decided it was time to escape to somewhere safe. Mr. Ha put 85 children and staff on two buses and headed for Saigon where he hoped they could flee to safety.

One of the buses was shot at by a North Vietnamese soldier and the buses separated. Somehow they re-united in Saigon. After renting a boat and getting some distance from shore, the engine quit. For five days they drifted before a Thailand tanker approached. The captain refused to help, but later changed his mind, turned around and towed them for a while. After cutting the tow line, a group of fishermen towed them toward Singapore.

Soldiers refused to let them ashore. Mr. Ha wrote a name on a piece of paper and asked a soldier if he could locate a missionary named Ralph Neighbour to help.

Dr. Neighbour (now 96), and newly arrived in Singapore, was miraculously found. He picks up the story from there in an email to me: “Singapore government kept them out on St. John’s island. Our missionary team took clothes and food out. USA embassy contacted Swiss United Nations Refugee Center. Special flight arrived. Children whisked thru Singapore on bus with windows covered. Government feared losing neutrality during war. No official record they were there.”

I knew Dr. Neighbour from when he was a pastor in Houston where I worked at a local TV station. He called and asked if I could help get the orphans and staff to the U.S and find temporary housing for them. I contacted some Washington officials I knew and permission for them to enter the country was granted. When they arrived in Houston, a church couple with a large ranch offered them shelter and food until the Buckner Children and Family Services in Dallas could assist with processing and adoptions.

I interviewed the youngest, oldest and one in between who made the anniversary trip.

Sam Schrade, who was a baby when he was rescued from the streets of Saigon, is 51 and owns a successful media business in Houston. How would his life have been different had he stayed in Vietnam? He says the fact that he is of “mixed race” (American-Asian) would make it “doubly hard” because native Vietnamese “look down upon such people. I have been told by many people I would not have had a good life here because of the race issue and a government that didn’t want me.”

Kelli St. German, now 56, thinks she might have been growing coffee beans and doing hard labor had she not come to America. She also believes she would not have developed a strong faith because of the state’s antipathy toward religion. “I became a teacher for 30 years.”

Thomas Ho, the oldest orphan, now 76, was 25 when he left Vietnam. He helped organize the evacuation and prepared small amounts of food for the children. In America he became a chef and then studied to become an engineer. He says if he had stayed in Vietnam, “I might not have survived, especially at my age now. Life here is very difficult. A lot of the food is not very healthy.”

Reuniting with these adults, many of whom I met when they were children, is a reminder that there are things far greater than politics, celebrities and the petty jealousies that are the focus of too many of us.

There are few greater blessings than to have had a role in changing these lives for the better. These former orphans are blessed. So am I.

Readers may email Cal Thomas at tcaeditors@tribpub.com. Look for Cal Thomas’ latest book “A Watchman in the Night: What I’ve Seen Over 50 Years Reporting on America” (HumanixBooks).