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Higher ed and ‘playtime for adults’

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By Sherry Robinson
All She Wrote

I’m going to tell you a story about entitlement, misuse of public money, poor judgment, and fuzzy ethics. The only reason we know about it is because one journalist, doing his job, brought it to the public eye. Other media outlets followed suit and the State Auditor investigated. It’s now before the state Ethics Commission.

A year ago Joshua Bowling at the online Searchlight New Mexico broke this story: Since 2018, Western New Mexico University President Joseph Shepard had spent nearly $100,000 on travel to Zambia, Spain and Greece to recruit international students and their higher tuition dollars. With him at times were other university executives, members of the WNMU Board of Regents and his wife, former spy, author and congressional candidate Valerie Plame.

“All have traveled on the university’s dime,” Bowling wrote.

Also, Shepard spent nearly $28,000 in university money at a high-end Santa Fe store to furnish his on-campus house. It was necessary for entertaining potential donors, he told Bowling. “The president’s house has to look presidential. People expect it.”

The university tab has included $12,000 to lease a 5,400-square-foot home in Santa Fe for two months and $25,500 to send six people to the Ritz-Carlton Rancho Mirage, a resort in Palm Springs, California, for a seminar that was also available online.

WNMU has 3,500 students; 64 of them are foreign. Silver City’s economy depends on copper mining, tourism and the college. The median income of its 9,300 population is $21,000, and nearly 30% of its people are poor.

Regents have raised Shepard’s salary by $87,000 to $365,000 since 2020. And they’ve ignored two red flags.

In 2019, the school’s financial director resigned. Cheryl Hain told Bowling: “As a director of financial aid who can go to jail for the s— the school is doing… this is not worth the risk to me. Our taxpayers are funding playtime for adults.”

In 2018 the vice president of business affairs, Brenda Findley, sued regents over

Shepard’s “improprieties.” He ordered raises for employees he liked and directed university janitors to clean his house, run errands, cook meals and do laundry. When Findley complained, he fired her. Regents settled the lawsuit in June with a payout to Findley.

The Silver City Daily Press published the Searchlight story, along with a response from Shepard justifying the spending. It also reported on a crowded regents’ meeting in which many defended Shepard and criticized the Searchlight story as sensational and unfair. Searchlight then said the newspaper could no longer use Searchlight material.

The Santa Fe New Mexican chimed in early this year, reporting that the state Higher Education Department chastised Shepard in a letter for not performing a cost-benefit analysis on overseas travel spending and for issuing a state procurement card to his famous wife, who is not an employee. The department suggested suspending overseas travel until the benefits could be determined.

WNMU regents blew off the department. Their lawyer wrote back that WNMU was not part of state government. Translation: We don’t answer to you.

Next the State Auditor began investigating and on Nov. 19 stated that between 2018 and 2023, WNMU violated its own policies with $363,525.99 in wasteful and improper spending. The auditor’s report got wide news coverage.

Regents claim to be addressing the auditor’s “strong concerns,” but on a performance review last summer they gave Shepard high marks plus a $50,000 bonus. And they’ve ordered an independent audit. Wait, isn’t that what the State Auditor has already done?

Here we see two kinds of journalism. Searchlight dug into the numbers of a small-town institution and wielded an outsider’s objectivity. The Daily Press covers WNMU every day and sees the institution’s shades of gray.

At a time when real journalism is under fire, both approaches serve an informed readership.

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.

Mike Gallagher named Eddy County manager

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Adrian Hedden and Mike Smith
Carlsbad Current-Argus
achedden@currentargus.com
msmith@currentargus.com

Former Lea County Manager Mike Gallagher has been selected as county manager for Eddy County.

Gallagher’s appointment was announced Thursday, Dec. 5. He replaces Steve McCutcheon, who served as interim county manager for about four months after Roberta Gonzales stepped down as county manager in August.

Gallagher will assume the manager’s post Jan.1 He said his contract included a $249,500 salary for an indefinite period, a slight increase from the $246,000 he was paid in Lea County.

The county manager oversees day-to-day operations and all of Eddy County’s government departments, including its regional fire service, sheriff’s office, clerk’s office and public works department.

He said he looks forward to leveraging his experience in Lea County and its similarities with Eddy as a leading oil and revenue producer for the state.

“I think there’s a lot in common with Eddy and Lea County economically, and our way of life,” Gallagher said. “I’ve represented Lea County at the federal, state and local levels and I believe that will be applicable in Eddy County.”

Lea and Eddy counties share the Permian Basin in the southeast corner of the state and are New Mexico’s top producers of oil and gas. Eddy and Lea were also the fastest growing counties in the state since 2010, according to the 2020 U.S. Census. Eddy County’s population growth during that period was 15.8% and Lea County’s population increased by 15%.

The region is a “driver” for the state, Gallagher said, due to its heavy oil and gas production. It’s a story he said needs to be told on a state-wide level, not just for the benefits but the costs associated with supporting the industry for needs like road maintenance.

He said during his tenure as county manager, Lea County partnered with oil and gas companies to help fund projects, but also coordinated projects with extraction operations “to minimize interruptions and make sure our roads are safe.”

“I think Eddy and Lea counties, with other counties, we have the ability to educate the state on some of our local costs with oil and gas,” Gallagher said. “A lot of counties are envious of Eddy County. Eddy County is very blessed. Not a lot of counties are sympathetic that we don’t get our fair share (of revenue) back.”

Eddy County Commission Chair Bo Bowen said 12 people applied for the job, and the field was narrowed to six before Gallagher was chosen.

Bowen said he looked forward to working with Gallagher.

“I was pleasantly surprised he put in his resume and intent to interview with Eddy County,” Bowen said. “From my perspective, he was the right candidate. His expertise, his leadership, his experience in a similar county is going to transfer well to Eddy County.”

Gallager served as Lea County’s manager for about 14 years beginning in December 2010, according to his LinkedIn page. During that time, he oversaw an annual budget of about $680 million and more than 400 employees, the page read.

Gallagher worked as an advanced urban and regional planner at the New Mexico Department of Transportation in the Las Cruces region from 2008 to 2010, and as an urban planner with Dona Ana County from 2005 to 2008.

Gallagher brings with him to Eddy County his wife Rachel Gallagher, who serves and will continue to as a vice president at New Mexico Junior College in Hobbs, along with his son and four daughters ranging in age from 21 to seven.

He’s originally from St. Louis, Missouri and attended college, like his wife, at New Mexico State University before moving to southeast New Mexico in 2010.

“I think Eddy County is a great community,” he said. “Me and my family love Artesia, love Carlsbad and the river walk. “Folks (in Eddy County) have a desire to make some impressive legacy decisions, to flourish and be a leader in the state. Eddy County has all the right ingredients.”

McCutcheon, who retired as Carlsbad city administrator in 2018, served mostly in an advisory role ahead of Gallagher’s appointment, collecting a salary of $10 a month during his time with the county.

Gonzales took the county manager job in 2023 to replace retiring Al Davis. She was promoted from the county finance director position she held for the previous nine years. Gonzales returned to that job after stepping down as county manager.

New Mexico can “move the needle” with a regulatory sandbox

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By Paul Gessing

Among the numerous economic policy areas that hold New Mexico back is its heavy regulatory burden. Unnecessarily heavy regulations on business can make it harder than necessary to start and grow a business in New Mexico. The good news is that at least some regulatory reforms show real potential for bipartisanship in Santa Fe.

New Mexico could (and should) take a step toward regulatory reform by embracing what are known as “regulatory sandboxes.” In 2023 Albuquerque Democrat Rep. Meredith Dixon introduced an innovative form of legislation (HB 356), “The Technology Sandbox Act.”

While it didn’t pass or get so much as a hearing in 2023, the concept is relatively new to New Mexico and needs to be at least heard and discussed in legislative committees in the upcoming 60-day session. The concept of “regulatory sandboxes” is one that could be applied successfully to other areas of the State economy.

First and foremost, what is a “sandbox?” Simply put, it is a regulatory “space” for entrepreneurs and innovators, from small start-ups to large corporations, to try new ways of doing things without excessive, outdated regulations. Sandboxes allow regulators the flexibility to safely monitor and foster new ideas instead of simply shutting them down.

The concept didn’t come from a “red” state like Texas or “blue” state like California. It started in the UK in 2014 for financial technology innovations and quickly spread to other countries. In the US, several states targeted the fintech, insurance, and property tech industries while more states have begun to look at the industries of agriculture, healthcare, and energy.

Industry-specific sandboxes are a good way to start, but the goal is to allow for a universal sandbox to provide flexibility to all industries, creating a fair process that boosts economic growth while empowering businesses both big and small. Four states (Arizona, Kentucky, Utah, and now Missouri) have these broad sandboxes.

Outdated and unnecessary regulations don’t just hurt business people. We can’t know how many business ideas either fail or aren’t attempted due to archaic regulations that are inapplicable to modern models. Sandboxes let businesses do what they do best: solve problems for consumers.

Hopefully New Mexico’s newly minted and much-changed Legislature will take a more business-friendly approach to all manner of public policy issues starting with the upcoming 60-day session. With a more moderate approach we can certainly hope that a focus on actually growing our economy and diversifying it while continuing to benefit from the oil and gas boom would be winning approaches for Republicans and Democrats alike.

We have made the case for tax reform and reduction, but New Mexico’s thicket of regulations also holds us back. Regulatory “sandboxes” are a bi-partisan approach that is worth exploring this session.

Paul Gessing is president of New Mexico’s Rio Grande Foundation, an independent, nonpartisan, tax-exempt research and educational organization dedicated to promoting prosperity for New Mexico based on principles of limited government, economic freedom and individual responsibility.

Light Up Artesia is happening tonight!

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From: Artesia Daily Press Reports

Artesia MainStreet’s annual Light Up Artesia event will kick off the holiday season Dec. 5 with a full day of shopping, the annual Christmas tree lighting and the traditional Parade of Lights.

Shoppers can support local businesses during Shop Local from 11a.m. to 8 p.m., strolling through Main Street shops or visiting the indoor Pop Up Vendor Market at 302 W. Main Street.

The festivities rev up at 5 p.m. with the lighting of Artesia’s Christmas tree at the Derrick Floor and continue with the Parade of Lights featuring colorful floats and twinkling lights.

Parade staging will be at the Bulldog Bowl parking lot from 5-5:45 p.m. The parade gets underway at 6 p.m.

The parade route runs along Main Street and ends at 2nd Street. Spectators can enjoy the show from any point along Main Street but organizers advise parade watchers to arrive early to grab their favorite viewing spots.

For more information, visit www.artesiamainstreet.com.

Eddy County tax collections increase

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Mike Smith
El Rito Media
msmith@currentargus.com

Eddy County collected $5.9 million in sales taxes for October, finance director Roberta Gonzales reported during the county commissioners meeting Dec. 3.

Gonzales said the total was $2.1 million more than October 2023.

Oil and gas tax collections for October were $7.8 million, Gonzales reported.

“We’re up almost $4 million from last fiscal year,” she said.

October’s oil and gas tax receipts represent July business activity, she said. “For July’s business activity, we collected 26 million barrels (of oil) at about $76 a barrel.”

Gonzales said the county’s tax revenue from the oil and gas industry is based on West Texas Intermediate sweet crude oil prices.

“They are the most accurate with (the) current landscape in Eddy County,” she said.

As of Dec. 3, Gonzales said, the county was taxing an average of 24.5 million barrels of oil a month at a price of $78 per barrel.

Oil and gas tax collections could increase in Eddy County between now and the end of the 2024-25 fiscal year on June 30, Gonzales said.

The county has budgeted $5 million per month in revenue from oil and gas taxes, she said, except for December when $14 million was budgeted.

Gonzales said the additional revenue in December is generated by oil and gas equipment taxes not budgeted in other months.

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

Artesia to begin tournament play

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At 10 a.m. Thursday at the Bulldog Pit, the Artesia Bulldogs start the 2024-2025 season against Kirtland Central in the opening round of the City of Champions Classic.

At 11:30 a.m. Thursday, the Lady Bulldogs start the tournament against Goddard. 

Here is the complete bracket.

Council approves Officer Safety Plan

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By: Rebecca Hauschild

The Artesia Police Department’s use of high-tech tools to fight crime will take another step forward with the purchase of a $470,000 Officer Safety Plan bundle from Arizona-based weapon/technology developer Axon.

The city council approved the purchase and related budget adjustments along with several other budget changes during its meeting Nov. 26.

Axon Enterprise Inc. of Scottsdale, Arizona, manufactures and markets the Taser, which police officers use to incapacitate criminal suspects with electrical current. Axon’s Officer Safety Plan bundle includes the latest version of the Taser, officials said, as well as virtual reality training, streamlined reporting, body cameras and interview room recorders.

The Axon contract will be a recurring expenditure, according to Summer Valverde, Artesia’s city clerk/treasurer.

“We will be replacing about $192,000 in expenditures that are currently within our 2025 budget, so the net is $201,000,” Valverde said. “The total contract is $470,000 but the LEPF fund is going to pay for some of the hardware that will come in the bundle.”

Another budget change will provide city employees with extra pay for maintaining their employment. As part of the budget adjustment resolution, the council approved $3300 in retention pay for employees in departments other than fire and police. The cost of the program is $449,000, Valverde said.

Other items in the fiscal year 2025 budget adjustment resolution included grants received from the Federal Aviation Administration for the taxiway rehab project at the Artesia airport; a $495,000 grant received for a water well project; and a $26,500 increase in expenditures for the law enforcement retention fund.

In other action:

• Community Development/Infrastructure Director Byron Landfair reported that Jaycee Park will be open for winter hours, 8 a.m. to 8 p.m., and the new restrooms will be open during those hours.

• Landfair offered a progress report on 26th Street bridge work. “The northbound lane got poured this week,” he said. “They are starting to work on pads and suspension pieces underneath. As a reminder, please be mindful when you detour in that area and watch for kids playing.”

• Valverde discussed the government committee’s recent review of architecture designs for remodeling the airport: “We are waiting for bids on the hangar, but plans are to have the hangar building and taxiway rehab done by the end of February 2025.”

Thankful for You

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By: Pastor Rick Smith

During this time of the Thanksgiving holiday our minds and hearts are focused more on those things for which we should be thankful. We should live our lives in constant thanksgiving. Yet it is good that our forefathers saw the need for a focused call annually to a time as a nation to give thanks. And we, as Americans, have much for which we need to be thankful. No other nation has been blessed materially as we have. Although we have never been perfect, no other country has enjoyed a more universal freedom than ours. I can’t but feel that our general well being us a result of those early pilgrims that set the pattern of civil justice that has long been followed in the generations since. As Christians we must set the standard for others to emulate. Even we fail to give thanks for those people that have blessed our lives. The apostle Paul on more than one occasion gave thanks for people that had touched his life. For instance, Paul says in 1 Thessalonians 1:2, “We give thanks to God always for you all, making mention of you in our prayers.” Let this verse be a pattern of our thankfulness for the people in our lives.

“We give thanks to God always for you all, making mention of you in our prayers.” We thank God. Although we should always thank those that have blessed us, we know that all good things come from God (James 1:17) and He should be thanked for those He sends into our lives. You will notice that Paul says, “We give thanks to God.” He could have been referring to himself as an individual or he and his team. In either case we are instructed by Jesus to pray “our Father”. We are to thank God in reference to and in unity with all our brothers and sisters in Christ. It doesn’t mean that I never can pray or give thanks as an individual, but it does mean that I am aware and inclusive of the family of God. We have the wonderful privilege of thanking our Father for the blessing of others in our lives.

Notice again what this verse tells us. “We give thanks to God always for you all, making mention of you in our prayers.” Developing a thankfulness for people in our lives is something we all should do. How often we neglect to tell others what a blessing they have been in our lives. How more often do we fail to thank God for including them in our lives. We are ungrateful to both God and to those who have blessed us. How often do we gripe and complain about minor faults in people that have generally been a blessing to us. We should give unceasing thanks to God for all things and in every situation and for the people He places in our life’s path. That would include the bad and exasperating people that come into our lives. God has Allan that we cannot fully appreciate, but we can trust Him that they are in our lives for His glory and their and our ultimate good.

It is important that we see the means of our thanksgiving to God. “We give thanks to God always for you all, making mention of you in our prayers. When I was younger, my prayers were filled with my own needs and interests. As I have grown my prayers are filled more with people instead. Prayer should include thanksgiving to the Father for people whom He has blessed us with as well as our personal requests, intercessions, and praise to God. Mentioning people to God in prayer, seeking their well being and growth will help them, mature us, and glorify God. Selfish self-centered prayer benefits nobody, not even ourselves. That kind of prayer is not prayer at all, but a Pharisaic ritual. Thank God in prayer for those people that have blessed you.

Take time, not just during the Thanksgiving holiday season, to thank God for the people He’s blessed you with. And, if you have the occasion, thank those people that have been a blessing in your life.

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.

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

Annual Food Drive Held

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Yucca Bulldog Bandit Student Council held their annual food drive. All food items were donated to Grammy’s House. J&J Homecare sponsored the food drive, providing a pizza party for the class that donated the most items. Mrs. Conn’s 1st grade class won the class competition. AHS Student Council, The Bridge-Sober Living, and Victory Life Fellowship helped deliver the items to Grammy’s House.

Roswell defeats Artesia for 5A state title

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Mike Smith
Artesia Daily Press
msmith@currentargus.com

The Roswell Coyotes scored early against the Artesia Bulldogs Saturday at the Wool Bowl in Roswell and never looked back denying Artesia its 33rd state title and a three-peat in New Mexico’s 5A class winning 41-22.

The victory avenged a 35-21 loss in 2023 at the Bulldog Bowl in Artesia.

The Bulldogs last three-peat came in 1996-97-98.

Coyotes quarterback Jacob Palomino set the tone on Roswell’s opening drive of the first quarter scoring on a 62-yard run.

Francisco Guzman booted the extra point kick with 10:46 left in the opening period.

Seconds later Bulldog quarterback Izac Cazares answered Palmino’s score, as he ran for an 80-yard touchdown. The extra point kick was blocked as the Coyotes led 7-6.

Palomino scored his second touchdown of the quarter with under seven minutes left to play. Guzman kicked the extra point as Roswell exteneded the lead 14-7.

The Bulldogs could not find any offensive footing on its second drive of the first quarter. Fate though appeared to be on Artesia’s side as the Palomino fumbled on the Coyotes third drive of the period.

Cazares capped off a nine play drive with a 5-yard touchdown run. Artesia’s 2-point conversion failed as Roswell held on to a 14-12 lead.

In the second quarter, the sold-out crowd felt the momentum shifting to Roswell’s favor as the Coyotes capped off a 17-play drive, as Palomino struck 6-foot-3 wide reciever Madison Greathouse with a 5-yard pass. Guzman’s extra point kick was good as Roswell led 21-12 with 6:26 left before halftime.

More than two minutes later, Artesia’s Corbyn Dominguez booted a 32-yard field goal as the lead narrowed to 21-15.

Roswell widened the lead again as Palomino scored on a 2-yard run with 33 seconds left before halftime. The extra point was good as the lead was 28-15.

The Coyotes put the game away for good in the second half securing its first state title since 2019.

Artesia’s final touchdown of the game came with 7:01 left in the third quarter as senior running back Frankie Galindo caught at 40-yard pass.

Dominguez kicked the extra point for the Bulldogs.

Roswell head coach Jeff Lynn said the win was good for not only Roswell High School, but the community as a whole which is still recovering from flood damage suffered during an October storm.

“I’m just happy for these kids, everything they’ve overcome. I’m just super proud of our community and our school,” he said after the game as players, the parents and the community at large celebrated.

“I’m just super happy for these kids, that’s what its all about. For them to finish on top, that’s what it’s all about,” he said.

Bulldog head coach Jeremy Maupin said Artesia played good at times in the loss. But lacked consistency.

“We just need to be more consistent and wish we had another shot at them. We don’t have it this year, so we’ll have to wait another year,” he said after the Bulldogs accepted the second-place trophy.

Maupin said injuries to starting quarterback Izac Cazares and running back Bryce Parra did not help Artesia’s cause in the second half.

He said he was proud of the seniors as 34 of them played their final game in a Bulldog uniform, including Galindo.

After the game, Galindo said he wanted to motivate the team to another victory.

“I just never thought to give up. I just wanted to go 110 percent, I just wanted to keep on driving and I wanted to keep teammates up even thought their heads were down. I always wanted to be the positive person and leader of this group and bring everyone up and try to get something going, a spark,” he said.

Galindo thanked the coaches and the community for its support during his time in a Bulldog uniform.

Artesia wrapped the 2024 season with a 9-4 record and Roswell finished 11-1.

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