On December 3, Governor Michelle Lujan Grisham accompanied by Speaker of the House Javier Martinez, Mayor Tim Keller and State Fair Commission Chairman Eric Serna and other officials held a news conference at Expo New Mexico to announce that the state intended to find a new location and move the State Fair within two years.
The announcement included the release of a Request For Proposal (RFP) that the legislature advanced $500,000 to develop a master plan for the 236-acre cite. The purpose of the Master Plan would be to provide a plan to maximize facilities operations year round, including addressing the needs and growth of the area for the next 10 to 20 years and find perhaps other uses for the property itself. The $500,000 Request for Proposals was issued on December 3 and was to last for 45 days.
No new location was announced during the press conference, but it was suggested that keeping the State Fair centrally located such as in Bernalillo, Valencia or Torrance County would be beneficial due to the interstates. Governor Lujan Grisham said this:
“We have made the decision preliminarily to ask for folks to focus on the center of the state … but there are a lot of spaces. Though Albuquerque is a bit constrained, there are still plenty of opportunities in Bernalillo County. Imagine, if you will, that Valencia County could offer up some interesting proposals, that the South Valley right here in Bernalillo County [could do the same]. Bernalillo County ought to think about where would a new developed platform in space be. Maybe Torrance County, maybe Edgewood and Santa Fe.
New Mexico House Speaker Javier Martinez said this:
“Sadly, we’ve lost our two grocery stores. We lost to Walmart a couple of years ago. We lost the Fair Square even before then. We’ve lost our two drug stores in the area as well over the last couple of years. This area is in serious need of a jolt of energy. … For the community that lives here, I think folks are ready for a change. And folks are ready for affordable housing.”
State Fair Commission Chair Eric Serna said this:
“Those who have attended the fair recognize that we have outgrown the facilities and property here. It’s time to look at the growth of this fair to continue to be the best fair in the country, and under the governor’s leadership and commission, we will move forward and seek the best possible options for the growth of our fair.”
Albuquerque Mayor Tim Keller for his part discussed his wish list for new locations for Expo New Mexico, including keeping the fairgrounds in Albuquerque and listing the Balloon Fiesta grounds, Mesa del Sol and West Side spaces as potential new locations.
Among the many ideas suggested for the development of the 236 acres of prime property included low income and affordable housing and demolishing the 60-year-old Tingly Coliseum and building a multipurpose entertainment and sports facility. Recommendations for future land use include commercial retail business development.
The announcement to move the Fair Grounds took surrounding neighborhoods and businesses by total surprise. There was a complete failure by the State Fair Commission and the Governor’s Office to reach out to adjoining neighborhood, property owners and businesses to get their thoughts and input.
CONTENTIOUS MEETING
On February 26, Bernalillo County Government held a meeting to discuss and provide information on the county’s proposed Tax Increment Development District (TIDD) for the New State Fairgrounds known as EXPO New Mexico. The county wants to enact a TIDD for the entire westside half of the State Fair grounds property excluding the Downs, the supporting stables and the casino. The public meeting was held at the State Fair Grounds Alice Hopes African American Pavilion with upwards of 200 people attending.
WHAT’S A TIDD?
A Tax Increment Development District (TIDD) is a funding mechanism within a specific geographic boundary to finance public infrastructure improvements. A TIDD uses a portion of incremental gross receipts taxes or property taxes dedicated to it by the County or other public entities as a source of TIDD bonds. These funds are used to reimburse the developers for the cost of constructing the public infrastructure improvements such as roads, water and sewer and community facilities. Operation, maintenance and repair expenses are funded by the public entity accepting the public infrastructure. Funding generated from the issuance of the TIDD bonds can only be used for infrastructure on the specific property identified in the TIDD and it is strictly prohibited by law to use the monies for use to benefit another property.
At the February 16 meeting, a slide presentation was made by Bernalillo County Economic Development Director Marcos Gonzales on County’ proposed TIDD for the State Fair Grounds. Participating in the presentation and responding to questions were Acting Cabinet Secretary of the New Mexico General Services Department Anna Silva, Bernalillo County Commission Chairman Eric Olivas, former Albuquerque Mayor Marty Chavez who is the Governor’s appointed Infrastructure Advisor, and Expo New Mexico State Fair Manager Dan Morning. Bernalillo County Commissioner Adriann Barboa and City Councilor Nichole Rogers acted as emcees for audience questions. Also, in attendance as an audience member was Bernalillo County Commissioner Frank Baca.
HOSTILE REACTIONS
After the very short slide presentation by Bernalillo County Economic Development Director Marcos Gonzales, former Mayor Chavez was asked to respond to questions. Chaves said this before answering questions:
“About six months ago, the governor approached me and said, ‘Look, what’s going on right now in the southeast part of Albuquerque is not sustainable. … You see it every day: the homicides, the unhoused run over, left dead on the street.”
Chavez mentioned the possibility of moving the State Fair. The audience reacted in anger to moving the State Fair and issuing the TIDD financing. The meeting quickly disintegrated into confrontation and angry questioning by the audience. Chavez took the brunt of the criticism as demands were shouted by the audience that the Fair Grounds not be moved.
Unfounded accusations of impropriety were leveled against Chavez and he did his best to respond, claiming he understood people’s first amendment rights. He said he has had his share of being yelled over the years. Chavez said “Everyone will be heard” noting he was speaking on Governor Lujan Grisham’s behalf. The audience was in no mood to listen to what Chavez had to say.
At one point an audience member asked all those present to raise their hands to show how many wanted the Fair Grounds to stay where it is. Upwards of 99% of the audience raised their hands not to move the Fair Grounds. Chavez insisted that the meeting was not about moving the fairgrounds, there was no final decision by the Governor but he himself opened the door when he first mentioned it as an option. He said he was Governor Michell Lujan Grisham’s representative, no final decision had been made ostensibly forgetting the Governor’s December 3 press conference announcing moving the fairgrounds.
AUDIENCE MEMBERS SPEAK OUT
Audience members were given the opportunity to speak after the presentation on the TIDD. Audience members said that the City has been a total failure in cleaning up Central and the city has failed to address the homeless crisis on Central. Audience members argued that before anything is spent on improving or moving the Fair Grounds, money would be better spent cleaning up Central, dealing with the homeless, drug addicted and mentally ill and providing them with services to get them off the streets.
Speakers cast skepticism on their ability to sway the state to not move the State Fair and how the area would be developed. Audience member Paul Losinski said this when given his chance to speak:
“They will have already decided the main framework, so all we can do is decide, do we want high-rise buildings? Or do we want low-rise buildings? We have already lost the ability to have input as to what the RFP was for.”
Another Albuquerque area resident, René Horvath, said moving the fair won’t solve the problems on East Central. Horvath said this:
“Leave the fair alone, it’s not a problem. I’m going to be heartbroken if they move the fair.”
The public spoke against not only the proposed move but the TIDD. One man asked “You’re just wasting money! Who’s pocket is this going into?!”
Most if not all of the public spoke out against the move, citing that the large homeless population and crime in the area have driven out other businesses from the neighborhood. One audience member said this:
“We have lost Walmart, we have lost Walgreens, we are in a food desert. And you guys talk about doing this, you need to put your money somewhere else!”
Other audience members argued that the funding should be used to help the homeless rather than remove them. An audience member said this:
“You have a community of 5,000 homeless people, 55% of which are veterans who’ve served this country. And this is where our taxpayer money is going? To restructure our fairground or change our fair?”
It was noted by audience member Pete Dinelli that 15 years ago Central was in fact cleaned up before by the Safe City Strike Force he headed with aggressive code enforcement action against Central motels and violent bars that the city tore down. The city took enforcement actions against nuisance properties both residential and commercial of up to 1,000 a year. It was also noted that the Keller Administration has spent upwards of $400 million over the last 4 years for shelters and services to the unhoused but the city’s efforts have been a failure to reduce the proliferation of the homeless on Central and throughout the city.
RFP CANCELLED WITHOUT EXPLANATION
After Chavez spoke, acting Cabinet Secretary of the New Mexico General Services Department Anna Silva made the surprise announcement that the state just a few hours before the meeting canceled the Request For Proposals (RFP) to develop a master plan aimed at transforming the fairgrounds. Former Mayor Martin J. Chávez, who the Governor tapped to help on the project, said he didn’t know why the RFP was canceled.
The state had planned to finalize the original RFP contract by February 20 and award it on Friday February 29. Instead, the State withdrew and cancelled the RFP on February 27. According to Anna Silva, the acting secretary of New Mexico’s General Services Department, another RFP will be sent out the first week of March.
After the meeting Bernalillo County Economic Development Director told Albuquerque Journal reporter Noah Alcala Bach this:
“I just found out this evening [about the cancellation of the RFP] … Ultimately, if we wanted to be more prepared, we would need more information from the state on their master plan process and what they want to actually have at the site.”
Bernalillo County Commissioner Adriann Barboa who represents the county commission district that includes the fairgrounds, said she hasn’t spoken directly with the governor about plans for the site and instead receives updates from Chávez. Barboa in an interview with the Albuquerque Journal reporter Noah Alcala Bach after the meeting said this:
“This was my decision to hold this meeting. The state wasn’t necessarily wanting to. … I asked them to come to be transparent.”
Bernalillo County Commission Chairman Eric Olivas for his part said public concern about the future of the fair had an impact on him. Olivas blamed the state for canceling the RFP, saying it “set us back tremendously.” Olivas sent the Albuquerque Journal a statement the day after the meeting that said in part:
“We needed to present a better menu of options, a vision for the future and better address the serious and legitimate concerns raised… I heard loud and clear two messages: community does not want to move the fair, and we must better address crime and rampant drug use on Central.”
It was in January that commissioners voted unanimously to take a vote on establishing a Tax Increment Development District (TIDD) for the State Fair grounds. County commissioners will now vote on vote March 11 on whether to establish a Tax Increment Development District (TIDD) for the fairgrounds.
Links to relied upon or quoted news sources are here:
https://www.krqe.com/news/public-backlash-as-officials-hold-meeting-on-future-of-expo-new-mexico/
https://www.krqe.com/news/albuquerque-metro/bernalillo-county-commissioners-look-at-creating-special-tax-district-at-state-fairgrounds/
https://www.abqjournal.com/business/article_d7b2660e-f560-11ef-b5ac-475a04606d4e.html
GOVERNOR MLG RESPONSE TO “WOMAN TAKING BACK OUR NEIGHBORHOOD” MEMBER REVEALS BACKTRACKING OF EPOCH PROPORTIONS
Women Taking Back Our Neighborhoods is a community activist organization involved and voicing their opinions on critical issues facing the City of Albuquerque. It has a membership of upwards of 100 members who attend city council meeting and public presentation and who are known to protest on occasion. On March 3, the Office of Governor Lujan Grisham sent the following email responding to a member of Women Taking Back Our Neighborhoods regarding the proposal to move the state Fair Grounds:
“Thank you for contacting The Office of the Governor.
At this stage, no decision has been made regarding whether to relocate the Fair or rebuild it in its current location. The Master Plan initiative aims to gather community input, reliable data, and a comprehensive understanding of the relevant facts and sentiments.
The Governor is considering several concerns. The southeast heights, particularly the International District where the Fair is situated, is experiencing a troubling surge in drug-related issues and violent crime, unprecedented in our history. In the past year, notable establishments like Walmart, Walgreens, and CVS have closed their doors.
The State Fair occupies 238 acres of prime land that is well-suited for mixed-income and mixed-use, walkable development. If executed properly, this could lead to an increase in property values around the Fair, which are currently declining, and attract private investment to enhance the neighborhoods surrounding the Fairgrounds, ultimately reducing crime.
It’s worth noting that when the Fair was initially established in its current location, Albuquerque’s eastern heights were primarily home to the University of New Mexico, and the Fair stood alone on the mesa.
Additionally, over the years, the Fair has seen a steady decline in popularity and attendance. Once the third largest in the country, it has now fallen significantly in rankings. We lost the Arabian horse show to Oklahoma, which was willing to invest in that program. Major music events have shifted to the Event Center in Rio Rancho, and rural New Mexico youth are finding more success at their county fairs for agricultural events.
Despite millions of dollars invested, Tingley Coliseum remains substandard. Whether the Fair is moved or stays put, this is an opportunity to re-envision it and restore its world-class status. For the past 40 years, every administration, regardless of political affiliation, has sought ways to make the property suitable for year-round use, yet success has been mixed at best.
Currently, efforts are underway to gather data and make informed decisions. It may ultimately be best to enhance the Fair in its current location, or it may be more beneficial to rebuild it elsewhere. These decisions will be made only after thorough consideration of the facts.
The Governor is committed to taking action rather than allowing the challenges facing the neighborhoods around the Fair and its dedicated attendees to go unaddressed.
We encourage you to stay engaged in this important discussion for all of us.
Respectfully,
Office of Governor Michelle Lujan Grisham
COMMENTARY AND ANALYSIS
Simply put, the February 26, Bernalillo County Government meeting to discuss and provide information on the Bernalillo County Commission’s proposed Tax Increment Development District (TIDD) for the New State Fairgrounds was an absolute and utter disaster. It reflected a hapless effort by Bernalillo County Government as well as the Governor’s representatives to explain to the public what is going on. The fact that the State withdrew the RFP for development of the property just a few hours before the meeting only added to the confusion and the public resentment. The meeting and what was said created an atmosphere of hostility and mistrust when the results should have been to inform and educate the public.
The email from the Office of Governor Michelle Lujan Grisham reflects back tracking of epoch proportions on what she really wants to do with the State Fair. The Governor has gone from announcing on December 3 “We have made the decision preliminarily to ask for folks to focus on the center of the state … Maybe Torrance County, maybe Edgewood and Santa Fe ” to saying in the email “At this stage, no decision has been made regarding whether to relocate the Fair or rebuild it in its current location.”
The Governor’s Office also said in part in the email:
“The Master Plan initiative aims to gather community input, reliable data, and a comprehensive understanding of the relevant facts and sentiments. … It may ultimately be best to enhance the Fair in its current location, or it may be more beneficial to rebuild it elsewhere. These decisions will be made only after thorough consideration of the facts.”
Why wasn’t a “thorough consideration of the facts” done in the first place?
Governor Lujan Grisham is the one who held a press conference on December 3, 2024 with the Speaker of the House Javier Martinez, Mayor Tim Keller and State Fair Commission Chairman Eric Serna to boldly announce that the decision had been made to move the Stater Fair. She did so speculating where it could go and without any feasibility study nor exploring potential costs. Past feasibility studies done years ago said the cost to purchase land, relocate the fair and replicate existing facilities at a new site would cost upwards of $1 Billion. The Governor also said she wanted to relocate the fair in two years and that the 2025 State Fair would likely be the last time it would be held at the existing cite. The Governor did not asked the 2025 legislature to fund the relocation of the State Fair evidencing that she was not truly committed to moving the State Fair and that her press conference on December 3 was for show and headlines.
EFFORTS TO ADDRESS AFFORDABLE HOUSING
During the December 3 press conference announcing plans to move the state fair ground, it was pointed out that there is a major shortage of affordable housing in the city and a need for 55,000 houses or living spaces within the next decade. Both Governor Lujan Grisham and Speaker of the House Javier Martinez suggested that affordable housing could be placed on 236 acres of land. Proposing to commandeer a good portion of the Expo NM State Fair Property for affordable housing is as absurd as it gets. Affordable or low-income housing is not the highest and best use of any portion of the 236 acres of prime property for development in the center of Albuquerque. It would put a small dent in a projected 55,000 shortage of housing.
The Governor and the Speaker of the House should know the New Mexico Finance Authority (NMFA) is already taking major steps to address the need for more affordable housing over the next 10 years and accessing low-cost capital for home ownership in New Mexico cities and counties. The MFA administers hundreds of millions of dollars each year among 40 programs that range from homeless services to homeownership. It includes new housing, down payment assistance and home rehabilitation. At its May and June meetings last year, the New Mexico Mortgage Finance Authority Board of Directors approved a $50 million allocation, along with the $34.6 million in state fiscal year 2025 severance tax bond funding. The breakdown includes:
- $26.6 million to create more housing.
- $20 million for down payment assistance.
- $10 million to preserve existing affordable housing.
- $1 million to create stable housing environments.
- $27 million in reserve to use based on particular demands.
BUILDING A NEW MULTI PURPOSE ARENA
One major project that was being suggested in the RFP withdrawn that merits serious discussion is building a new arena as part of the redevelopment of the existing Expo New Mexico property. The new venue would be a modern arena that would have the capacity to support year-round large scale concerts and events. It would replace the existing Tingley Coliseum. Demolishing the 60-year-old Tingly Coliseum and building a multipurpose entertainment and sports facility with the capacity of upwards 20,000 has been a dream of many a Governor, State Fair Commissions and Fair Managers.
Tingley Coliseum was built in 1957 and has a capacity for 11,000. Over the years it’s been repeatedly remodeled and upgraded. Tingley Coliseum in the past few months has had $2 million worth of upgrades geared toward replacing old seats and fixing the electrical system. The work that began in November permanently removed the benches and outdated 80’s-era seats for new, wider ones. In the process, the coliseum lost roughly 700 of its total 10,000 seats, but officials plan to make up the loss with more standing-room availability.
https://www.krqe.com/news/albuquerque-metro/tingley-coliseum-undergoes-renovations-as-governor-looks-to-possibly-move-state-fair-site/
The City of Albuquerque in particular for decades has needed a large capacity, multipurpose entertainment venue after demolition of the 30 year old Albuquerque Civic Auditorium in 1986. It was back on February 25, 2019 that it was reported that there is a need for such a facility and EXPO New Mexico was in the final stages of conducting a feasibility study on the construction of a new arena on the state fairgrounds. Absolutely nothing ever happened with the feasibility study and its likely collecting dust somewhere in the State Fair mangers office.
https://www.krqe.com/news/officials-want-to-build-new-arena-on-state-fairgrounds/
https://www.krqe.com/news/expo-new-mexico-looking-into-new-arena-to-replace-tingley-coliseum/
HIGHEST AND BEST USE OF PROPERTY IS EXPO NEW MEXICO
Elected officials and politicians need to keep their greedy little hands off the State Fair grounds and abandon any effort to move it. The highest and best use of the 236 acres of property is the State Fair itself and keeping it as Expo New Mexico. Expo New Mexico can be revitalized into an Entertainment and Commercial Hub that could revitalize the entire SE Heights and surrounding area with creation of all new commercial property areas leased by the State Fair for shops, restaurants, theaters and entertainment venues that would also be used for operations of the annual State Fair and during the State Fair itself. There would be no affordable housing and no other housing on the property.
The existing walls along San Pedro, Lomas and Louisiana should remain intact for security reasons but develop larger entrances. Efforts to revitalize adjoining neighborhoods would only be undertaken by private developers perhaps with state and city development and tax incentives. The City of Albuquerque must and can as it has in the past take aggressive action to deal with nuisance properties that are magnets for crime in the immediate surrounding neighborhoods. The City of Albuquerque needs to aggressively enforce its vagrancy laws to deal with the homeless, including making arrests if need be and provide services to them designed to get them off the streets.
The Albuquerque Downs Racetrack and Casino, along with its stables, occupies upwards of half of the state fairgrounds and it is not going anywhere anytime soon given that it has a 25 year lease with 12 years remaining and subject to renewal. Governor Lujan Grisham said this:
“There is a long term lease that is not expiring in the next two years, four or six. So for now, I would expect that the racino stays for a large amount of time.”
Prominent Albuquerque businessman Paul Blanchard is one of the owners of the Downs Race Track and Casino and there is no doubt he will try and have major say on what is to be developed on the remaining fairgrounds areas that may affect the casino or racetrack. But the Fair Grounds is still state property that the state can develop as it sees fit. Perhaps its the racetrack and casino that needs to be moved to another location and county with a buyout, but not the Fair Grounds.
OTHER VENUES
Getting rid of the “midway” ride area on the South side and replacing it with year round entertainment venues and facilities is in order. Demolishing existing, aging specialty exhibition halls, such as the Manuel Lujan building and livestock exhibition stables and replacing them with new, larger facilities with multi purpose usages likewise is in order. Removing the flea market and replacing it with a Farmers Market or a permanent arts and crafts shopping area should be in the mix.
There are two major facilities that could be integral parts of an Entertainment And Commercial District Hub: the Downs Race Track and Casino if they want to still be a part of the State Fair and the proposed new multipurpose arena. Part of the redevelopment of the existing Expo New Mexico property would be the building of a new, modern arena to replace Tingly Coliseum that would support year round large scale concerts and events. It’s a capital improvement project that needs to go forward. With the continuing historical state revenue surpluses, the building of a multipurpose state of the art arena to replace Tingly Coliseum would be an investment for future generations.
APPROVE THE TIDD
The Bernalillo County Commission should spend more time educating the public on the TIDD. They should consider having another meeting and deferring the March 11 vote to another date to approved it. The Bernalillo County Commission should demand that Governor Michelle Lujan abandoned any effort to relocate the New Mexico State Fair and EXPO New Mexico and make it a condition of approving the TIDD.
The Commission should enact the TIDD with strict irrevocable language that the financing can only be used for infra structure improvements at the existing EXPO New Mexico and that the funding under no circumstances from the TIDD would be used or diverted to relocated State Fair grounds. Grounds for violation of the dedicated funding to the existing state fair would be grounds for claw backs and punitive damages and penalties.
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POSTSCRIPT
Colleen Aycock Guest Opinion Column
The below guest opinion column was submitted for publication on www.PeteDinelli.com by Colleen Aycock, a resident of Four Hills in SE Albuquerque. She is an organizer of “Women Taking Back Our Neighborhoods”. She has a Ph.D. in Rhetoric from the University of Southern California and has spent her professional life teaching writing at the college level, editing business magazines, and writing biographies for the U. S. Capitol, Statuary Hall. She serves on the Editorial Board for the International Boxing Research Organization (IBRO), has authored 5 books on boxing. She has been inducted into the New Mexico Boxing Hall of Fame. She has spent a lifetime in active civic volunteerism, having been president of Rotary Clubs in Texas and Maryland. She is currently president of P.E.O. Chapter AM, Albuquerque. Her email is cka13705@aol.com.
HEADLINE: Urgent Message To Save Expo New Mexico
Just because someone thinks the State Fair needs to be relocated (many don’t), we shouldn’t be throwing the BABY (Park & Expo) out with the BATHWATER (State Fair).
This is an urgent message sent to SAVE OUR PARK AND EXPO.
Do NOT sell it for another inner-city, high density project–we already have enough on Louisiana.
It appears that [elected officials and politicians] do not know or appreciate our history:
FACT: Yes, SE ABQ is a hub of Cartels and Crime, Closed & Dilapidated Businesses (sometimes both in the same–witness the prosecution of the Central Serial Rapist who used the decades-old empty Franklin Plaza for his dirty deeds as witnessed in Dist. Court Records, Dec. 2023 – try googling the story)
Note: the Rapist did NOT rape his victims on the Fair Grounds at Expo. Fix the problem on Central–the EXPO is Neither the Problem Nor the Solution!
FACT: First Expo in 1881 (before statehood) – the New Mexico, Agricultural, Mineral, and Industrial Exposition (where the title Expo came from)
Next One: March 14-16, 2025, the annual “Gem, Mineral Jewelry Expo” advertised throughout the U.S. at the EXPO Center New Mexico (state Fair Grounds) see http://www.agmc.info, is advertised across the state, and is one of the largest in the SW.
Note: This is only ONE SHOW that draws hundreds/thousands of visitors to ABQ. There are over 200 other events – events other than the State Fair. (from lace-making, to antiques, fine arts, monster trucks, low riders, health, home, garden, dogs, ponies, folk festivals, native American arts, chile fests, music events, horse races and permanent art collections that keeps our population and tourists putting money into our local economy)
FACT: Between Louisiana and San Pedro, along Central is 2-3 miles of walking space through grassy lawns, old growth oak trees, by historic replicas, buildings, public art, and sculpture. We need Visitor Interpretive Signs for this history; not more high-density apartments.
Note: Like N.Y.’s Central Park; ABQ’s Central Park is the Historic EXPO
Citizens NEED open space for solitude, exercise, learning, and recreation. Not more inner-city.
FACT: Tingley Coliseum was built for rodeos and inaugurated by Roy Rogers and Dale Evans in 1957.
Note: We should better use this property to appeal to our Cowboy and Movie history for tourists and city-wide education. Make it the biggest Cowboy attraction in the Southwest —
FACT: The Palomino Barns were the first structures built in 1938 out of adobe. How ’bout a historic interpretive sign of the Lujan Complex?
Note: Does anyone know about Leon Harms who advocated for the Youth of our State opening a private dormitory and dining area for kids who traveled from distant farms to exhibit their animals? According to one source, he held the general manager’s position for 30 years, advocating for our YOUTH.
FACT: the Alice K. Hoppes African American Pavilion,
Note: How about a monument to our African-American history.
FACT: The Weekend Flea Market: 25 acres where more than 1300 vendors and local food marketeers sell their wares: SMALL BUSINESS at its weekly finest, including Native American Jewelry, locally grown food products, and one-truck estate sales.
Note: Don’t these Small Business entrepreneurs, including Girl Scout and High School Student sales count? Aren’t these home-grown, home-trained, secure business experiences better than anything our legislators can suggest on the same land?
Please inform your ABQ friends at what our city and legislators are trying to do in the next few weeks: Steal our Historic Park and Expo.
Once we lose it, it is gone forever.
A one-line note to your city, county, or state leader is enough. Don’t wait until you have no SAY in the matter,
Sincerely,
Colleen Aycock
Woman Taking Back Our Neighborhoods
The link to a related article is here:
Gov. MLG Seeks To Relocate Expo NM; Request For Proposal Issued For Master Plan To Create Mixed Use Development Using 236 Acre State Fair Location For Economic Development, Entertainment Venues And Affordable Housing; New Arena To Replace Tingly Coliseum Proposed; No New Location Identified For Expo New Mexico