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Esther Frazee

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A rosary will be recited for Esther Hernandez Frazee at Our Lady of Grace Catholic Church in Artesia, NM on Saturday, March 1, 2025, at 10:30 am. Funeral Mass will immediately follow at 11:00 am. Burial is at Woodbine Cemetery.

Esther was called to her eternal resting place on February 12, 2025. She was born to Ramon and Genevieve Hernandez in Artesia, NM. Esther was raised in the catholic faith and relied on her faith in the Lord to get her through the good times and bad times.

Esther lived a full life. After graduating from Artesia High School, she went to University in Lawton, Oklahoma on a full scholarship. She graduated as a registered nurse. She returned to Artesia and began working at Artesia General Hospital. While working as an RN, Esther completed her Bachelor’s and Master’s Degrees at Eastern NM University in psychology and sociology. While completing her degrees, Esther also worked two jobs and raised four children as a single mother.

After retiring from nursing, Esther was a case worker and then an adult probation officer for the State of New Mexico. She also taught psychology at ENMU.

Esther was a compassionate, giving, and loving person. In her years of employment, she cared for and took in many children and adults in their time of need. She was a member of NM Retired Teachers Association, volunteered at the local food bank, and helped at funerals for the catholic church.

Esther took great pride in her four children and supported them in all activities they participated in. She raised her children to be strong, independent, and productive individuals.

She was preceded in death by her parents; son, Richard Frazee; brother, Ramon “Sonny” Hernandez; sisters, Martha Easley, Margaret Pacheco, and Josephine Weaver; son-in-law, Billy Latham.

She is survived her daughter, Rhonda Frazee-Matejka (Curt); son, Rene Frazee (Judy); daughter, Roxanna Frazee; grandchildren, Monique, Candace, Jamie, Bobby, Chyenne, Dillon, Courtney, Brianna, Ramon, and Montana; 26 great grandchildren; numerous nieces, nephews, and cousins.

Esther felt her greatest accomplishments were Richard, Rhonda, Rene, Roxanna, her grandchildren, and great-grandchildren.

James Leachman

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A viewing will be held for James Adam Leachman at Artesia Center on Friday, March 7, 2025, from 11:00 am to 2:00 pm with a Memorial Service to immediately follow.
Adam, 44, passed away on February 23, 2025, in Artesia, NM. He was born on May 3, 1980, to James Ray and Rita Faye (Long) Leachman in Wichita, KS.

Adam coached little league basketball for over 20 years and has been a Recreational Tech at the center for 8 1/2 years coaching and umpiring youth sports.
Adam is preceded by his parents James and Rita Leachman; best friends, Jose Martinez (2011) and Daniel Zamarron (2022).

Those left to cherish his memory are his sons by love, Darian and Canaan Mahan; sister, Tonya Teel; nieces, Lauren and Georgia; nephew, Nolan.

Popular ski area has historic origins

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Mike Smith
El Rito Media
msmith@currentargus.com

Visitors to Pajarito Mountain Ski Area in the northern New Mexico community of Los Alamos know it’s a great place to ski.

What a lot of them may not know is that the ski mecca was the brainchild of the very same scientists who spearheaded the Manhattan Project – the top secret program that developed the world’s first nuclear weapons in Los Alamos more than 80 years ago.

A group of scientists and soldiers launched the Los Alamos Ski Club in 1943 and the club evolved into today’s popular ski area, according to the Pajarito Mountain website.

“Many of them had immigrated to the U.S. from Europe and skiing was in their blood. Most had grown up climbing and skiing the Alps,” the website says of the club’s founders – a group that included J. Robert Oppenheimer and Nobel laureates Enrico Fermi, Hans Bethe and Niels Bohr.

“The scientists developed the first ski resort in Los Alamos called Sawyers Hill and then they moved it because they wanted more snow and they moved it to the current Pajarito (location),” explained Christiana Hudson, Pajarito Mountain’s marketing director.

Weather a concern this season

Hudson said Pajarito has been dry with above normal temperatures, although half the ski area’s trails are still open.

“We’re definitely not where we usually are this time of year. We’re at 58 inches this season,” she said.

At 3:15 p.m. Monday, Feb. 24, the National Weather Service reported a temperature of 66 degrees at the Los Alamos Airport. The weather service was predicting temperatures in the mid-50s for Saturday and Sunday, March 1-2.

Hudson said Pajarito Mountain has a snowmaking pond that helps when Mother Nature is lacking.

“Our beginner’s slope is really well-suited and groomed very well,” she said. “We really keep up with that beginner area to make it family friendly and affordable.”

More on Pajarito Mountain

Hudson said the mountain resort has 280 acres for skiing with a summit elevation of 10,000 feet.

“There are 53 trails, and the majority are intermediate or difficult. Twenty percent are beginner trails and there are six lifts,” Hudson said.

Pajarito Mountain offers ski lessons, equipment rentals, a gift shop, and a café for hungry skiers. This year’s ski season will culminate March 29 with “Skiesta.”

“We do really zany and fun races and ski competitions and snow competitions,” Hudson said. “We’ll have live music. It’s always a big party. It’s super fun.”

Here are reported New Mexico skiing conditions as of Monday, Feb. 24
(information provided by Ski New Mexico):

Pajarito Mountain had a base depth of 10 inches with 24 of 53 trails and 3 of 6 lifts open.

Angel Fire had a base depth of 21 inches with 51 of 86 trails open and 7 of 7 lifts open.

Sipapu had a base depth of 16 inches with 13 of 44 trails open and 4 of 6 lifts open.

Ski Apache had a base depth of 10 inches with 4 of 55 trails open.

Ski Santa Fe had a base depth of 36 inches with 83 of 90 trails open and 6 of 7 lifts open.

Taos Ski Valley had a base depth of 33 inches with 93 of 120 trails open and 12 of 13 lifts open.

Note: Snow conditions can change after this report is compiled.

Mike Smith can be reached at 575-308-8734 or email at msmith@currentargus.com.

Ordinary Missionaries

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By: Pastor Rick Smith

The first church was blessed with apostles, deacons, and elders, but missionaries didn’t appear at first. Perhaps God wanted them to settle in to the life of that local church, or, maybe it was simply not in God’s timing to send out missionaries. That early church was made up of locals and foreigners. They had to learn how to be the church. They had to handle the growing pains of having such a diverse group of people. But then came persecution and martyrdom. “Now they which were scattered abroad upon the persecution that arose about Stephen travelled as far as Phenice, and Cyprus, and Antioch, preaching the word to none but unto the Jews only.” (Acts 11:19). They were ordinary missionaries that God used in miraculous ways.

Who were these that were scattered because of the persecution after Stephan’s death? Looking back to Pentecost in Acts 2 we are told that the crowd was made up of “…Parthians, and Medes, and Elamites, and the dwellers in Mesopotamia, and in Judaea, and Cappadocia, in Pontus, and Asia, Phrygia, and Pamphylia, in Egypt, and in the parts of Libya about Cyrene, and strangers of Rome, Jews and proselytes, Cretes and Arabians…” (Acts 2:9-11). It was this mixed group of foreign born Jews and proselytes that were scattered. The regions that they settled in were places dominated by Gentiles that spoke Greek. Initially the contacts were made sharing the gospel with other Jews. This is the pattern that was practiced later by the apostle Paul. These, though, probably limited themselves to the Jews, because they were more comfortable communicating the gospel to them. They were Jews and they would have common ground to proclaim the gospel.

But among those that were scattered were those from parts of the Roman world where the Jews would have to do commerce and live among the Gentiles. “And some of them were men of Cyprus and Cyrene, which, when they were come to Antioch, spake unto the Grecians, preaching the Lord Jesus. And the hand of the Lord was with them: and a great number believed, and turned unto the Lord.” (Acts 11:20-21). This is a prayer point for us. We want the hand of the Lord to be with all of our mission work. The gospel of Jesus Christ is precious seed that must penetrate into the depth of the soul and grow. We want all men to turn to the Lord. That should occupy our prayers and our work.

Once the church at Jerusalem heard about it they sent Barnabas to check it out. “Then tidings of these things came unto the ears of the church which was in Jerusalem: and they sent forth Barnabas, that he should go as far as Antioch.” (Acts 11:22). Jerusalem was approximately fifteen days journey to Antioch. When Barnabas saw what God had done he “…exhorted them all, that with purpose of heart they would cleave unto the Lord.” (Acts 11:23).

At this point in the book of Acts there is a turning of the page. Up to this point the emphasis had been on the work of the original apostles, especially Peter. But now, Barnabas seeks out Paul in Tarsus to bring him into the work at Antioch. You will remember that when Paul turned to Christ it was Barnabas who presented him to the Jerusalem church. Now, Barnabas brings Paul into the work of disciplining the new Gentile believers. Paul and Barnabas, along with others, for a year gathered with the “…with the church, and taught much people.” (Acts 11:26). The new disciples were edified and Paul and Barnabas were able to bring others to faith in Jesus.

The goal of ordinary missions and missionaries is to present every man prefect in Christ (Colossians 1:28). The disciples were no longer Jew or Gentile, but something new and part of the mystery of the gospel. It really is summed up in the statement: “And the disciples were called Christians first in Antioch.” (Acts 11:26). Through the ordinary members of the scattered church acting as missionaries God open the door to the Gentiles. Our mission, as individuals, is the same as that of every true church. Our mission is to bring the gospel to all men everywhere.

If you have any questions, we invite you to visit with us this Sunday. Worship at 10:50 A.M. We are located at 711 West Washington Ave. Check our sermon videos on Youtube @ricksmith2541. Send comments and prayer requests to prayerlinecmbc@gmail.com.

Rick Smith is the Pastor at Calvary Missionary Baptist Church in Artesia.

Legislation with no off ramps

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By Senator Larry Scott

We are now just past the halfway point of this 60 day legislative session and the activity level, as is usually the case, has been very hectic. I’ve settled into my new role in the Senate with the procedures not much different than those in the House. Voting is much ‘lower tech’ as instead of pushing a button to vote electronically, we vote in the Senate with a show of hands. It feels just a bit like third grade which is appropriate given some of the legislation being considered.

I’ve been assigned to two committees, ‘Conservation’ and ‘Health & Public Affairs’. Perhaps the worst bill we will see this session came through Conservation early in the session. This bill codifies the Governor’s executive order to reduce greenhouse gas emissions to ‘net-zero’ by the year 2050. Unlike the Governor’s order, this legislation contains no off ramps. Seventy-five percent of the reductions cannot occur with carbon credit offsets but must be actual lowering of the emissions. I made the argument in committee that, in our mechanized society, emissions equal energy availability equal prosperity. What SB4 will do is take the State back to emission levels comparable to the poorest central African nations whose citizens live short lives in grinding poverty.

The oil and gas industry continues to be under attack. There have been no less than 24 bills introduced that would harm, in one way or another, the industry on which our southeast prosperity depends. Your southeast legislators in both the House and Senate are doing everything we can to stall or kill all of these.

Other legislation of note is the ‘Paid Family Medical Leave’ act which, when introduced, would allow 12 weeks of paid time off for virtually any reason. This, along with the proposed minimum wage increases to $17.00/hour, would decimate small businesses across the State. In a conversation with a restaurant owner here in Santa Fe, she represented that there was very simply insufficient profit margin to keep her restaurant open under those conditions. The building would have to become another art gallery.

The number and velocity of bad bills moving through the legislature is greater this session than anything I have previously experienced in my 10 years of service. I can almost believe that my progressive colleagues are feeling the winds of change that are blowing across the country and are making a last ditch effort to place into statute all of the rules and executive orders advanced by this administration in the last 6 years. The term floating around the capital is “Trump proofing” State public policy.

New Mexico is dead last in so many quality of life areas that it is hard to imagine that a change of course would not be appropriate. We have moved from a 6 billion dollar to an almost 11 billion dollar budget during my term in office and yet are no better off. It’s been said that the definition of insanity is doing the same thing over and over again expecting different results. It is long past time for us to do something different.

Larry Scott is a New Mexico State Senator

representing District 42.

Eddy County public land sale nets $20M for oil and gas

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Adrian Hedden
El Rito Media
achedden@currentargus.com

A sale of leases to the oil and gas industry for federal public land in Eddy County brought in $20 million on Feb. 20, as the federal government aims to increase fossil fuel production throughout the U.S.

The lease sale held by the Bureau of Land Management offered parcels of land in New Mexico’s southeast corner amid the Permian Basin oilfields – the most productive oil and gas basin in the U.S.

A total of about $20.7 million was received during the auction for leases that will remain in effect for 10 years or as long as oil or gas is produced.

All seven of the offered parcels were bid on and set to be leased, totaling 1,317 acres in Eddy and Lea counties. About 1,238 of those acres – six of the seven parcels – were in Eddy County while a single parcel on 79 acres was offered in Lea County.

Leasing the parcels, which are nominated by oil and gas companies, is the first step toward development on public land, which also requires applications to permit drilling and subsequent environmental analysis before applications are approved.

In a statement released with the sale results, the bureau said the leases help fulfill the federal administration’s agenda of increasing domestic fossil fuel production following an executive order issued in January by President Donald Trump.

“Oil and gas lease sales support domestic energy production and American energy independence, while contributing to the nation’s economic and military security,” read the statement.

But fossil fuel trade groups argued the agency should have offered more land for production in the highly sought-after Permian Basin. The parcels provided in the sale were chosen during the previous administration, and the Western Energy Alliance voiced frustration at the low amount of land offered.

“The amount of acreage offered for sale in New Mexico is below demand, as indicated by the minimal number of parcels and acreage listed, and our members’ frustrations with waiting years for parcels to be made available,” read a protest letter submitted to the bureau by the Alliance on Dec. 9, 2024.

Conservation groups protested the sale for different reasons. A joint letter submitted by the Western Environmental Law Center, Wild Earth Guardians, the Center for Biological Diversity and Sierra Club’s Rio Grande Chapter said the bureau should pause oil and gas leases until a full environmental analysis is completed.

The groups argued the agency should analyze the effects of drilling on air and water quality ahead of leasing, as opposed to the process of doing so when applications to permit drilling are submitted after the land is leased.

The Department of Interior, the bureau’s parent agency, should also take steps, the groups argued, to limit air pollution emissions that could cause global warming above 1.5 degrees Celsius – an international benchmark when scientists believe catastrophic weather events could occur.

The groups contended a review of the leases “must include meaningful consideration of alternatives that could allow the Department of Interior to fulfill its role in putting the nation on a path towards an emissions future compatible with limiting warming to 1.5°C and mitigating the worst effects of global climate change.”

Despite environmental concerns, U.S. oil development on public land is a critical facet of the nation’s economy, argued economic nonprofit Taxpayers for Common Sense. The group called on recently appointed Interior Secretary Doug Burgum to maintain a higher royalty rate enacted by the administration of former President Joe Biden, amid discussions Trump could roll it back.

The bureau receives a 16.67% royalty rate paid by lessees on the proceeds from oil and gas sales. The rate was increased from 12.5% in April 2024 .

The taxpayers group noted in a Feb. 20 report that the average bid of $15,673 per acre in the latest lease sale in New Mexico was four times higher than the average bid for sales in 2024 in the state. This showed that lands needed for oil and gas were increasing in value and returns for. American taxpayers should increase accordingly, the group argued,

“With U.S. oil production already at record highs and industry executives signaling they aren’t looking to expand domestic production further, there’s no justification for undermining fiscal responsibility or handing over America’s natural resources to pad the pockets of speculators,” said Taxpayers for Common Sense President Steve Ellis.

Patients sound off about NM medical malpractice costs

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By Sherry Robinson
All She Wrote

This is how bad New Mexico’s medical malpractice problem is.

Reader Carl Hester, of Hobbs, writes that when he went to a doctor in Lubbock, he had to sign a statement, apparently intended for New Mexicans, saying “any lawsuit or other dispute arising from or related to medical care I receive from (the provider) will be brought only in an appropriate court located in Lubbock.

New Mexico’s reputation for doctor targeting, judge shopping and sky high awards has spread to Texas, where a great many people living on the East Side go for medical care. Texas providers feel the need to protect themselves. Our own providers don’t have that luxury. It’s one reason why the New Mexico Medical Society says it’s difficult to recruit and retain doctors.

A couple of weeks ago I wrote about Senate Bill 176 to cap attorney fees in medical malpractice lawsuits at 25% of the money awarded if a case is settled or 33% if a case goes to trial. It would also send 75% of punitive damages to a new public fund designed to improve patient safety.

SB 176 is one in a package of bills advanced by Think New Mexico, a nonpartisan think tank, to address our shortage of healthcare workers.

New Mexico ranks second highest in the nation for medical malpractice lawsuits per capita. The number is more than twice the national average. New Mexico’s medical malpractice insurance premiums are nearly twice those of Arizona, Colorado and Texas and still rising. And yet, many malpractice insurance companies lose money.

We’ve gotten here because of the New Mexico Trial Lawyers Association’s grip on legislators, many of them lawyers.

I asked my dermatologist about his experience. He said doctor friends have gotten tired of being in legal crosshairs and moved to Montana and Texas. In 20 years he’s been sued three times, once for himself and twice for his physician assistants, even though each time a medical review board voted unanimously in his favor.

Recently, commentary erupted on the listserve Next Door after an Albuquerque breast surgeon asked her patients to contact legislators about the lack of doctors in New Mexico. The patient wrote, “Lawyers giving money to the people we voted into office to not cap the money people get for suing the doctors is the one reason lawmakers don’t do anything about the issue.”

Here’s a sampling of the responses:

“My wife’s (doctor) just retired early. She said if she wasn’t about to retire she would have left this state to practice elsewhere. She said this is a very hostile state to practice medicine in. The legal expectation is that (doctors) should be God and that no possible complication should ever happen, even if it was not the fault of the provider.”

“Doctors and surgeons have left New Mexico due to the high cost of medical malpractice insurance. It is high because there are no legislative restrictions on what trial lawyers can sue for. New Mexico’s legislators, Republican and Democrat, receive huge amounts of campaign contributions from trial lawyers to keep it this way.”

“My daughter is a soon-to-be third-year medical student (out of state) & would love to come back to Albuquerque even for residency… as she loves it here but keeps getting warned not to do it.”

“As someone who actively recruits physicians, (I can say) they don’t want to come here because of the med mal climate. Not only are the premiums sky high, $105k for an Ob/Gyn, but the threat of getting sued in this state and then facing punitive damages on top of the med mal price tag is outrageous. We need tort reform. The trial attorneys have all the money and pay lobbyists to protect their cash cow. They also control the House and Senate so any substantial change will likely not happen.”

“You are exactly right about this! Even those physicians who love this state have to decide how much risk and actual abuse they can take!”

Watch what happens to SB 176. You’re going to hear it’s victim blaming. It’s not. You’re going to hear it’s about healthcare industry profits. That’s a separate, unrelated issue. Who is going to ask the big question: Is it right for lawyers to kneecap our healthcare system so they can harvest millions?

Sherry Robinson is a longtime New Mexico reporter and editor. She has worked in Grants, Gallup, the Albuquerque Journal, New Mexico Business Weekly and Albuquerque Tribune. She is the author of four books. Her columns won first place in 2024 from New Mexico Press Women.

3 Circles

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By: Pastor Ty Houghtaling

We can all agree that the world at times seems pretty broken. What broke the world? People. People lie, cheat, and steal. People can be so self-centered. Christians, we know that people are flawed. We have come to believe that we are all born with a sin nature; a nature bent towards rebellion and self-seeking.

God has given us a choice; we can either pursue our self-interests or pursue His design. Christians we know that when people depart from God’s design for their lives, they will always end up in a place of brokenness. Once there in the broken place they obviously try to escape. Maybe they try to start over with a new relationship or they try and numb their pain with alcohol or drugs, or maybe they just “white knuckle it” and “try harder” but none of these attempts seem to bring much peace. At this point they might ask themselves, “is there any way out of my pain and confusion?”

Thankfully God has made a way out of brokenness. He has provided Jesus as “The Way”. The Christian knows this, but our non-believing friends and neighbors do not believe this powerful truth. That’s where we come in, we can offer them an alternative to the cycle of running from God and ending up in disillusionment. We can point them to the good news. Below is a diagram of the three circles evangelism strategy. It has some scripture references to help walk a person through the process of finding a way out of sin. It isn’t a perfect tool but a helpful one in explaining how sin has broken the world and how Jesus can save us and give us a better way to live and to pursue God.

Ty Houghtaling is the Pastor at the First Baptist Church in Artesia

Congressional Dems highlight Trump fears at Roundhouse

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El Rito Media News Services

U.S. Rep. Teresa Leger Fernández did not mince words Monday on the New Mexico House floor when raising concerns about the early days of President Donald Trump’s second term.

“I’m going to say it, guys: We are at the door of a constitutional crisis, when profiteering billionaires who are not elected,” Leger Fernández said, the rest of her sentence largely drowned out in a flurry of heavy applause.

In speeches spanning about 20 minutes, Leger Fernández, along with U.S. Sens. Martin Heinrich and Ben Ray Luján, offered messages of strength and unity, stressed the importance of the Legislature’s work and relayed concerns about the policy priorities of the Trump administration — messages that spurred multiple standing ovations.

New Mexico has historically relied on large portions of federal aid, and the members of the delegation alluded to natural disasters that have rocked the state in recent years.

“In our most challenging times, New Mexicans look out for each other,” Heinrich said. “From the darkest days of the Hermits Peak/Calf Canyon Fire to last year’s flooding in Roswell. From north to south, from east to west, New Mexicans understand our shared commitment to one another.”

The remarks came as protesters gathered outside the Roundhouse on Monday to rail against policy directives set by the Trump administration as well as against billionaire Elon Musk’s new role in the federal government at the helm of the Department of Government Efficiency, or DOGE.

There were a number of open seats in the chamber, with some Republican members of the House and Senate choosing not to attend the joint session. House Minority Leader Gail Armstrong, R-Magdalena, noted the session came at a busy time in the lawmaking season but that she was able to attend portions of it.

“Today’s speeches from members of New Mexico’s Congressional delegation only solidify how out of touch they are with New Mexicans,” Armstrong said in a statement. “I’m not focused on their attacks and complaints about lost elections.”

“I’m focused on the people of New Mexico,” the statement continued. “We want to deliver for them by lowering costs, making our neighborhoods safer, and fixing broken departments like CYFD.”

Heinrich praised state lawmakers for prioritizing deeper investment in behavioral health and for looking to increase the childhood tax credit. Three bipartisan bills — all aimed at reforming and funding New Mexico’s behavioral health system — are moving quickly through the Legislature.

“All of these New Mexicans are counting on us, here in this room, to lead, to give a damn and to keep our community safe,” Heinrich said. “Simply put, they are counting on us to deliver and that requires grappling with difficult decisions and it requires solving real problems that impact real people.”

Luján talked about the importance of New Mexican values, calling for communication and collaboration across a range of issues. He noted he is one of the senators who reintroduced the Radiation Exposure Compensation Reauthorization Act last month, an effort to revive and expand a program that compensates people who were sickened through the federal government’s nuclear weapons testing and production. The proposal would extend the benefits to residents of New Mexico.

“I am more convinced than ever that, as New Mexicans, we can stand strong against whatever headwinds there are. And we are going to come out stronger, right?” Luján said.

He also urged funding tied to closing gaps in broadband access in the state.

“It’s time for the state to start investing these dollars,” Lujan said. “If you don’t believe me, just go back and chat with the folks back at home, and take time to travel down that long, dirt road to that one farm where you know the family but you know there’s no connectivity.”

Leger Fernández agreed.

“We can’t just have broadband in the big house. We need it in the adobe house. We need it in the ranch house,” she said, generating applause. “We need it in every house in New Mexico.”

Amid concerns about housing affordability in the Land of Enchantment, Leger Fernández talked about her “Home of Your Own Act,” introduced in Congress in June of last year.

The legislation would expand a limited pilot project to provide a one-time, $30,000 down payment assistance grant to first-time homebuyers who qualify for the program and to create a new national homeownership assistance grant program at the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development. Leger Fernández referred to proposed spending cuts at the federal level.

“What are we going to say? Hell, no. We are going to fight like hell to keep those cuts from happening,” Leger Fernández said.

Talking to reporters following the speeches on the House floor, Heinrich said Democrats in Congress will have their work cut out for them to push back on Trump’s agenda.

“We’re now in trench warfare. We’re in program by program, issue by issue, and it’s an endless game of Whac-a-Mole,” he said.

Theater renovation discussed by City Council

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By: Rebecca Hauschild

The Land of the Sun Theater could be one step closer to revival after the Artesia City Council voted to pursue capital funding to purchase or renovate the long-closed movie house often referred to as the Landsun or Land Sun.

Morgan Fox, executive director of Artesia MainStreet, discussed possible renovation during the council’s Feb. 11 meeting

“I talked with the director of New Mexico MainStreet at a recent conference,” Fox said. “They receive capital outlay funding from the New Mexico Legislature, grant it to communities across New Mexico, and they have a little bit left over.

“Their director said, ‘Let’s grant the city of Artesia monies to purchase the Landsun.’ So, we could either purchase the Landsun or if that’s not required, we can use (the money) to renovate. They have awarded $1.1 million over the last 10 years for theater renovations across New Mexico. Lovington received $400,000 and Carlsbad received $350,000.”

Fox also spoke to the New Mexico Environmental Department about the theater, she said.

“They applied for a $2 million federal grant in hopes that the city would buy the Landsun and they could help with some remediation if necessary,” Fox said “They have funding available for the first step, which is an environmental assessment … required before an acquisition.”

New Mexico MainStreet would require project completion in two years and ownership by the city for a minimum of 10 years, Fox said.

‘I think it’s exciting,” Fox said “We do have an opportunity to reengage with Russell Allen who owns Allen Theatres and maybe entice him back into participating in our community and that would be really excellent.”

“I’m all for it,” said councilor Jarrod Moreau. “We’ve already earmarked $1 million for renovations. However, we need to massage all that to make it work.”

In other action:

• Police Chief Kirk Roberts told the council there were eight auto burglaries in the city last month. He said the most common areas for auto burglaries are the south side of town and the Richey and 20th Street area. Roberts said many of the car burglaries in the city are committed by repeat offenders. “We have some new auto burglars but there are …. generations of the same family doing the same thing,” he said. Roberts also discussed an increase in “porch pirates” and recommended getting a delivery box that can be locked. “We have identified a few of these people but there are others,” Roberts said. “A lot of them will follow the delivery trucks around.”

• Community Development/Infrastructure Director Byron Landfair reported that bids have come in much higher than expected for a planned 1800-square-foot building to house portions of the planning and infrastructure department. “We may look at some portables to go in out there for now,” he said. “There’s not good news on the contracting cost front.

• The council approved a $190,000 adjustment to the 2024-2025 parks department budget that included $100,000 to improve softball and baseball fields.