City Sanctioned Homeless Encampment Coming To Open Space Area Near You!; City Council To Allow 45 Homeless Camps For 1,800 Homeless And Allowing Up To 40 Tents; Councilors Need Their Heads Examined And Tour Coronado Park

This falls squarely into the category of “What the hell are they thinking?”

On Wednesday, April 13, the City Council’s Land Use, Planning and Zoning Committee (LUPZ) met to consider amendments updating the city’s 2017 enacted Integrated Development Ordinance (IDO) that regulates zoning development throughout the city. One amendment is for zoning changes that will allow city sanctioned “safe outdoor spaces”, also called “government sanctioned homeless campsites” where the homeless will be able to sleep and tend to personal hygiene. The amendment is being offered as a solution to assist the city to deal with the city’s homeless numbers. The amendment is now part of the IDO update legislation. The full City Council could vote on the amendment as early as May 2.

HOMELESS CAMPSITES

The zoning change that will allow for homeless encampments is expected to generate severe opposition from neighborhood associations as well business organizations. Democrat City Councilors Isaac Benton, Brook Bassan, Pat Davis, Tammy Fiebelkorn and Republican Trudy Jones have all sponsored or co-sponsored amendments to the city’s zoning code to allow for homeless campsites. The LUPZ committee voted to advance Councilor Pat Davis’ amendment that will restrict the number of homeless campsites citywide.

The proposed zoning changes to allow for homeless campsites can be summarized as follows:

1. Not more than 5 sanctioned campsites will be allowed in any one of the city’s 9 city council districts, or 40 total campsites, and the campsites would be limited to 40 tents, cars or recreational vehicles. Ostensibly, a minimum 1,800 homeless city wide will be allowed to select the camp they want to use. The math is as follows: 5 sanctioned campsites times 9 council districts equals 45 times 40 tents, cars or recreational vehicles equals 1,800.

2. Each campsite will be required to have a certain number of water-flush or composting toilets, or portable facilities, hand-washing stations and showers based on occupancy.

3. It would require a surrounding wall or screen at least 6 feet high for those using tents.

4. Operators of the campsites, which could include churches and nonprofit organizations, would have to provide the city with a management plan or security agreement proving the site has 24/7 on-site support and security.

5. Operators would offer occupants some form of social services and support facilities.

6. The homeless campsites would be prohibited from being allowed within 330 feet of low-density residential areas. Religious institutions would have more flexibility for locating them.

7. The campsites would be permitted in certain commercial, business park and manufacturing zones and in some mixed-use zones after a public hearing.

According to City Officials, in most instances, the encampments would be set up and managed by churches or nonprofits.

Members of the public who appeared before the LUPZ committee cautioned the councilors about allowing homeless campsites and specifically asked for rules to restrict their proliferation in certain areas of the city. Councilor Pat Davis said his proposal addresses some of those concerns by banning more than 5 sanctioned campsites in any one of the city’s nine council districts. In other words, no more than 45 camp sites would be allowed within the city limits spread out over the 9 city council districts.

FUNDING FOR HOMELESS CAMPSITES AND GATEWAY SHELTER

Mayor Keller’s 2023 budget includes $750,000 for the first phase of implementing city sanctioned Homeless camp sites which if approved by Council “will enable ultra-low barrier encampments to set up in vacant dirt lots across the City” plus an additional $200 thousand for developing other sanctioned encampment programs for a total of $950,000.

Mayor Keller’s 2022-203 proposed budget also includes the following funding:

• $4.7 million net to operate the first Gateway Center at the Gibson Health Hub, including revenue and expenses for emergency shelter and first responder drop-off, facility operation and program operations.

• $1.3 million for a Medical Respite facility at Gibson Health Hub, which will provide acute and post-acute care for persons experiencing homelessness who are too ill or frail to recover from a physical illness or injury on the streets but are not sick enough to be in a hospital.

• $4 million in recurring funding and $3 million in one-time funding for supportive housing programs in the City’s Housing First model.

It was on Tuesday, April 6, 2021, the city officially announced it had bought the massive 572,000-square-foot complex for $15 million and will transform it into a Gateway Center for the homeless. It was announced that the complex would be only 1 of the multisite homeless shelters and not the 300-bed shelter originally planned. The complex has a 201-bed capacity, but remodeling could likely increase capacity significantly. The emergency shelter and services hub is slated to provide overnight beds for 50 women by year’s end. The city has also said it could eventually host up to 100 adults and 25 families at a time.

2022-2023 PROPOSED FUNDING FOR CONTRACTS TO DEAL WITH HOMELESS

The City of Albuquerque has at least 10 separate homeless service provider locations throughout the city. This fiscal year that ends June 30, the entire general fund budget for the Department of Family and Community Services is approximately $41 million. The $41 million is not just exclusive funding for services to the homeless.

The services offered by the Family and Community Services Department to the homeless are directly provided by the city or by contracts with nonprofit providers. The services include social services, mental/behavioral health, homeless services, health care for the homeless, substance abuse treatment and prevention, multi-service centers, public housing, rent assistance, affordable housing development, and fair housing, just to mention a few.

This past fiscal year 2021 ending June 10, 2021, city hall and the Keller Administration have spent upwards of $40 Million by the Family and Community Services Department to benefit the homeless or near homeless. The 2021 adopted city budget for Family and Community Services Department provides for emergency shelter contracts totaling $5,688,094, affordable housing and community contracts totaling $22,531,752, homeless support services contracts totaling $3,384,212, mental health contracts totaling $4,329,452, and substance abuse contracts for counseling contracts totaling $2,586,302.

The link to the 2021-2022 city approved budget is here:

https://www.cabq.gov/dfa/documents/fy22-approved-budget-numbered-w-hyperlinks-final.pdf

Mayor Keller’s 2022-2023 proposed budget significantly increases the Family and Community Services budget by $24,353,064 to assist the homeless or near homeless by going from $35,145,851 to $59,498,915. The 2022-2023 proposed budget for the Department of Community Services is $72.4 million and it will have 335 full time employees, or an increase of 22 full time employees.

A breakdown of the amounts to help the homeless and those in need of housing assistance is as follows:

$42,598,361 total for affordable housing and community contracts with a major emphasis on permanent housing for chronically homeless. It is $24,353,064 more than last year. (Budget page 101)

$6,025,544 total for emergency shelter contracts (Budget page 102.), down $396,354 from last year.

$3,773,860 total for mental health contracts (Budget page105.), down $604,244 from last year.

$4,282,794 total homeless support services(Budget page 105.), up $658,581 from last year.

$2,818,356 total substance abuse contracts for counseling (Budget page 106.), up by $288,680 from last year.

The link to the proposed 244-page 2022-2023 budget it here:

https://www.cabq.gov/dfa/documents/fy23-proposed-final-web-version.pdf

2021 POINT-IN-TIME (PIT) REPORT

The Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) defines sheltered homeless as “residing in an emergency shelter, motel paid through a provider or in a transitional housing program.” HUD defines “unsheltered homeless” as “those sleeping in places not meant for human habitation including streets, parks, alleys, underpasses, abandoned buildings, campgrounds and similar environments.”

Each year the “Point in Time” (PIT) survey is conducted to determine how many people experience homelessness on a given night in Albuquerque, and to learn more about their specific needs. The PIT count is done in communities across the country. The PIT count is the official number of homeless reported by communities to the federal Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD),

On June 22, 2021, Albuquerque’s 2021 Point-In-Time (PIT) report was released that surveyed both sheltered and unsheltered homeless.

Major highlights of the 2021 PIT report are as follows:

There were 1,567 sheltered and unsheltered homeless people living in Albuquerque, a slight increase over the 2019 count of 1,524 homeless. The 2020 homeless count is 2.8% higher than in 2019 and 18.9% more than in 2017, despite the pandemic limiting the 2021 counting effort’s.

The 2021 PIT count found that 73.6% of the homeless population was staying in emergency shelters, transitional housing or using motel vouchers rather than sleeping in alleys, parks and other “unsheltered” locations. The 73.6% in the 2021 count is much a higher than the 2019 and 2017 PIT counts.

Albuquerque’s unsheltered homeless decreased from 567 people in 2019 to 413 in the 2021 count.

42% of Albuquerque’s unsheltered were defined as chronically homeless, meaning they had been continuously homeless for at least a year and had a disabling condition.

21% said they were homeless due to COVID.

37% were experiencing homelessness for the first time.

12% were homeless due to domestic violence.

30.19% of the homeless in Albuquerque self-reported as having a serious mental illness.

25.5% self-reported as substance abusers.

The link to quoted statistics is here:

https://www.abqjournal.com/2402560/homeless-numbers-see-little-change.html

https://www.cabq.gov/family/documents/2019-albuquerque-pit-count-final.pdf

Government agencies and nonprofits report that the city’s homeless numbers are greater than those found in the PIT reports and that the number of homeless in Albuquerque approaches 4,500 to 5,000 in any given year. The nonprofit Rock At Noon Day offers meals and other services to the homeless. Noon Day Executive Director Danny Whatley reported in July, 2021, that there are 4,000 to 4,500 homeless people in the Albuquerque area. Albuquerque Public Schools (APS) is New Mexico’s largest school district, serving more than a fourth of the state’s students and nearly 84,000 students. APS reports the number of homeless children enrolled in district schools, meaning kids from families that have no permanent address, has consistently ranged from 3,200 to 3,500.

NOT A CRIME TO BE HOMELESS

What is happening in Albuquerque is that the homeless are becoming more and more visible to the public by their camping anywhere they want and for as long as they can get away with it. The problem is complicated when the city, and for that matter private property owners, do not intervene with aggressive action to remove encampments.

Camping on public property is not allowed but people experiencing homelessness have constitutional rights. The blunt truth is being homeless is not a crime and arresting and jailing is not a solution.

https://www.krqe.com/news/politics-government/the-process-behind-removing-homeless-camps-from-public-places/

The Albuquerque Police Department (APD) and city workers have in the past done “sweeps” of unsheltered people from parks, sometimes arresting them, citing them for trespassing or loitering and taking and disposing of their property. APD is limiting its enforcement of trespassing and vagrancy laws relying on citations as opposed to making arrests as a result of federal litigation.

Alleged seizures of property and identification records of the homeless by APD likely violates the 2017 settlement agreement in the federal case of McClendon v. Albuquerque, which prohibits Albuquerque police from seizing or disposing of property or personal identification unless they are “authorized by law.” The point of the lawsuit was that police were arresting and incarcerating so many people that the jail was severely overcrowded with the settlement meant to reduce the number of people in jail. To that end, it also prohibits Albuquerque police from even asking for identification if they have reason to believe that the person is mentally ill or homeless.

https://sourcenm.com/2021/09/17/albuquerque-police-still-sweeping-homeless-camps-despite-cdc-guidelines/

PROCESS IN PLACE

The process the city has in place to deal with homeless encampments is a long process from when the city gets a complaint about a homeless camp to when it gets cleared out, if it ever gets cleared out. The only time the city can immediately clear out a camp is if it is putting the campers or community members in danger. The city does have the west side homeless shelter which is located 20 miles outside the city and located in the old vacated jail where the homeless can go, but the city cannot force them to the shelter or any other shelter.

The city has an “encampment team” made up of seven people. Their job is to respond to reported encampments set up on public property, and give the people living there “written notice” that they have to go. Once their time is up, the encampment team checks in to make sure the people have in fact move. Once the encampment has been vacated, the city cleans up whatever is left behind at the camp which includes many times trash and needles for elicit drug use.

https://www.krqe.com/news/politics-government/the-process-behind-removing-homeless-camps-from-public-places/

There are multiple steps the city follows when no law enforcement sweep actions happen. When an encampment is reported and a complaint filed, the Family and Community Services Department and Albuquerque Community Safety sends outreach providers to speak to the people to see what services they might want and what services can be offered.

After the assessment, written “notices to vacate” are issued and people have 72 hours to clear the area of their personal property and belongings. The camps are then cleared by the city, but it does not always stay that way. Neighbors, and area property owners and the homeless population are stuck in a vicious cycle of filing 311 reports and calling APD and filing complaints and getting camps cleared out, then the camps moving back in.

https://www.kob.com/albuquerque-news/city-official-answers-questions-on-homeless-encampments-in-albuquerque/6317454/

COMMENTARY AND ANALYSIS

During the April 13 LUPZ Committee hearing, Republican City Councilor Brook Bassan had this to say:

“We have to do something, and these are ideas. Let’s try it – let’s try it, because we’re already mad [about the homeless] . We’re probably going to get a little bit madder. … Then if we don’t try anything, it’s just going to continue getting worse, but if we try something, we’re going to start seeing something else better happen.”

Director of the city’s Family and Community Services Department Carol Pierce had this to say about both amendments:

“This is a huge opportunity for our community to help unhoused folks and to have more options. … We need more options. … We just need different kinds of tools in our tool belt.”

Basaan’s and Pierce’s comments fall squarely under the category of Exactly what the hell are you thinking?” How many more tools are needed and must be funded for services not wanted?

NEED TO HAVE THEIR HEADS EXAMINED AND TOUR CORONADO PARK

The City Council amendment to the Integrated Development Ordinance will allow 5 sanctioned homeless campsites in each of the city’s 9 city council districts, or 45 total sanctioned campsites spread throughout the city, and allowing 40 tents, cars or recreational vehicles in each campsite, or ostensibly for a total of 1,800 homeless to camp. This is the best example of elected officials’ good intentions that will go awry making a crisis even worse. A total of 45 sanctioned campsites, coupled with $59,498,915 million in spending for the homeless, will likely have the unintended consequence of making Albuquerque an even bigger magnet for attracting the homeless to the city.

Any city councilor or any member of the general public that thinks 45 city sanctioned campsites with upwards of 40 occupants spread throughout the city is somehow “good idea” need to have their head examined. All they need to do to realize this is a very bad idea is to take a tour of the Coronado Park located near I-40 and 2nd street. As of April 17, the public park has upwards of 60 tents with the homeless wondering the park and the surrounding area.

Coronado Park is considered by many as the heart of Albuquerque’s homeless crisis. It comes with and extensive history lawlessness including drug use, violence, murder, rape and mental health issues. In 2020, there were 3 homicides at Coronado Park. In 2019, a disabled woman was raped, and in 2018 there was a murder. Police 911 logs reveal a variety of other issues. In February 2019, police investigated a stabbing after a fight broke out at the park. One month before the stabbing, police responded to a call after a woman said she was suicidal, telling police on lapel camera video that she had previously made attempts to overdose on meth. Officers then took her to get help.

https://www.kob.com/albuquerque-news/police-records-depict-pattern-of-problems-violence-at-coronado-park/5891961/

On August 20, 2020, the City of Albuquerque paid more than a half-million dollars for a small piece of property with a two story office building at 2040 Fourth Street NW, right next to Coronado Park. For decades, the two story office building housed the law firm Dubois, Cooksey & Bischoff. Reports were that the homeless use of the park became so bad that the firm felt it had no choice but to sell to the city and threatened an inverse condemnation action against the city.

https://www.krqe.com/news/albuquerque-metro/city-buys-old-law-office-property-near-coronado-park/

City officials have said Coronado Park is the subject of daily responses from the encampment team because of the number of tent’s set up there. They say the encampment team, along with Parks and Recreation Department , and Solid Waste go out every morning, during the week, to give campers notice and clean up the park. They also work on getting them connected to resources and services they may need.

https://www.krqe.com/news/politics-government/the-process-behind-removing-homeless-camps-from-public-places/

GOVERNMENT SANCTIONED HOMELESS CAMPS FLAWED POLICY

As it stands, the proposed amendment to allow homeless camp sites is seriously flawed. Those flaws include:

1. Exact size or physical area of the encampments are not defined.

2.The length of time of occupancy that will be allowed and the extent of screening of campers, check in times and check out times are not delineated.

3. There is no mention if the City Administration will be allowed to unilaterally decide where the camp sites can be located, like Mayor Tim Keller did with the purchase of the Lovelace/Gibson for the Gateway Shelter, with very little or no input from neighborhoods and the city council.

4. Will the amendment allow under-utilized city parks and city owned open space be allowed to be used for the encampments. Bullhead park near the Veterans Hospital or even the vacant airport industrial park come to mind when there is talk of open space locations that are near homeless services in that both are in walking distance to the soon to be open Gateway Homeless Shelter Center on Gibson.

5. Location and site selection criteria, including proximity to residential areas, school, churches, hospitals and bars and recreational marijuana dispensaries.

6. The extent of rules imposed to allow camping such as no drug use, no weapons nor firearms or open fires.

7. Security to be provided by the city.

8. To what extent is the city assuming liability for any injury sustained to anyone who uses the camps?

CREATING LIABILITY WITH USE OF CITY OWNED PROPERTY

Once a homeless campsite becomes a “city sanctioned operation” on city owned open space property, the city will be subjecting itself to liability. The city is assuming the responsibility for maintaining a safe environment and to provide accommodations for personal hygiene. When there is a failure for the city to provide satisfactory security and a person is injured, a personal injury lawsuit for damages will likely result.

EXTENT OF THE UNSHELTERED DECREASED

The 2021 Point-In-Time (PIT) report found that there were 1,567 sheltered and unsheltered homeless people living in Albuquerque, a slight increase over the 2019 count of 1,524 homeless. It also found Albuquerque’s unsheltered homeless decreased from 567 people in 2019 to 413 in the 2021 count. It is the “unsheltered homeless”, or between 413 to 667 homeless that the campsites are being proposed to help, yet the council wants to provide campsites to accommodate 1,800 adults.

Basaan, Pierce and the city council need a reality check. They have a hard time dealing with the facts that many homeless adults want to live their life as they choose, where they want and how they want, without any government nor family interference and especially no rules. They simply do not want anyone’s help. Many homeless do not seek help, even though they may desperately need it, especially those who suffer from mental illness or substance abuse. It’s an aversion to any sort of rules, a desire to live as one chooses, and many times the inability to qualify for help that makes things difficult for the homeless.

City hall sanctioned homeless camps, especially those on city owned property, must have rules and regulations, which in practice will likely be totally ignored by the homeless. The county’s Tiny Homes Village is the best example the problem. Bernalillo County is having a hard time finding people to stay at the Tiny Home Village complex. The county spent $5 million to build the facility even as homeless encampments keep popping up all over the city.

One year after the Tiny Home Village opened in the International District, 25 of the 30 homes are empty as nearby streets are lined with tents. One of the city’s largest homeless encampments is right outside the Tiny Home Village. One of the biggest reasons for the Tiny Homes village being empty is all the rules that must be adhered to. To qualify for a Tiny Home, one must be free of drugs and alcohol. In addition to following the rules, residents are required to help around the complex. Many applicants for the Tiny Homes project cannot make it past the vetting process.

https://www.krqe.com/news/albuquerque-metro/tiny-home-village-struggles-to-fill-vacancies-as-homeless-encampments-surge/

The 2021 Point-In-Time (PIT) report does reflect that progress is being made when it reported that 73.6% of the homeless population was staying in emergency shelters, transitional housing or using motel vouchers rather than sleeping in alleys, parks and other “unsheltered” situations. The 73.6% in the 2021 count is much a higher than the 2019 and 2017 PIT counts.

GONVERNMENT SANCTION ENCAMPMENTS NO SOLUTION

The city does have a homeless crisis with around 1,500 homeless in any given night in the metro area. The city and the county for that reason are spending millions a year in addressing the homeless crisis. It is the actual services that are being provided to the homeless that are critical to solving the homeless crisis.

If the Family and Community Services Department and its Director Carol Pierce think the department needs “more tools” than $60 million dollars can provide a year, they do not have the know how to “build” or find a solution other than just throwing more financial resources at the problem.

City sanctioned homeless camps will defeat any real progress being made. Government sanctioned homeless encampments will only encourage those who seek such encampments to continue with their lifestyle living on the streets. Providing a very temporary place to pitch a tent, relieve themselves, maybe bath and sleep at night with rules they do not want nor will likely follow is not the answer to the homeless crisis.

The answer is to provide the support services, including food and lodging, and mental health care needed to allow the homeless to turn their lives around and become productive citizens and self sufficient and no longer dependent on others.

City Councilor Louie Sanchez Claims His 911 Calls Mishandled, Demands Full City Audit; Accurate Audit Not Likely With 390,000 Calls A Year; APD 911 Priority Call Response Times And Crime Rates Evaluated; Sanchez Demand For Audit Reflects Ignorance And Vindictiveness On 5 Levels

EDITOR’S NOTE: This blog article contains an in depth analysis of 911 Call statistics and APD response times in conjunction with the city’s crime statistics in order to emphasize the difficulty that an audit will present.

On November 2, 2021 Louie Sanchez was elected the District 1 City Councilor defeating incumbent Lan Sena who had been appointed city councilor by Mayor Tim Keller after the death of longtime city councilor Ken Sanchez. Louie Sanchez was sworn into office on January 1 for a 4 year term to represent the West side area of the City. Sanchez is a retired APD cop with 26 years of service. After retiring, Sanchez became an insurance salesman. His election to the city council race was the first time he has ever run for office. Sanchez did have some limited exposure to politics having served as the officer in charge of Mayor Marty Chavez security detail and work directly out of the Mayor’s Office.

HIGH PROFILE NEWS COVERAGE

On April 7, KOAT Target 7 ran a lead story entitled “Albuquerque City Councilor Louie Sanchez concerned about 911 response times”. On the April 13, the Albuquerque Journal on its front page above the fold with his photo ran a story with the headline “City Councilor Sanchez questions response times of APD officers”. Both stories involve Sanchez making a 911 Priority 1 call on March 6 along with his history of making 911 emergency calls. According to both news reports, over the past 10 months, Louie Sanchez has called the APD 911 emergency dispatch nearly a dozen times to report crimes or occurrences he has seen outside his Allstate Insurance Agency office on Central and 61st.

The links to both news reports are here:

https://www.abqjournal.com/2487806/city-councilor-questions-911-response.html

https://www.koat.com/article/albuquerque-city-councilor-louie-sanchez-concerned-about-911-response-times/39668101

PATTERN OF 911 CALLS

Since being sworn in to office on January 1, Sanchez has continued making 911 calls but now brings them up during City Council meetings to complain how they are being handled. Sanchez is asserting that his calls are examples of APD mishandling, or just not responding, to 911 Priority 1 calls and downgrading the calls, his calls in particular, so APD does not have to respond. APD is questioning his motives. Sanchez is now demanding an audit of APD priority 1 calls.

At the epicenter of both news reports is that Sanchez is demanding to know why APD police officers are not immediately being dispatched to high priority calls. His March 26 call was about a man threatening or maybe hitting another with a gun. According to Sanchez, he believes 911 calls are being downgraded from what should be considered the highest priority, or a Priority 1 which are felonies that are in progress or there is an immediate threat to life or property to a lower priority call such as a Priority 5 Call, which is where a crime has already occurred and there is no suspect at or near the scene and no threat of personal injury, loss of life or property.”

CALL FOR AUDIT

Since taking office, Sanchez has been extremely critical of APD Chief Harold Medina and uses City Council meetings to raise issues as he attempts to excert dominance over APD management. He frequently brings up his 911 and calls to 242-COPS at council meetings as well as his history with the police department. After the April 4 City council meeting, Louie Sanchez prompted the city council services to request the city’s Office of Internal Audit to conduct an audit of 911 emergency response times. Nicole Kelley, the city auditor said the department is determining what the scope and objective of that review would be.

THE MARCH 6 EMERGENCY 911 CALL

According to the Target 7 report, Louie Sanchez made a 911 call on the afternoon of Saturday March 26. The transcript of the 911 call is as follows:

“Sanchez: 61st and Central. I’m across the street in the building
Dispatch: Which corner are they on?
Sanchez: They are at the pit stop 61st and Central.
Dispatch: Which corner is that on?
Sanchez: He beat a guy up with a but stock of a gun and pointed it.”

The dispatcher asks Councilor Sanchez if he wants to meet with police, he says no.

Dispatch: If nobody wants to talk to officers then…
Sanchez: No, you need to get the gun off the street, ma’am. There he goes. He is walking away. He just pointed the gun at somebody else.
Dispatch: Where’s the victim?
Sanchez: Are you going to get it? You guys waste too much time.

Four minutes into the call the dispatcher issues a “be on the lookout for the suspect.”

Sanchez: Are you serious? You’re not going to come over here and deal with it. You’re just going to be on the lookout.

About five minutes into the call dispatch hung up on Sanchez without letting him know whether officers were called to the scene.

According to police logs reviewed by Target 7, an APD officer arrived in the area to check out what was going on with a reported man with a gun approximately 50 minutes after Sanchez made the call and after he talked with the dispatcher’s supervisor. Sanchez said he believes officers were not dispatched until after he called a supervisor complaining.

In the Target 7 interview, Sanchez had this to say:

“As far as I know, no one even checked the area. As far as I know, an officer never came to talk to me together [for] further information. … I hope that the police department is not avoiding or diminishing calls to keep the crime stats down.”

In both news stories, APD Spokesman Gilbert Gallegos was asked about the March 6 call made by Sanchez. In both reports, Gallegos said the call should have been considered a Priority 1 or Priority 2 call since there was an allegation that a gun was involved. Instead, the call-taker told Sanchez she was setting up a “be on the lookout”, which Sanchez took exception to and essentially demanded more.

Gallegos did say APD officers were dispatched to the scene about 50 minutes after Sanchez’s call. According to Gallegos, when officers went to the scene all they found were two people sitting in the shade who said they had been there a few minutes and hadn’t seen anything suspicious. Gallegos said when officers reviewed area security camera footage they did not have a clear view of the gas station where Sanchez said the incident took place. Gallegos did say the security camera showed at least 4 different police cars in the area at various times on a busy street.

Despite whether Sanchez was willing to speak with a responding officer, APD Spokesman Gilbert Gallegos said the dispatcher made an error. Gallegos had this to say:

“Ideally, they would have dispatched officers, gone to the scene … Ideally, they would have victim information, or they could have met with Mr. Sanchez, to get more information … if there’s someone out there on the property, they could formulate a plan and go deal with it. … They should have dispatched an officer right away and that type of call. … The director [of the 911 Dispatch Center] did speak to the call taker after the incident, talked with that person and mandated some additional training to make sure they were aware of what they should have been doing. ”

APD Spokesman Gallegos added that he thought Sanchez may have confused the call-taker by saying that he didn’t want an officer to contact him and then saying he did. According to Gallegos:

“If the victim [is] not there and they don’t know if a victim wants to press charges or a witness isn’t contacted, the officer can’t just show up and take the gun from someone’s hands if they’re not sure that they committed a crime or have suspicion.”

Sanchez for his part told the Journal reporter that when he told the call-taker “no” about an officer contacting him he meant “that’s not the way that’s supposed to be taking place,” not that he wouldn’t talk to an officer.

PATTERN OF CALLS USING A SECURED PHONE LINE

Logs provided to the media by APD show Sanchez called 911 or 242-COPS on 11 different days between June 2021 and the end of March referencing fights he’s seen, or suspected drug dealing and prostitution. According to dispatch logs, Police were dispatched to at least 3 of those calls. In some cases, Sanchez told the operator it was already too late to dispatch a police officer and expresses disbelief that no one had answered the phone when he called. Sanchez acknowledged that he has called more frequently in the past several months and says that’s because a lot of incidents have happened in front of his office and Sanchez said had this to say:

“I witnessed a fight in progress with a stabbing, I witnessed individuals throwing rocks at each other during heavy traffic.”

APD Spokesman Gilbert Gallegos took issue with the number of calls made by Sanchez and declined to say whether APD believe Sanchez’s calls are legitimate. Gallegos said:

“I think I counted 10 calls to 911 or 242-COPS. [On a couple of the calls] you can hear [Sanchez] arguing with the call-taker. … It is a pattern, the counselor calling 911 or saying he is going to call 911 and then bringing it up at city council meetings. So it’s a little confusing, I guess, as to what his goals are. … If they’re all legitimate emergencies, that’s quite a bit for that period of time. … The concern is we don’t want him tying up the line for anyone else who does have a legitimate emergency. It’s impossible for me to know whether they were and what his intentions were. … I think something like [Sanchez’ motives] … would have to be more properly vetted and answered by an outside entity like maybe the inspector general.”

Gallegos also took issue with the phone line Sanchez used and said Sanchez called a secure line that is supposed to only be used by the Chief. Sanchez countered that saying “I’ve called that line for 26 years as a police officer and I still have that in my phone.” Its more likely than not that Sanchez did not have the number his entire 26 years as a police officer and was in fact given the number when he was in charge of the Mayor’s personal security detail and he kept the number stored in his personal phone.

Target 7 did ask Councilor Sanchez what his goal was in making all the calls and he said he wants to make sure citizens get a response when they call police, especially on a 911 priority call.

APD ADDS TWO PRIORITY CALL CATEGORIES TO REDUCE RESPONSE TIMES

On March 6, 2019, APD announced that it expanded the way it was dispatching police officers to 911 calls from a 3 priority call list to a 5 priority call list. A major goal of adding the two new types of priority call to the system is to determine what calls do and do not require a police officer. APD stressed that every call is different and depending on the circumstances of that call the level of priority can always change. The single most compelling reason for the change is that it was taking way too long to dispatch police officers after a call was received. Police were being dispatched to calls where an officer was not always needed.

Priority calls are evaluated as they are received by Communications personnel and categorized in one of the following 5 priorities:

PRIORITY 1 call is a felony that is in progress or there is an immediate threat to life or property. These are calls where the immediate presence of the police is essential to have life, prevent serious injury, or to arrest a violent felon.

PRIORITY 2 call is where there is no immediate threat to life of property. Misdemeanor crimes in progress are priority 2 calls

PRIORITY 3 call is any calls where there are no threats to life or property were priority any call in which a crime has already occurred with no suspects at or near the scene.

PRIORITY 4 call is a routine response call that require the presence of police, but time is not critical.

PRIORITY 5 is a where a crime has already occurred and there “is no suspect at or near the scene and no threat of personal injury, loss of life or property.”

Under the new system, the public are asked to go to the telephone reporting unit to make a report and APD will not dispatch officers unless it meets some other criteria elevating the call. For the lower priority calls where an officer isn’t needed, callers have three ways to file a report: online, over the phone, or at any police substation.

In announcing the change in policy, APD Public Information Officer Gilbert Gallegos had this to say:

“What we want to do is get officers to the scene of a call as quickly as possible for the most urgent calls, and by that I mean calls where there is a life-threatening situation. … Basically we’re adapting to the situation where we’re trying to make the system much more efficient and much more effective “.

https://www.krqe.com/news/politics-government/city-changes-the-way-officers-are-dispatched-to-calls/1829973373

Click to access analyzing-calls-for-service-to-the-albuquerque-police-department..pdf

NEWS INVESTGATIVE REPORTS REVEALS DRAMATIC INCREASES IN APD RESPONSE TIMES

The time it takes for APD to respond to priority 1 calls, which are calls for a felony that is in progress or there is an immediate threat to life or property, has a major impact on increasing physical injury to victims or callers. There have been news reports on APD response times that merit mentioning.

KOAT TV TARGET 7 REPORT

Two years ago , on February 20, 2020, KOAT TV Target 7 reported on an investigation into the Albuquerque Police Department’s (APD’s) response times. The report revealed an alarming level of time it took APD to respond to 911 emergency calls and that there was a 93% increase in APD 911 response times since 2011 with a 48 minutes average time of arrival. It was reported that it takes APD 23 minutes longer to get to an emergency call than it did 8 years ago. There has been an astonishing 93% increase since 2011 with response times getting worse every year since. In 2011, the average response time to all calls, whether it was a life or death emergency or a minor traffic crash was 25 minutes. In 2019, that time period spiked to 48 minutes in the average response time.

https://www.koat.com/article/apd-response-times-continue-to-climb/31028667

KOB INVESTGATIVE REPORT

On August 11, 2021, KOB 4 did an investigative report on APD’s response times for Priority 1 calls and requested the response times for Priority 1 calls over the last few years. Priority 1 calls include shootings, stabbings, armed robberies, sexual and aggravated assaults, domestic violence with weapons involved and home invasions. According to the data, the time it takes officers to get to a crime scene stayed relatively consistent between January 2018 to May 2021 and was roughly between 9 and 12 minutes. Data obtained did reveal drastic differences in recent years. In 2018, clearing a scene ranged from an hour to an hour and 12 minutes. Fast forward to 2021 and APD was averaging more than 2 hours to write reports, gather evidence and interview witnesses, a full hour longer than three years ago.

https://www.kob.com/albuquerque-news/abq-4ward-examining-apds-response-times/6204745/

APD PERFORMANCE BASED BUDGET

The City of Albuquerque budget is a “performance based” budget. Each year, all 27 city departments submit statistics reflecting job performance to justify the individual department budgets being requested for funding.

On April 1, the Mayor Tim Keller Administration released the 2022-2023 annual budget that once enacted by the city council will be for the fiscal year that begins on July 1, 2022 and will end June 30, 2023. The overall budget submitted for review and approval of the Albuquerque City council is for $1.4 Billion. $841.8 represents the general fund spending and it is an increase of $127 million, or 17.8%, over the current year’s budget of $1.2 Billion.

The Albuquerque Police Department (APD) continues to be the largest city budget out of 27 departments. The fiscal year 2023 proposed General Fund budget is $255.4 million, which represents an increase of 14.7% or $32.8 million above the fiscal year 2022 level. The fiscal year 2022-2023 proposed General Fund budget for APD is $255.4 million, which represents an increase of 14.7% or $32.8 million above the FY/22 level. The proposed General Fund civilian count is 665 and sworn count is 1,100 for a total of 1,765 full-time positions.

APD’s general fund budget of $255.4 provides funding for 1,100 full time sworn police officers, with the department fully funded for 1,100 sworn police for the past 3 years. However, there are currently 888 sworn officers in APD. The APD budget provides funding for 1,100 in order to accommodate growth.
The link to the proposed 244-page 2022-2023 budget it here:

https://www.cabq.gov/dfa/documents/fy23-proposed-final-web-version.pdf

APD PERFORMANCE MEASURES REPORTED IN 2022-2023 GENERAL FUND BUDGET

The 911 Emergency Dispatch Center is a 24/7 center that has operators and dispatchers located in the Emergency Operations Center North of the Albuquerque Fire and Rescue Department Academy on the Westside. It has upwards of 60 full time operators, dispatchers and support staff divided into 3 separates 8 hour shifts. All 911 emergency calls are recorded.

The 2021 approved budget and the 2022-2023 proposed budget for APD contains the following performance measures:

Number of actual 911 calls received by fiscal year:

2020: 370,686
2021: 384,150
2022: target: 390,000
2022: midyear [actual]: 240,203
2023: target: 400,00

Number of actual 242-COPS calls received

2020: 600, 236
2021: 554,992
2022 target: 580,00
2022 mid-year [actual]: 279,447
2023 target: 575,000

Number of calls for service

2020: 543,574
2021: 524,286
2022 target: 550,000
2022 mid-year [actual]: 253,386
2023 target: 550,000

Number of violent crimes per 100,000 residents:

2020: 6,685
2021: 7,073
2022 target: 8,000
2022 mid-year [actual]: 7,579

Number of property crimes per 100,000 residents:

2020: 32,135
2021: 8,972
2022 target: 33,000
2022 mid year [actual]: 24,600

APD RESPONSE TIME PERFORMANCE MESURES

Following are the response times listed for APD priority 1, 2,3,4 and 5 calls under the performance measure “Officers arrive quickly”:

EDITOR’S NOTE: “Percentage (%) of Priority 1 calls responded to within 10 seconds” refers to the call actually being answered by the 911 operator, the time the operator takes to assign a priority ranking of 1 through 5 and the time it takes to dispatch a police unit to a call. It does not reflect the time it actually takes for a dispatched officers to arrive at a scene after the call is made to 911.

Average response time to Priority 1 calls (minutes)

Percentage of Priority 1 calls responded to within 10 minutes:

Fiscal year 2020 Actual: 90.80%
Fiscal year 2021 Actual: 89.48%
Fiscal year 2022 Approved: 90%
Fiscal year 2022 Mid Year: 70.07%

RESPONSE TIMES

The actual time in minutes and seconds are as follows:
Fiscal year 2020 actual: 7 minutes, 10 seconds
Fiscal year 2021 actual: 6 minutes, 8 seconds
Approved fiscal year 2022: 6 minutes, 10 seconds
Midyear fiscal year 2022: 7 minutes, 19 seconds
Proposed Fiscal year 2023: 7 minutes, 30 seconds

Average response time to Priority 2 calls (minutes)

Fiscal year 2020 actual: 10 minutes, 43 seconds
Fiscal year 2021 actual: 3 minutes, 45 seconds
Approved fiscal year 2022: 4 minutes, 9 seconds
Midyear fiscal year 2022: 6 minutes, 18 seconds
Proposed Fiscal year 2023: 6 minutes, 20 seconds

Average response time to Priority 3 calls (minutes)

Fiscal year 2020 actual: 14 minutes, 49 seconds
Fiscal year 2021 actual: 13 minutes, 43 seconds
Approved fiscal year 2022: 14 minutes, 55 seconds
Midyear fiscal year 2022: 16 minutes, 28 seconds
Proposed Fiscal year 2023: 16 minutes, 30 seconds

Average response time to Priority 4 calls (minutes)

Fiscal year 2020 actual: 15 minutes, 12 seconds
Fiscal year 2021 actual: 15 minutes, 16 seconds
Approved fiscal year 2022: 16 minutes, 13 seconds
Midyear fiscal year 2022: 18 minutes, 39 seconds
Proposed Fiscal year 2023: 19 minutes, 0 seconds

Average response time to Priority 5 calls (minutes)

Fiscal year 2020 actual: 11 minutes, 45 seconds
Fiscal year 2021 actual: 9 minutes, 34 seconds
Approved fiscal year 2022: 7 minutes, 28 seconds
Midyear fiscal year 2022: 7 minutes, 43 seconds
Proposed Fiscal year 2023: 7 minutes, 45 seconds

APD PERFORMANCE MEASURES ON SOLVING CRIMES

APD’s 2022-2023 proposed budget contains specific performance measures on APD “solving crimes” when it comes to felony arrests, misdemeanor arrests and DWI arrests. Following are those statistics

ACTUAL NUMBER OF FELONY ARRESTS

Fiscal year 2020: 10,945
Fiscal year 2021: 6,621

ACTUAL NUMBER OF MISDEAMEANOR ARRESTS

Fiscal year 2020: 19,440
Fiscal year 2021: 16,520

ACTUAL NUMBER OF DWI ARRESTS

Fiscal year 2020: 1,788
Fiscal year 2021: 1,230

APD CLEARANCE RATES

APD’s 2022-2023 proposed budget contains specific performance measures on APD “
Clearance rates on crimes investigated, including homicides separately, as follows:

Actual clearance rates of “crimes against persons” (e.g. murder, rape, assault)

Fiscal year 2020: 56%
Fiscal year 2021: 56%

Actual clearance rates of “crimes against property” (e.g. robbery, bribery, burglary)

Fiscal year 2020: 11%
Fiscal year 2021: 12%

Actual clearance rates of “crime against society” (gambling, prostitution, drug violations)

Fiscal year 2020: 79%
Fiscal year 2021: 77%

HOMICIDE CLEARANCE RATE:

Fiscal year 2020: 57%
Fiscal year 2021: 53%
Approved for 2022: 60%
Mid-Year [Actual] 2022: 47.5 %

APD NOT PROACTIVE AS TO ARRESTS

APD performance measure statistics for the budget years of 2019 and 2020 reflect that APD is not “pro-active” and not doing its job of investigating and arresting people. APD felony arrests went down from 2019 to 2020 by 39.51%, going down from 10,945 to 6,621. Misdemeanor arrests went down by 15% going down from 19,440 to 16,520. DWI arrests went down from 1,788 in 2019 to 1,230 in 2020, down 26%. The total number of all arrests went down from 32,173 in 2019 to 24,371 in 2020 or by 25%. Bookings at the jail have plummeted from 38,349 in 2010 to 17,734 in 2020. To have booking, there must be arrests. Thus far as of mid April 2022, APD’s homicide unit has an anemic clearance rate of 36%.

2018 to 2021 CRIME STATISTICS COMPARED

APD Response times are only the very first step with APD dealing with a crime. The extent of the city’s crime problem is reflected by the city’s final crime statistics. Following is a nutshell breakdown of Albuquerque’s 2018 to 2021 crime statistics as reported by the FBI national crime statistics reports:

TOTAL CRIMES

In 2021, according to data released on March 30 by APD, total crimes in Albuquerque increased by 0.85%. The less than 1% increase was the first time since 2018 that crime was reported to have increased overall. Since 2018, APD has said that there was a 19% drop in property crime, which drove a decrease in overall crime, even as violent crime spiked across Albuquerque. The 0.85% increase in overall crime came after the city recorded decreases of 7% and 6% in 2019 and 2020 in overall crime. Those decreases were attributed to back-to-back drops of 10% in property crimes.

Following are the past 4 years of total crime statistics:

2018: 75,538
2019: 70,223
2020: 65,503
2021: 66,066

CRIMES AGAINST PERSONS

Crimes Against Persons include murder, rape, and assault, and are those in which the victims are always individuals. Following are the reported totals in Crimes Against Persons for the last 4 years:

2018: 14,845
2019: 14,971
2020: 15,262
2021: 15,765

Violent crime increased or has stayed relatively constant for the last 4 years. In 2021, Violent Crime, known as crimes against persons, saw increases in all but four categories. Violent crime continued to rise and went up 3% which is largest annual increase since 2018. APD’s data shows the steepest increase were in homicide with an increase of 53%, intimidation with an increase of 20% and aggravated assault with an increase of 5%.

In 2021, gun violations along with homicide and fraud, saw the largest increases. APD’s data shows the steepest increase were in homicide with a 53% increase, intimidation with a 20% increase and aggravated assault with a 5% increase, all of which reached their highest levels since 2018.

Sex offenses increased by 15% as simple assault decreased by 11% and kidnapping decreased by 5%.

CRIMES AGAINST PROPERTY

Crimes Against Property include robbery, bribery, and burglary, or to obtain money, property, or some other benefit. Following are the Crimes Against Property for the last 4 years:

2018: 57,328
2019: 51,541
2020: 46,373
2021: 46,291

In 2018, property crime began to fall and for the past several years, has decreased. In 2021, property crime had its first increase of under 1%. Property crime saw its biggest jumps in reports of fraud and robbery. Notwithstanding the increase, property crime did see a large drop with a 15% drop in stolen property, a 10% drop in the category of “destruction, damage, vandalism” and a 7% drop in “larceny and theft offenses”. All three categories reached their lowest levels since 2018.

Fraud skyrocketed 61%, from 3,900 to 6,300 cases. According to APD, Fraud rose as APD cracked down on shoplifting, larceny and burglaries. APD said those with drug abuse issues moved away from those crimes and began to steal identities, checks and credit cards to fuel their drug addiction behavior. According to APD, auto theft rose by 6% and the rise was the first time in years.

Auto theft rose for the first time in years and went up by 6%. According to APD Chief Medina, the increase was attributed to an Internal Affairs investigation into the Auto Theft unit that opened in June 2021. The investigation caused the unit to “take a step back” and become “skittish” in enforcement.

CRIMES AGAINST SOCIETY

Crimes Against Society include gambling, prostitution, and drug violations, and represent society’s prohibition against engaging in certain types of activity and are typically victimless crimes. Crimes Against Property for the last 4 years is reported as follows:

2018:3,365
2019: 3,711
2020: 3,868
2021: 3,910

According to the data released, crimes against society saw a large spike of 66% in gun violations which has gone up 218% since 2018 and drops of 26% and 63%, respectively, in drug offenses and prostitution. In 2021, prostitution, drug and stolen property offenses had the biggest decreases. Chief Medina attributed the slight increase in Crimes Against Society locally to internal investigation and technology lapses hindering auto theft enforcement, people with drug use issues committing more fraud and an increase in guns being taken off the streets.

https://www.petedinelli.com/2022/04/08/koat-target-7-news-report-makes-city-councilor-louie-sanchez-look-foolish-by-allowing-apd-to-question-sanchez-motives-and-allowing-apd-not-to-state-if-they-believe-sanchezs-911-calls-were-legitim/

https://www.petedinelli.com/2020/03/02/apd-homicide-clearance-rate-drops-from-80-to-52-911-response-time-increases-by-93-to-48-minutes-average-response-time-abq-journal-weighs-in-on-homicide-clearance-rate/

COMMENTARY AND ANALYSIS

Newly elected City Councilor Louie Sanchez’ demand for an audit of APD is questionable on a number of levels. It reflects a degree of vindictiveness’ and pettiness on his part as he seeks to show dominance and control over a department he once worked for 26 years.

First, Louie Sanchez has made it very personal in his attempt to exert his authority as an elected official over APD. He engages in a pattern of conduct of calling APD 911, not being satisfied with how APD handles his calls, and then turns around to discuss it at city council meetings. Instead of first attempting to handle the problem privately like citizens are required to do, he uses his city council position to get media coverage to force APD into submission.

Second, when Sanchez yells at low ranking city 911 operators, as APD Spokesman Gilbert Gallegos has said, he is creating an atmosphere of resentment and mistrust of an elected official by city hall employees.

Third, Sanchez used a “secured line” that is supposed to only be used by the Chief saying I’ve called that line for 26 years as a police officer and I still have that in my phone.” It’ s more likely than not that Sanchez did not have the number his entire 26 years as a police officer and was given the number when he was in charge of the Mayor’s personal security detail. When Sanchez terminated his employment with APD, he was required to return all of his city issued equipment and should have deleted the secured line and not retain it for his personal use.

Fourth, Sanchez is asking for an audit that is so “in the weeds” as to be impossible to determine anything of real value let alone accuracy. In order to perform the audit Sanchez wants and get accurate results, auditors will have to find a way to review upwards of 400,000 Priority 1 calls, which would require also listening to dispatch recordings and then and only then be able to determine if a 911 call was accurately classified as priority 1, 2, 3, 4 or 5. Such review will only result in second guessing the classification of calls.

Five, Sanchez is attempting to micromanage APD when that is not the function or authority of a City Councilor. If managing APD is what Sanchez wants to do, he should resign his council seat and ask Mayor Keller to appoint him APD Chief or Chief Administrative Officer of the City, which may be a good idea given Medina’s poor performance and now that CAO Sarita Nair is leaving. Then again, its highly doubtful the City Council, other than Dan Lewis, would vote to confirm him.

FINAL COMMENT

City Councilor Louie Sanchez has no business trying to manage APD as a City Councilor by calling APD 911 and telling APD how to handle 911 calls which is exactly what he has done. Sanchez is looking increasingly like a fool and losing credibility at City Hall as he uses the press to ask questions of APD and calling for audits. Louie Sanchez needs to start acting like a City Councilor and needs to start introducing City Council Resolutions that will affect APD on policy to solve APD problems and get the backing of more than Republican City Councilors with his efforts.

On April 1, Mayor Tim Keller forwarded to the City Council the 2022-2023 proposed budget that the City Council must review, amend and enact before July 1. The most crucial responsibility of the City Council is to review the budget. City Councilor Louie Sanchez has the best opportunity to find out what is going on with APD during the budget process when APD’s budget is presented by APD Chief Medina. The budget process is the time and place to hold APD accountable.

New Mexico Voting Laws Praised By Congressional Committee As Improving Access To Ballot; New Mexico Republicans Resist Efforts To Improve Ballot Access

On Monday, April 11, the United States Congressional Subcommittee on Elections of the Committee on House Administration held a hearing with the agenda entitled “Voting in America: Access to the Ballot in New Mexico”. The hearing was convened to discuss how the state has expanded access to the ballot over the past years and to examine further advances to voting in the state. The congressional hearing was held as a proposed federal update of the federal Voting Rights Act has stalled in the U.S. Senate. Hearing are being held around the country to gather evidence of voter suppression and issues facing elections officials.

Voter turnout in New Mexico hit a record high in 2020. However, since the 2020 election, anti-voter laws under the guise of election reform to protect the ballot from fraud have been enacted in many states controlled by Republicans in large part because of Der Fuerhe Trump’s false and unproven claims of election fraud and that the election was stolen from him.

New Mexico has been totally opposite from Republican controlled state legislatures. New Mexico has pushed for election practices to ensure every voter has access to the ballot box. The state employs many election policies that improve and expand access to the ballot such as automatic voter registration, online voter registration, same-day registration, early in-person voting, and no-excuse absentee voting.

In the 2020 general election, New Mexico voter turnout surged with 68% of registered voters casting ballots. The 2020 turnout percentage was the state’s highest since 2008, when 70% participated. New Mexico also set a record for raw votes cast with more than 928,000 ballots cast altogether. Of that amount, roughly 35% were cast via absentee ballot, as registered New Mexico voters are not required to provide a reason for requesting an absentee ballot and casting their votes via that method.

APRIL 11 CONGRESSIONAL HEARING

The April 11 Congressional hearing was held in Santa Fe at the State Capitol with the hearing focused on steps the state has taken to expand voter access. The hearing was not attended by a single Republican member of congress. Republican members were invited to attend the hearing, including via remote participation, but all declined to do so. Democratic U.S. Reps. Teresa Leger Fernandez and Melanie Stansbury were allowed to attend while Republican congresswoman Yvette Harrell declined.
Democrat from North Carolina U.S. Rep. G.K. Butterfield, chairman of the subcommittee on elections, said at the beginning of the hearing that New Mexico’s approach to voting laws stands in contrast to “anti-democratic” measures enacted in other states, including his home state of North Carolina. Butterfield had this to say:

“This great state has moved in the opposite direction by increasing access to the ballot box for voters”.

New Mexico Third Congressional District Congresswoman Teresa Leger Fernandez, who is a member of the subcommittee, cited her past legal work before running for Congress to address long lines to vote on tribal lands in New Mexico, among other issues. She said the testimony provided to the committee would be valuable for committee members. Leger Fernandez had this to say:

“Some of the issues that were raised here, like the need to provide funding so there is a steady source for our secretary of secretary of state, that’s something I’m going to go back and work on immediately.”

SECRETARY OF STATE MAGGIE TOULOUSE OLIVER TESTIFIES

New Mexico Secretary of State Maggie Toulouse Oliver testified during the April 11 hearing. Toulouse Oliver, who a second term, cited past threats she has received related to her job duties. She lamented the spread of misinformation about voter fraud and other election-related issues. Toulouse Oliver said this:

“We have to collectively figure out how we can make it so these lies are not tolerated and they are not allowed to propagate. …It is a fallacy to say ballot access comes at the expense of election security.”

Toulouse Oliver made it clear that New Mexico has conducted fair and accurate elections after adding same-day voter registration, ballot drop boxes and allowing 17-year-olds to vote in primary elections, provided they turn 18 before the general election.

Advocates for expanded voting rights attended the Congressional suncommitee and testified. Andrea Serrano, the executive director for OLÉ New Mexico, a well-known an Albuquerque-based nonprofit group, said misleading election-related information is often spread with a specific goal in mind of voter suppression. Serrano said:

“That disinformation is done intentionally! … It’s done specifically to keep people of color from voting.”

The link to quoted news source material is here:

https://www.abqjournal.com/2487719/nm-voting-laws-draw-praise-during-congressional-field-hearing.html

NEW MEXICO REPUBLICANS SUCCEED AT KILLING NEW MEXICO VOTING RIGHTS BILL

In New Mexico, questions about election irregularities and fraud continue circulate in Republican dominated counties and their candidates for office. Republican front runner candidate for Governor Mark Wrongchetti has gotten into the act of alleging voter fraud with a talking point in his platform that says:

“Ensuring secure elections where the results are trusted and accepted by our citizens is critical for a healthy democracy. … Mark Ronchetti believes we must make it easy to vote and hard to cheat.”

Mark Wrongchetti was nowhere to be found to voice his opinion to the congressional committee nor to the New Mexico legislature when it considered the voting rights act during the 2022 legislative session.

In January, the Otero County Commission authorized a $49,750 contract for a countywide review of election records and voter registration information linked to the 2020 general election Trump won nearly 62% of the vote in Otero County in 2020 but county commissioners have said they are not satisfied with assurances of an accurate midterm election in 2022 by their county clerk or results of the state’s risk-limiting audit.

The Otero County Commission accepted a proposal from Echo-Mail, one of the contractors hired by Arizona’s Republican-controlled state senate to review election results in Maricopa County. Secretary of State Maggie Toulouse Oliver issued a warning about the audit telling area residents to be wary of what she called intrusive questions and potential intimidation by door-to-door canvassers.

https://www.abqjournal.com/2479294/election-audit-prompts-pushback-from-new-mexico-auditor.html

In New Mexico, Republicans have taken issue with New Mexico election laws and any attempts to improve voter access to the ballot an make it easier to vote. The 2022 New Mexico legislature failed to enact a voting rights bills in large part because of Republican shenanigans. The Democratic majority floor leaders in both chambers, Santa Fe Senator Peter Wirth of Santa Fe and Albuquerque Representative Javier Martínez of Albuquerque, supported the measures.

Secretary of State Maggie Toulouse Oliver had this to say about supporting passage of the voting rights bill:

“Even as we’ve seen attempts around the country to make voting more difficult for eligible voters … here in New Mexico we continue to be a leader in how to balance the demands for voter access with the needs of maintaining our high levels of election security.”

Not at all surprising, many New Mexico Republicans followed Republican national talking points when it came to opposing the proposed voting rights bills and said the changes would lead to “fraud and confusion”. Republican Party Chairman Steve Pearce went so far as to falsely say the changes would damage the security and integrity of New Mexico elections.”

The links to quoted news source material is here:

https://www.abqjournal.com/2464376/democratic-leaders-introduce-nm-elections-bill.html

https://www.abqjournal.com/2464708/lawmakers-clash-over-student-id-for-voting.html

The voting rights bill failed to be enacted by the Senate after passage in the House. Der Führer Trump Republican Senator William Sharer, R-Farmington, effectively killed the measure with a filibuster on the Senate floor. In order to run out the clock on the legislative session, Sharer talked about San Juan River fly-fishing, baseball rules, Navajo Code Talkers and the celestial alignment of the sun and moon during his lengthy filler buster on the Senate floor.

The bill would have done the following:

1. Established a permanent absentee voter list.
2. Allowed voters to sign up once to receive absentee ballots for every general election, rather than having to apply for one each time.
3. Established a Native American voting rights act.
4. Directed counties to offer two secured, monitored drop boxes for absentee ballots.
5. Made it a crime to threaten or intimidate state and county election officials.
6. Restored the voting rights of people convicted of a felony upon release from incarceration, rather than after they’ve completed probation or parole.

https://www.abqjournal.com/2471195/voting-bill-dies-as-30-day-session-comes-to-an-end.html

2020 NEW MEXICO ELECTION ADMINISTRATION, VOTER SECURITY, AND ELECTION REFORM REPORT

On January 26, the “2020 New Mexico Election Administration, Voter Security, and Election Reform Report” prepared by University Of New Mexico Political Science Department was released. It is the 8th time such a post-election report has been prepared released by UNM. It was prepared with the assistance from the Secretary of State’s Office using funds from the Help America Vote Act. This research is conducted to help guide New Mexico election policy and incorporate public understanding of the process into those reforms. It is also meant to serve as a guide to voters about the health of their state democracy and backdrop of elections in New Mexico. The 2020 election report is 132 pages long and contains numerous graphs and statistics. The report found that New Mexico’s 2020 election was indeed secured and New Mexico voters has confidence in the election outcome and being free from voter fraud.

The link to read the full report is here:

https://www.sos.state.nm.us/wp-content/uploads/2022/01/2020-UNM-Voter-Report.pdf

COMMENTARY AND ANALYSIS

What Republicans have shown nationally and in other states is that what they want is absolute control of the ballot box to ensure that the only votes to be counted are those votes that will ensure Republican victory. Nationally, legislatures controlled by Republicans in red states are making major changes to their election laws to give Republicans in charge of administering election counts the power to merely invalidate election results and votes and making it as difficult as possible to vote in order to suppress voter registrations and invalidate election outcomes. Simply put, the goal of Republicans is not election security but to make sure that only those votes cast for Republicans are the votes that are counted.

No doubt Secretary of State Maggie Toulouse Oliver was disappointed in the New Mexico legislature’s failure to enact the voting rights bill all because of a Republican filibuster in the State Senate. Notwithstanding, she can take great comfort with the United States Congressional Subcommittee on Elections citing the state as having made great strides with ballot access and making it easier to vote while at the same time having secured elections. She can also take great comfort in the findings of the “2020 New Mexico Election Administration, Voter Security, and Election Reform Report” which found that New Mexico’s 2020 election was indeed secured. The report is a clear reflection she has done her job well and it is a testament to her success despite Republican obstructionist doing whatever they can to prevent access to the ballot.

New Mexico voters as well can take great comfort in knowing that our election laws are indeed some of the strongest in the country promoting access to the ballot. What is also clear in New Mexico is that Republicans are not at all interested in free elections and nor easy access to the ballot.

The link to a related blog article is here:

Republicans Refusing To Accept Defeat; Bogus Election Fraud Claims; Voter Suppression And Invalidating Votes More Important to Republicans Than Ballot Access; UNM 2020 Election Administration And Voter Security Report

FBI Reports City’s Crime Up By Less Than 1%; Statistic Skewed Because Of Changes In FBI Reporting System; Crime Likely Much Higher Given APD’s Reduced Enforcement Efforts And APD’s Past Inaccurate Reporting

On Wednesday March 29, the 2021 the Albuquerque Police Department (APD) released the 2021 crime statistics as compiled by the Federal Bureau Investigation (FBI) in its annual Crime in the United States report. It was the fourth full year in a row that the annual crime statistics released used the FBI National Incident-Based Reporting System (NIBRS). The FBI Based Reporting System uses 3 broad categories of crime as opposed to the SRA system that used 8 major crimes. The postscript to this bog article explains the difference between NIBRS and SRS.

In 2018, APD along with other law enforcement departments across the country, switched the format mandated by the FBI for its annual crime report published each fall. Under NIBRS, there are 52 subcategories spread throughout crimes against persons, crimes against property and crimes against society. Each crime committed during an incident is counted.

Before the change from the SRS to NIMBS, both violent crime and property crime had been rising steadily since in 2015, with large jumps in auto theft, homicides, assaults and robberies
The three major categories of crime statistics under NIBRS are:

1. Crime against persons
2. Crimes against property
3 Crimes against society

2020 FBI UNIFIED CRIME REPORTS

According to the 2020 FBI Unified Crime Reports:

Albuquerque had a crime rate of 194% higher than the national average.
Albuquerque’s Violent Crime Index for 2020 was 346% of the national average.
Albuquerque Property Crime Index for 2020 was 256% of the national average.

The link to the 2020 FBI Unified Crime Reports for New Mexico is here:

https://crime-data-explorer.app.cloud.gov/pages/explorer/crime/crime-trend

2018 to 2021 CRIME STATISTICS COMPARED

Following is a nutshell breakdown of Albuquerque’s 2018 to 2021 crime statistics

TOTAL CRIMES

2018: 75,538
2019: 70,223
2020: 65,503
2021: 66,066

In 2021, according to data released on March 30 by APD, total crimes in Albuquerque increased by 0.85%. The less than 1% increase was the first time since 2018 that crime was reported to have increased overall. Since 2018, APD has said that there was a 19% drop in property crime, which drove a decrease in overall crime, even as violent crime spiked across Albuquerque. The 0.85% increase in overall crime came after the city recorded decreases of 7% and 6% in 2019 and 2020 in overall crime. Those decreases were attributed to back-to-back drops of 10% in property crimes.

CRIMES AGAINST PERSONS

Crimes Against Persons include murder, rape, and assault, and are those in which the victims are always individuals. Following are the reported totals in Crimes Against Persons for the last 4 years:

2018: 14,845
2019: 14,971
2020: 15,262
2021: 15,765

Violent crime increased or has stayed relatively constant for the last 4 years. In 2021, Violent Crime, known as crimes against persons, saw increases in all but four categories. Violent crime continued to rise and went up 3% which is largest annual increase since 2018. APD’s data shows the steepest increase were in homicide with an increase of 53%, intimidation with an increase of 20% and aggravated assault with an increase of 5%.

In 2021, gun violations along with homicide and fraud, saw the largest increases. APD’s data shows the steepest increase were in homicide with a 53% increase, intimidation with a 20% increase and aggravated assault with a 5% increase, all of which reached their highest levels since 2018.

APD Chief Medina said gun violations went up after gun ownership “exploded” during the pandemic, leading to more gun thefts from cars and homes and, in general, more people being armed. Medina had this to say regarding the increase in gun violations:

“Eventually, at some point in time, we’ve come across a lot of people with those firearms, and we start making those arrests … It’s just a combination of more guns in the community, officers being proactive and us taking the guns off the streets.”

Sex offenses also jumped 15% as simple assault decreased by 11% and kidnapping decreased by 5%. Gun violations went up after gun ownership “exploded” during the pandemic, leading to more gun thefts from cars and homes and, in general, more people being armed.

Sex offenses increased by 15% as simple assault decreased by 11% and kidnapping decreased by 5%.

FOUR YEARS OF HISTORICAL HIGH HOMICIDES

In 2018 there were 69 homicides. In 2019, there were 82 homicides. Albuquerque had more homicides in 2019 than in any other year in the city’s history before that. The previous high was in 2017 when 72 homicides were reported. The previous high mark was in 1996, when the city had 70 homicides.

The year 2020 ended with 76 homicides, the second-highest count since 1996. The decline dropped the homicide rate from 14.64 per 100,000 people in 2019 to about 13.5 in 2020.

2021 ended with the city shattering the all-time record with 117 homicides in one year and a per capita murder rate of 20.8 per 100,000.

https://www.abqjournal.com/1534762/homicide-numbers-high-despite-pandemic.html?amp=1

The final tally of murders in the city for 2021 is 117 and it shattered the previous 2019 record by 36 murders.

Following is the raw data breakdown for 2021:

Total Homicides: 117
Number of “justified homicides” excluded from total: 10
Per Capita Number: 20.8 per 100,000
Number of homicides Involving guns: 97
Number of cases solve or closed: 40
Oldest victim: 66
Youngest victim: 2

The link to quoted source material is here:

https://www.abqjournal.com/2458296/remembering-some-of-2021s-homicide-victims-in-abq-ex-total-

CITY’S HISTORICAL HOMICIDE CLEARANCE RATE HALF NATIONAL AVERAGE

Each year since 1995, the FBI has released annually its Crime In The United States Report which included homicide clearance rates. Following are the national homicide clearance rates for 2016, 2017, 2018 and 2019 as reported by the FBI:

In 2016: 59.4%. national clearance rate for murder
In 2017: 61.6% national clearance rate for murder
In 2018: 62.3% national clearance rate for murder
In 2019: 61.4% national clearance rate for murder

https://www.fbi.gov/services/cjis/ucr/publications

From 2019 to 2020, police across the country solved 1,200 more murders, a 14% increase. But murders rose twice as quickly by 30%. As a result, the homicide clearance rate, the percentage of crimes cleared, dropped to a historic low to about 1 of every 2 murders solved or by 50%.

https://www.themarshallproject.org/2022/01/12/as-murders-spiked-police-solved-about-half-in-2020

For the years 2019 to 2021, the city’s homicide clearance percentage rate has been in the 50%-60% range. According to the proposed 2018-2019 APD City Budget, in 2016 the APD homicide clearance rate was 80%. In 2017, the clearance rate was 70%. In 2018, the homicide clearance rate was 56%. In 2019, the homicide clearance rate was 52.5%, the lowest clearance rate in the last decade. In 2020 APD’s clearance rate dropped to 50%. APD’ clearance rate has now dropped to 30%.

APD Deputy Commander Kyle Hartsock oversees the homicide unit. On January 20, Hartsock said APD is investigating 115 homicides from last year, including a missing persons case from Belen and of that number, only about 30% have been closed, which is an all-time record low for APD.
Links to news source material are here:

https://www.koat.com/article/abq-crime-homicide-arrests/38820745

https://www.kob.com/news/albuquerque-homicide-map-2022/6350373/

https://www.abqjournal.com/2463551/apd-investigates-death-in-sw-albuquerque.html

https://www.abqjournal.com/2460901/apd-investigating-homicide-in-southwest-albuquerque-2.html

CRIMES AGAINST PROPERTY

Crimes Against Property include robbery, bribery, and burglary, or to obtain money, property, or some other benefit. Following are the Crimes Against Property for the last 4 years:

2018: 57,328
2019: 51,541
2020: 46,373
2021: 46,291

In 2018, property crime began to fall and for the past several years, has decreased. In 2021, property crime had its first increase of under 1%. Property crime saw its biggest jumps in reports of fraud and robbery. Notwithstanding the increase, property crime did see a large drop with a 15% drop in stolen property, a 10% drop in the category of “destruction, damage, vandalism” and a 7% drop in “larceny and theft offenses”. All three categories reached their lowest levels since 2018.

Fraud skyrocketed 61%, from 3,900 to 6,300 cases. According to APD, Fraud rose as APD cracked down on shoplifting, larceny and burglaries. APD said those with drug abuse issues moved away from those crimes and began to steal identities, checks and credit cards to fuel their drug addiction behavior. According to APD, auto theft rose by 6% and the rise was the first time in years.

Auto theft rose for the first time in years and went up by 6%. According to APD Chief Medina, the increase was attributed to an Internal Affairs investigation into the Auto Theft unit that opened in June 2021. The investigation caused the unit to “take a step back” and become “skittish” in enforcement.

CRIMES AGAINST SOCIETY

Crimes Against Society include gambling, prostitution, and drug violations, and represent society’s prohibition against engaging in certain types of activity and are typically victimless crimes. Crimes Against Property for the last 4 years is reported as follows:

2018: 3,365
2019: 3,711
2020: 3,868
2021: 3,910

According to the data released, crimes against society saw a large spike of 66% in gun violations which has gone up 218% since 2018 and drops of 26% and 63%, respectively, in drug offenses and prostitution. In 2021, prostitution, drug and stolen property offenses had the biggest decreases. Chief Medina attributed the slight increase in Crimes Against Society locally to internal investigation and technology lapses hindering auto theft enforcement, people with drug use issues committing more fraud and an increase in guns being taken off the streets.

APD CHIEF HAROLD MEDINA REACTS

Albuquerque Police Chief Harold Medina said Albuquerque is in the same situation as many other cities in the country and went so far as to blame bail bond reform. Surprisingly, Medina did not blame the increase of crime on the Federal Court Approved Settlement Agreement (CASA), that mandates 271 police reforms, as he has done in the past. Medina had this to say:

“We’re in line with a lot of national trends. We can’t expect to decrease every year. Our trends are still going down on the property crime side and our violent crime is still taking the same course as the rest of this country. … Every single major city chief is frustrated with the fact that we can’t keep people in custody and we have a revolving door in the criminal justice system and there has to be a middle ground. … We know the settlement agreement doesn’t cause crime to go up, but it does create a fear among our officers to be able to do their job and they aren’t as aggressive and proactive.”

CITY BUDGET PERFORMANC MEASURE STATISTICS REFLECT APD ARRESTS WENT DOWN

APD statistics for the city budget years of 2019 and 2020 confirm that APD was not as “aggressive and proactive” as Chief Medina proclaimed. APD statistics for the city budget years of 2019 and 2020 revealed the department was not doing its job of investigating and arresting people.

APD felony arrests went down from 2019 to 2020 by 39.51% going down from 10,945 to 6,621. Misdemeanor arrests went down by 15% going down from 19,440 to 16,520. DWI arrests went down from 1,788 in 2019 to 1,230 in 2020, down 26%. The total number of all arrests went down from 32,173 in 2019 to 24,371 in 2020 or by 25%.

In 2019 APD had 924 full time police. In 2020, APD had 1,004 sworn police or 80 more sworn police in 2020 than in 2019, yet arrests went down during the first year of the pandemic. APD’s homicide unit has an anemic clearance rate of 36%.

The 2023 proposed budget released on April 1, 2022, contains APD arrest statistics and performance measures. Following are the statistics for the reports years of 2020 and 2021:

NUMBER OF VIOLENT CRIMES REPORTED AND INVESTIGATED BY APD:

2020: 6,685
2021: 7,073

NUMBER OF PROPERTY CRIMES REPORTED AND INVESTIGATED BY APD

2020: 32,135
2021: 8,972.

APD FELONY ARREST

2020: 10,945 felony arrests
2021: 6,621 felony arrests

APD MISDEMEANOR ARRESTS

2020: 19,440 misdemeanor arrests
2021: 16,520 misdemeanor arrests

APD DWI arrests

2020: 1,788 DWI arrests
2021: 1,230 DWI arrests

FBI DIRECTOR CHRISTOPHER WRAY

APD released the crime stats the same day FBI Director Christopher Wray came to New Mexico to meet with law enforcement leaders across the state to “publicly acknowledge what we’re up against.” Wray had this to say:

“I would love nothing more than to hear that everyone seated around me is getting bored by the lack of crime happening here. But, needless to say, that is definitely not the case right now. [Nationwide, violent crime has reached] extreme and even alarming levels. As part of that national trend, this region has certainly had its share of gun violence and heartbreak recently. … [Albuquerque’s homicide spike in 2021 is] truly horrifying jump.”

Wray did not announce any new enforcement tactics in New Mexico but noted a recent FBI endeavor putting billboards around New Mexico stating “Gun crime = federal crime. No Parole”. Wray said the billboards will “hopefully change some behavior” of criminals and prevent crime from happening “in the first place.” Wray touted the past accomplishments of the FBI’s Violent Crime Gang Task and said:

[The Violent Crime Gang Task force are] laser-focused on reversing the trend of violence. … I would love nothing more than to hear that everyone seated around me is getting bored by the lack of crime happening here. … But, needless to say, that is definitely not the case right now.”

The link to quoted news source material is here:

https://www.abqjournal.com/2484277/abqs-overall-crime-goes-up-0-85-in-first-rise-since-18.html

KELLER COOKING THE BOOKS

Comparing Albuquerque’s new crime stats to those before 2018 is difficult at best because of the change in the system of how it is reported by APD to the FBI and because of major past mistakes made by APD that under reported crime. Previously crime was broken into eight categories, 4 in property crime and four in violent crime, and only the highest crime in each incident was counted. Under the new National Incident-Based Reporting System (NIBRS) there are 52 subcategories spread throughout crimes against persons, crimes against property and crimes against society. Each crime committed during an incident is counted. Before the change, both violent crime and property crime had been rising steadily since 2015, with large jumps in auto theft, homicides, assaults and robberies.

In 2018 and 2019, the first two years Tim Keller served as Mayor, he would hold a press conference every quarter when APD released the city’ crime statistics. He did so to proclaim and to some extent take credit for crime going down in all categories. It turns out for almost two years the statistics Keller regurgitated were seriously inaccurate and way too optimistic.

On July 1, 2019, Keller held a press conference only 1 day after the second quarter of 2019 ended to report the mid-year crime statistics compared to last year midterm numbers. Mayor Keller reported that crime was down substantially, with double-digit drops in nearly every category, between the first six months of 2018 and the first six months of 2019.

The statistics released during the July 1, 2019 Keller press conference, the Albuquerque Police Department (APD) reported to the FBI that in the first 6 months of 2019, the property crimes of home burglaries were down and auto burglaries were down. Robberies, sexual assaults and murders were reported as down from the first 6 months of last year. Double-digit drops were reported during the last 6 months in violent offenses included robberies, down, aggravated assaults, and rapes.

https://www.abqjournal.com/1335502/crime-declining-in-albuquerque-new-numbers-show.html

On Sunday, December 1, the Albuquerque Journal ran a front-page story that all the crime rate reductions Keller reported in Keller’s July 1, 2019 press conference were in fact seriously flawed and not accurate. According to the report, both the 2019 mid-year statistics and the statistics released at the end of 2018 were revised dramatically to include hundreds, and in some cases thousands, more incidents than were initially reported. The final numbers for all of 2018 showed violent crime actually increased. You can read the full December 1 Journal story at this link:

https://www.abqjournal.com/1396782/flaws-discovered-in-apds-crime-statistics.html

At an October meeting of the City Council, APD provided the revised statistics to it but failed to report that the numbers had changed drastically no doubt believing no one would notice. Mayor Keller also did not hold any kind of a press conference to correct nor announce the corrected statistics. The Keller Administration blamed the false numbers on antiquated software programs, but only after the Keller Administration had essentially been caught by the Albuquerque Journal.
Following are the corrected statistics:

Auto burglaries decreased 16%, not 38% as previously announced
Auto theft decreased 22%, not 39% as Keller reported
Commercial burglary decreased 3%, not the 27% Keller reported
Residential burglary decreased 16%, not 39% as Keller reported
Homicide decreased 2.5%, not 18%, but homicides have since increased substantially and the city has tied the all-time record of 71.
Rape decreased 3%, not the 29% Keller reported
Robbery decreased 30%, not 47% reported by Keller
Aggravated assault decreased 7.5%, not 33% reported by Keller
In February, 2019 APD reported very different numbers to the FBI’s Uniform Crime Reporting program, which collects and publishes the data. The data reported shows violent crime had actually increased 3.7% between 2017 and 2018 driven by aggravated assaults.
According to the FBI report:
Aggravated assault increased 21%, rather than decreasing 8% as announced during Keller’s July news conference
Rape increased by 3%, rather than decreasing 3%
Auto theft decreased 14%, not the 31% reported by Keller
Homicides remained basically the same decreasing by a single murder
Robbery decreased 32% and Keller reported it decreasing by 36%

https://www.petedinelli.com/2019/12/02/mayor-keller-cooking-the-books-with-all-that-stuff-keller-and-apd-chief-geier-looking-desperate-with-4th-program-in-9-months-time-for-another-reorganization/

COMMENTARY

According the to the FBI, the city’s total crime in Albuquerque may have only increased by a mere 0.85%, but that is simply not at all comforting given the city’s staggering violent crime and murder rates. APD’s lost a significant amount of credibility with its pathetic mishandling of the crime statistic a few years ago that deflated the actual numbers. People do not feel safe when murders are being reported on a daily basis.

It is unmistakable that APD statistics for the city budget years of 2018, 2019, 2020 and 2021 confirm that APD was not as “aggressive and proactive”. Felony arrests, misdemeanor arrests and DWI arrests by APD are all down dramatically while at the same time homicide clearance rates by APD are at unacceptable levels. When arrest are down by APD so are the numbers reported to the FBI. APD’s reduced enforcement efforts reduces crime reported to FBI. It’s doubtful that crime is up by only 0.85%.

________________________________

POSTSCRIPT

Following is a short synopsis of the SRS crime reporting system and the NIBRS system:

SRS SYSTEM

Prior to 2018, APD reported data using the Summary Reporting System (SRS), which included 8 crime categories and counted only the most serious offense during an incident. The eight categories were 4 in property crime and 4 in violent crime. The original 8 offenses were chosen because they are serious crimes, they occur with regularity in all areas of the country, and they are likely to be reported to police. In the traditional Summary Reporting System (SRS), the eight crimes, or Part I offenses are:

1. Murder and Nonnegligent Manslaughter
2. Forcible Rape
3. Robbery
4. Aggravated Assault
5. Burglary
6. Larceny-theft
7. Motor Vehicle Theft
8. Arson

A link providing a complete definition of each category under the SRS system is here:

https://www.bjs.gov/ucrdata/offenses.cfm

NIBRS SYSTEM

In 2018, the Albuquerque Police Department (APD) began reporting its annual crime statistics using the Federal Bureau Of Investigation’s National Incident-Based Reporting System (NIBRS). NIBRS is the most current national framework for reporting crime and replaces the FBI’s Uniform Crimes Reports (UCR). This change is important because, compared to UCR, NIBRS provides more comprehensive and detailed information about crimes against person, crimes against property and crimes against society occurring in law enforcement jurisdictions across the county. Under the National Incident-Based Reporting System there are 52 subcategories spread throughout crimes against persons, crimes against property and crimes against society. Each crime committed during an incident is counted.

https://www.cabq.gov/police/documents/crimestats2018_19_apd.pdf

Starting in January 2021, the FBI began requiring law enforcement agencies to use the National Incident-Based Reporting System (NIBRS). In NIBRS, there are 3 major reporting broad categories:

CRIMES AGAINST PERSONS

Crimes Against Persons include murder, rape, and assault, and are those in which the victims are always individuals.

CRIMES AGAINST PROPERTY
Crimes Against Property include robbery, bribery, and burglary, or to obtain money, property, or some other benefit.

CRIMES AGAINST SOCIETY

Crimes Against Society include gambling, prostitution, and drug violations, and represent society’s prohibition against engaging in certain types of activity and are typically victimless crimes.
The 3 major categories are then broken down into 52 sub-categories. NIBRS counts virtually all crimes committed during an incident and for that reason alone NIMRS is far more sophisticated than the “most serious incident-based” reporting SRS reporting system.

“In the National Incident-Based Reporting System” (NIBRS), each offense reported is either a Group A or Group B offense type. There are 23 Group A offense categories, comprised of 52 Group A offenses and 10 Group B offense categories. Law enforcement agencies report Group A offenses as part of a NIBRS incident report, but they report only arrest data for Group B offenses.”

https://ucr.fbi.gov/nibrs/2018/resource-pages/crimes_against_persons_property_and_society-2018.pdf

“In NIBRS, law enforcement agencies collect detailed data regarding individual crime incidents and arrests and submit them in separate reports using prescribed data elements and data values to describe each incident and arrest. Therefore, NIBRS involves incident-based reporting. … There are 52 data elements used in NIBRS to describe the victims, offenders, arrestees, and circumstances of crimes.”

A link to a complete guide to the NIBRS crime reporting system is here:

https://ucr.fbi.gov/nibrs/nibrs_dcguide.pdf

Governor Lujan Grisham raises $2.7 Million For Reelection; Republican Mark Ronchetti Reports $2.1 Million Raised; Commentary And Analysis On The 5 Republican Candidate’s For Governor “Interview For Governor”

Monday April 11 filing deadline for candidates for Governor to file campaign finance reports with the New Mexico Secretary of State. The reports cover a full 6 months of fund raising since October, 2021.

THE GOVERNOR

According to finance reports filed, Democratic Gov Michelle Lujan Grisham raised nearly $2.7 million for her reelection campaign. Lujan Grisham is running unopposed in the Democratic primary. Her campaign reports the Governor has $3.8 million in cash on hand and much more will likely be raised after the June 7 primary. Top contributors to the Governors campaign are the Pueblo of Santo Domingo at $22,000.00 and the Pueblo of Ohkay Owingeh at $20,400.00. In 2018 Lujan Grisham raised and spent $9.5 million to get elected and she is expected to match or exceed that amount this year.

https://login.cfis.sos.state.nm.us/index.html#/exploreDetails/LF-T58-SVo-SenRRiGLVeH1lK5MpzTLbNw12UnzEQ-I1/5/0/119/2022

https://login.cfis.sos.state.nm.us/index.html#/exploreDetails/LF-T58-SVo-SenRRiGLVeH1lK5MpzTLbNw12UnzEQ-I1/5/0/119/2022

THE REPUBLICANS

There are 5 Republicans running for Governor.

Republican Mark Ronchetti raised over $2.1 million, which is more than twice as much as any other Republican candidate in the race. Ronchetti’s largest contributors are ranchers, oil and gas companies, members of the Perot family in Dallas, and Allen Weh, a former chairman of the New Mexico Republican Party. Ronchetti also received $5,200 donations from Dorothy Rainosek, who along with her husband Larry Rainosek, own the Frontier restaurant and Doug Peterson of Peterson Properties, the largest commercial real estate owners in the Albuquerque. Ronchetti spent $584,000 and ended with a cash balance of $1.55 million.

The link to Ronchetti’s finance report is here:

https://login.cfis.sos.state.nm.us//Files/ReportsOutput//103/e487b690-f88d-47eb-a915-6073304e48a8.pdf

State Rep. Rebecca Dow, R-Truth or Consequences, reported raising $751,000 in donations. She has raise a total of $1.2 million for the campaign, including $100,000 transferred from her state representative account. She has $681,000 in cash on hand. According to reports filed, Dow loaned herself $40,000 and over $70,000 in donations are from members of the Yates family and affiliated trusts. The Yates family is a very prominent Artesia family involved in New Mexico’s oil and gas industry. Dow’s report reveals contributions from fellow Republican legislators. Her closing balance for the period is $684,000.

The link to Dow’s finance report is here:

https://login.cfis.sos.state.nm.us//Files/ReportsOutput//103/1986edb2-551b-44db-ab3a-0bb4c5963637.pdf

Greg Zanetti, a wealth manager and a retired New Mexico National Guard Brigadier General reported $169,000 in cash donations.

Sandoval County commissioner Jay Block reported upwards of $130,000 in cash and in-kind contributions.

Former Cuba Mayor an anti-abortion activist Ethel Maharg reported $13,000 in donations.

NEW MEXICO BUSINESS COALITION “INTERVIEW”

On Thursday, April 7, the 5 Republican candidates for Governor appeared before the New Mexico Business Coalition and an audience of upwards of 300 for what was advertised as a “job interview” style event where the candidates could highlight their own qualifications and platforms. The organization has held such “job interviews” in the past and did so in the 2013 Albuquerque Mayor’s race.

The link to news coverage is here:

https://www.abqjournal.com/2486816/gop-hopefuls-interviewed-before-audience-in-abq.html

THE NEW MEXICO BUSINESS COALITION

The New Mexico Business Coalition (NMBC) was established in 2009. It holds itself out as a “nonpartisan voice for business owners, employees and individuals in New Mexico”. Despite what is says, NMBC is far from being “nonpartisan.” The organization is known for promoting Republican causes and candidates and targeting Democrats for removal from office.

The New Mexico Business Coalition is anti-labor union, and has promoted right to work laws and opposes increases in the minimum wage. The organizations “call to action” on its web page calls for its members to ask for increases in oil and gas production in New Mexico when it has already reach historical highs, oppose environmental protection legislation calling it a “radical green” agenda, oppose state-controlled utilities and advocates for Second Amendment rights by opposing a “ban on firearm magazines that hold more than 15 rounds”. The organization advocates a Constitutional Amendment which would allow the recall of elected officials in New Mexico, no doubt elected officials they want removed.

The organization opposes mandatory vaccinations of the city government work force, wants to repeal executive emergency order authority of the Mayor during a health crisis and calls for the repeal of gross receipts taxes imposed by the city council, all council resolutions sponsored by the Republicans on the city council, and all which have failed.

You can read more about the New Mexico Business Coalition and its positions at these 3 links:

https://nmbizcoalition.org/calls-to-action/

https://nmbizcoalition.org/some-positive-action-by-new-city-of-albuquerque-councilors/

JOB INTERVIEW FORMAT

During the April 7 New Mexico Business Coalition (NMBC) “job interview” event, the candidates were asked prepared questions in the format of a job interview, with only one candidate present at a time. At one point, the 5 were asked to give one-word answers to some questions that they wanted to give far more explanation. All 5 of the candidates said YES to supporting photo identification for voters, YES to a work requirement for able-bodied residents receiving public assistance and YES to scaling back the governor’s emergency powers. All the answers are in lock step with the State Republican Party agenda.

COMMENTARY AND ANALYSIS

Virtually all 5 of the Republican candidates for Governor revealed themselves to be right wing conservatives with the same philosophy of government as Der Führer Trump and State Republican Party and Chairman Steve Pierce. Following are the highlights of what all 5 reportedly said at the April 7 event as well as what they have said in the past and in TV commercials.

1. TV PERSONALITY MARK RONCHETTI

During the April 7 New Mexico Business Coalition forum, former meteorologist and TV personality Mark Ronchetti proclaimed himself to be someone who would bring “humility and good listening skills” to the Governor’s office. Ronchetti has been accused of being nothing but a “blowhard” by Republican Rebecca Dow in her TV commercials.

Ranchetti said he would demand the Legislature send him an anti-crime bill before anything else is passed and said this:

“We will keep you safe. That will be our mantra. … If we don’t have safety, we don’t have anything.”

After the April 5 special session of the New Mexico legislature where $698 million in tax rebates and and $50 million spending package for upwards of 500 projects was enacted, Mark Ronchetti had this to say:

“Governor Michelle Lujan Grisham called a special session to give New Mexicans a few dollars trying to buy her re-election. Her election-year give away is not enough and pales in comparison to the taxpayer-funded pay raises she gave political insiders. New Mexicans need tax relief, not election-year politics.”

Ronchetti is not listening to the fact that New Mexicans are hurting financially because of the pandemic, inflation and high gas prices. If $698 million in tax rebates are too small and not necessary to Ronchetti, then he does not understand just how bad New Mexican’s are hurting financially. He is not articulating what should be done in the form of tax relief. He also took issue with immigrants being given the rebates not realizing they too pay taxes.

Mark Ronchetti is a strong and vocal supporter of New Mexico’s oil and gas industry. Ronchetti’s largest contributors confirm just how much he is indebted to the industry with major contributions coming from oil and gas companies and members of the Perot family in Dallas, and Allen Weh, a former chairman of the New Mexico Republican Party and who has made his fortune in the oil and gas industry. This financial support going tp a so called “weatherman” claiming to be a man of science who ostensibly does not believe the fossil fuel industry has having anything to do with climate change.

https://www.currentargus.com/story/news/2022/03/19/mark-ronchetti-new-mexico-governor-michelle-lujan-grisham-covid-19-oil-and-gas-permian-basin/7062732001/

It was On October 27, TV personality Mark Ronchetti announced he is running for Governor. Least anyone forget, Ronchetti ran for United States Senator in 2020 and lost to Ben Ray Lujan. Ronchetti hired Republican political consultant Jay McCleskey who is known for his slash and burn tactics and defamation of candidates and immigrants.

True to form for Mc Cusky, the very first TV commercial launched by Ronchetti was negative and highlighted southern border issue claiming a crisis and New Mexico’s failure to keep out undocumented immigrants seeking asylum. Ronchetti said if he is elected Governor, he plans to deploy the National Guard and create a Border Strike Force. Ronchetti falsely proclaimed:

“President Biden has completely opened this border, and it affects us all. … You can’t fight crime if you don’t secure the border.”

2. REPUBLICAN NEW MEXICO STATE REPRESENTATIVE REBECCA DOW

During the April 7 New Mexico Business Coalition forum, NM State Representative Rebecca Dow proclaimed herself to be an “effective legislator” who knows how to navigate the politics of the Roundhouse, and secure policy wins that would turn and keep the state Republican red.

Dow embellished to a great extent the passage of two very inconsequential bills she sponsored this year that became law. One bill extends a deadline for small businesses to apply for recovery loans and the other revises occupational licensing rules. Dow said this:

“We’ve got to have someone in office who’s able to work across the aisle and get things done.”

This coming from a Republican candidate for Governor whose first commercial is her riding a horse leading a posse of “good old boy”, overweight sheriffs, looking for “radical socialists” living along the border and wanting to complete Der Führer Trump’s wall. Dow presumptively wants to use state monies and divert funding from public education, health care and other essential services to build Trumps wall without making Mexico pay for it as Trump promised.

WHERE A BAND AIDE IS REALLY NEEDED

The truth is Dow is not at all known for working across the aisle as she claims and does not want to work with Democrats. Dow voted against the $698 million in tax rebates and $50 million spending package for upwards of 500 projects that were enacted by the special session. Dow had this to say after the special session ended:

“Michelle Lujan Grisham has decided to put a Band-Aid on a broken bone by giving out checks that will only provide temporary relief. We need a Governor with the sense to support our energy sector and give hardworking New Mexicans a long-term solution at the pump!”

The only Band-Aid really needed here is one across Dow’s big mouth. Dow ignores that “temporary relief” is being done across the country because of the Russian invasion of Ukraine that has spiked prices and contributed to inflation. When Dow advocates supporting New Mexico’s energy sector, she totally ignores that the Permian Basin in New Mexico is pumping oil at record levels and will likely set another record this year. One long-term solution is an end to the Ukrainian war that prompted the sky-high prices in the first place. But then again her idol Trump still praises Putin and has recently asked for Russian help and cooperation in the investigation of Hunter Biden.

ETHICALLY CHALLENGED DOW

It was on July 7, three term Republican State Representative Rebecca Dow of Truth or Consequences announced that she is running for the Republican nomination for Governor. In her announcement, she vowed to address “hard truths” related to the state’s high unemployment rate, low education rankings and chronic child welfare issues. She is a former early child care professional.

Dow in her announcement immediately attacked Governor Lujan Grisham and described the governor as a “power hungry” career politician whose policies have hurt New Mexico and said:

“As a state, we have never experienced more dire conditions than we are currently struggling through right now.”

https://www.abqjournal.com/2415471/sanche-zjoins-gop-field-for-governor.html

One hard truth that Dow no doubt wants to forget about is that on January 13, 2022 it was reported that the ethics charges filed against Dow with the New Mexico Ethics Commission are going forward after “probable cause” was found to support the allegations that Dow violated state laws on financial disclosure and governmental conduct.

The New Mexico Ethics Commission last year subpoenaed Dow’s financial records and scheduled her deposition which is allowed under the law. Dow resisted the taking of her deposition and the Ethics Commission went to court to enforce the subpoena. The ethics commission secured a court order requiring Dow to produce the financial documents and to appear for her deposition. Dow refused to comply with the court order, did not produce the financial documents and failed to appear for her scheduled deposition. The Ethics Commission went back to court to get another court order. In August, the State District Court Judge issued a second contempt of court order and finding her failure to produce documents and to appear for the deposition “lacked justification.” The District Judge ordered fines of $50 a day until she complied with the court order for a deposition and she paid $4,115 in fines and court costs

The link to full Albuquerque Journal article is here:

https://www.abqjournal.com/2460915/documents-dow-failed-to-obey-court-order-in-ethics-case-ex-im-not.html

3. WEALTH MANAGER GREG ZANETTI FOR A POOR NEW MEXICO

During the April 7 New Mexico Business Coalition forum Greg Zanetti, a wealth manager and military veteran, pointed repeatedly to his experience, describing himself at one point as the “money guy,” and someone well-qualified to handle state finances and public safety.

Zanetti said he would “de-claw” the Public Education Department and push the power to decide public education issues to the local level. What Zanetti likely meant by “de-clawing” the Public Education Department is either abolishing the New Mexico Public Education Department or destroying our education system the way former Governor Susana Martinez did which resulted in the landmark court decision Yazzie vs Martinez which found minorities were being deprived of the constitutional right to a public education. Yazzie vs Martinez mandates sweeping reforms now costing millions to repair our public education system.

Zanetti after noting that he’d risen to the rank of brigadier general and served as a commander at Guantanamo Bay, asked the audience:

“Should we have a general dealing with the issues at the border and with public safety?”

On June 14, Republican Greg Zanetti announced his campaign. Zanetti is a former Bernalillo County Republican Chairman and a former New Mexico National Guard Brigadier General who now works in the business of “wealth management.”

ANTI-VAXER

Zanetti has said in the past that he does not intend to get vaccinated for covid and has yet to say if he has since been vaccinated. On February 2, it was reported that U.S. soldiers who refuse to get a COVID-19 vaccine will be immediately discharged, saying the move was critical to maintain combat readiness. The Army’s order applied to regular Army soldiers, active-duty Army reservists and cadets unless they have approved or pending exemptions.

All of the U.S. military services have now begun disciplinary actions and discharges for troops who have refused to get the mandated coronavirus vaccine with as many as 20,000 unvaccinated forces at risk of being removed from service.

Former Brigadier General Zanetti has never disclosed if he would have carried out orders to have his troops vaccinated or be dishonorably discharged from the New Mexico National Guard for refusal to carry out direct orders.

https://www.cbsnews.com/news/covid-vaccine-military-troops-discharged/

https://www.reuters.com/world/us/us-army-discharge-soldiers-who-refuse-covid-19-vaccine-2022-02-02/

With respect to Governor Lujan Grisahm, Zanetti had this to say:

“We had this autocratic governor come down and impose all these rules where we shut down businesses, locked down the kids, we shut the state down, and as the facts changed and we learned more about COVID, she didn’t adjust.”

Surprisingly, Republican conservative Zanetti is trying to distance himself from Der Führer former president Donald Trump and said:

“This isn’t about Donald Trump. It’s not about one person, it’s about a bigger message.”

Ostensibly, Zanetti did not get the memo from New Mexico Republican Party Chairman Steve Pierce that the Republican Party in the state and nationally are very much in lock step with Der Führer Trump.

It is so damn laughable that Zanetti calls Lujan Grisham an “autocratic governor” who imposes and enforces rules. Zanetti is a retired New Mexico National Guard Brigadier General and he will likely bring his personal version of being an “autocratic governor” to Santa Fe. Brigadier General’s give out orders and demand that those orders be followed or suffer the consequences.

The biggest perception that Zanetti is going to find difficult to overcome is that it is very doubtful to believe that a “wealth manager” will understand the needs and concerns of the average New Mexican, many which live in poverty and live pay check to pay check on the minimum wage, something Zanetti opposes increasing.

4.Sandoval County Commissioner Jay Block

During the April 7 New Mexico Business Coalition forum, Sandoval County Commissioner Jay Block began his remarks by asking the audience to pose for a picture, triggering laughter as he urged people to “Say ‘No MLG’ ” rather than “cheese.”

As governor, Block said, he would ban vaccine mandates and critical race theory. He also said he would establish a border security agency and combat corruption in government. Block told the audience:

“You’re going to get honest government back because that’s what you deserve. You have not had that for so many years in this state, and I find that quite disgusting.”

The only things that are truly disgusting is Jay Block’s political alignment with Der Führer Trump and Blocks sure ignorance of the issues facing the state.

It was on April 18, 2021 Sandoval County Commissioner Jay Block announced he is running for the Republican nomination for Governor. Block is a retired lieutenant colonel who spent 21 years in the Air Force and moved to Rio Rancho in 2015.

Block has fully aligned himself with former President Der Führer Donald Trump, even though Trump has disparaged the military and called those who served and died in World War II losers. In his announcement he said he is in favor of defunding abortion services and restoring qualified immunity for police officers. In his announcement video Block said:

“This is a movement of shared values. … It’s time Michelle Lujan Grisham is out of office so we can start a new era of prosperity for New Mexicans.”

Block got downright nasty with his remarks about the Governor when he said:

“Michelle is proud of where New Mexico stands today. Michelle is proud New Mexico ranks last in education. Michelle is proud New Mexico ranks first in child poverty.”

What Block is very ignorant about is exactly why New Mexico ranks last in education and first in child poverty. Democrat Governor Michelle Lujan Grisham inherited both from her Republican predecessor Susana Martinez. Over 8 years, Martinez destroyed the state’s public education system resulting in the land mark decision Yazzie vs Martinez mandating sweeping reforms now costing millions to repair our public education system. Martinez made cuts in child care assistant programs with the cuts making things even worse for children living in poverty.

Yazzie v Martinez was brought by a coalition of parents, students, lawmakers and others in 2014 and charged New Mexico had not done enough to address the needs of Native Americans, English-language learners, disabled and low-income students and that children were deprived the constitutional right to a basic education. As a result of the State Court ruling, the 2019 legislature approved a whopping $3.2 Billion public education budget, a 16% increase over the previous year’s budget, out of the total state budget of $7 Billion.

Included in the budget was a $500 million in additional funding for K-12 education and increases in teacher pay. The 2022 legislature is increasing funding for education and teacher pay even more and by millions. In particular more than $70 million in spending allocated in the 2022 session will go to tribal entities to help offer culturally relevant lesson plans and access to virtual and after-school programs for those students.

Under former Republican Governor Susana Martinez, the Children’s, Youth and Family’s Department budgets were slashed, hundreds of social worker positions that dealt with child abuse cases went unfilled, abused children fell through the cracks and youth programs were eliminated that acted as a safety net, all for the cause of resisting tax increases which Republicans always oppose even for critical essential services. Republicans always advocate the slashing of budgets and reducing the size of government to avoid any and all tax increases, even if for essential services.

A major priority of Governor Lujan Grisham was the creation of a new “Early Childhood Department” that commenced on January 1, 2020. The new department focuses state resources on children from birth to 5 years of age. A major goal of the new department, coupled with other investments, will be more New Mexico children growing up to secure gainful employment as adults who don’t require government services.

Block should not be proud, to use his word, when he makes a fool of himself on the issues of child education and child welfare issues, things he knows absolutely nothing about.

https://www.koat.com/article/race-for-governor-of-new-mexico-heating-up/36974820

5. REPUBLICAN ANTI-ABORTION ACTIVIST ETHEL ROSE MAHARG

During the April 7 New Mexico Business Coalition forum , Ethel Maharg, a former mayor of Cuba and anti-abortion activist, said she supports “life” and doesn’t quit. When asked to describe her skills she told the audience:

“I care about life. I think that’s it. Life is basic.”

To quote Maharg’s web page promoting her candidacy for Governor:

“Ethel Rose Maharg is running for Governor to breathe life into New Mexico. Ethel is pro-life, without exception, from conception to natural death. And, she wears it like a badge of honor, it is who she is. Ethel believes in LIFE. Ethel believes that to breathe LIFE into New Mexico we must capitalize on our strengths. No one wants to bring a new business with good jobs to a state where politicians and elected officials complain about being at the top of the bad lists. It’s time for bold leadership. Bold leadership that is willing to make the right decision, not the popular or political decision. Bold leadership that understands the challenges everyday New Mexicans face. Bold leadership that will fight everyday for New Mexico. Bold leadership that will breathe LIFE into New Mexico.”

https://mahargforgovernor.com/

It is more likely than not that the United States Supreme Court will reverse in June the landmark case of Roe v. Wade setting aside a woman’s right to choose and leaving it up to the individual states to decide the issue. Last year, the New Mexico legislature repealed the New Mexico law making abortion a crime. If Roe v. Wade is in fact reversed, you can expect a Governor Ethel Maharg to advocate making abortion a crime once again in New Mexico and providing “bold leadership” back into the dark ages of woman’s rights and not caring if abortions are performed with a coat hanger, which should be her campaign for Governor lapel pin.

DEMOCRATIC PARTY REACTS

The Democratic Party of New Mexico was asked to react to the April 7 New Mexico Business Coalition forum. Democratic Party of New Mexico spokeswoman Delaney Corcoran said Governor Lujan Grisham and Democrats are focused on delivering economic relief to state residents, while the Republican candidate for Governor spout “extremist rhetoric” and she said:

“The Republican candidates for governor … continue to demonstrate just how out of touch they are with the majority of New Mexicans.”

FINAL COMMENTARY

Now that the first campaign finance reports have been released, it pretty clear that Mark Ronchetti is the front runner for the Republican nomination having raised over $2.1 million. It is also clear that Republican State Representative Rebecca Dow is a distant second for the Republican nomination having reported $751,000 in donations. Given the anemic fundraising of Greg Zanetti, Sandoval County Commissioner Jay Block, Ethel Maharg, all 3 should save themselves from the embarrassment of a poor showing at the polls and drop out of the race.

It is pretty pathetic, but not at all surprising, that all 5 Republican candidates for Governor are Republican malcontents. Not one has offered any real solutions to the problems we face as a state. If anything their platforms will only make things worse for the State. What is alarming is the extent to which they have all bought into Der Führer Trump extremism.

“Media Hog” Pat Davis Announces Mayor Tim Keller’s $950,000 Plans For “City Sanctioned Homeless Encampments”; Council Needs To Vote No On Homeless Encampment Funding

On April 1, the Mayor Tim Keller Administration released the 2022-2023 annual budget that once enacted by the city council will be for the fiscal year that begins on July 1, 2022 and will end June 30, 2023. The overall budget submitted for review and approval of the Albuquerque City council is for $1.4 Billion. $841.8 represents the general fund spending and it is an increase of $127 million, or 17.8%, over the current year’s budget of $1.2 Billion.

The link to the proposed 244-page 2022-2023 budget it here:

https://www.cabq.gov/dfa/documents/fy23-proposed-final-web-version.pdf

In an interview, Mayor Tim Keller said the budget is actually a “pretty bland” proposal that covers the necessary bases without introducing many new elements. Keller is quoted as saying:

“I don’t think there’s anything in here that is a particular surprise … It’s not like we have some massive announcements.”

The link to quoted news sources is here

https://www.abqjournal.com/2484892/mayor-releases-1-4b-budget-proposal.html

“ADDRESSING HOMELESSNESS THROUGH A HOUSING FIRST APPROACH”

Since day one of being sworn in as Mayor on December 1, 2017, elected Mayor Tim Keller has made it a top priority to deal with the city’s homeless crisis. The 2022-2023 budget continues with Mayor Tim Keller’s commitment to help the homeless including funding for the Gateway Homeless Shelter on Gibson.

It was on Tuesday, April 6, 2021, the city officially announced it had bought the massive 572,000-square-foot complex for $15 million and will transform it into a Gateway Center for the homeless. It was announced that the complex would be only 1 of the multisite homeless shelters and not the 300-bed shelter originally planned. The complex has a 201-bed capacity, but remodeling could likely increase capacity significantly. Mayor Keller alienated many when he unilaterally decided on the purchase of the Lovelace Gibson facility and announcing that it would be used as a homeless shelter. Mayor Keller sought little or no input from the surrounding neighborhoods.

Notwithstanding, Mayor Keller in the 2022-2023 budget is increasing his commitment to dealing with the homeless on a number of levels. However, there is one new level that is a totally different level without making full public disclosure for the new effort.

On April 4, Mayor Tim Keller’s plan to spend $950,000 on “city sanctioned homeless encampments” was reported in a blog article on the entire proposed 2023 city budget. The article is entitled “Keller’s ‘Pretty Bland’ $1.4 Billion 2023 City Budget Far From Bland With 18% Increase; 13% Pay Raises For Cops With Performance Measures Down And More Overtime; Anemic 2% Pay Raises For City Workforce; $900,000 For Open Space City Sanctioned “Homeless Encampments”

The link to the April 4 blog article is here:

https://www.petedinelli.com/2022/04/04/kellers-pretty-bland-1-4-billion-2023-city-budget-far-from-bland-with-18-increase-13-pay-raises-for-cops-with-performance-measures-down-and-more-overtime-anemic-2-pay/

Buried in Mayor Keller’s “Executive Summary” of the $1.4 Billion Dollar budget is a section entitled “Addressing Homelessness Through a Housing First Approach”.

To quote in part Keller’s Executive Summary of the 2022-2023 proposed budget:

“The pandemic exposed cracks in the social safety net and public health systems, and provided an opportunity to address these challenges with urgency. Our proposed budget also aims to close some of those cracks in the system on a larger and more permanent scale, including:

• $750 thousand for the first phase of Safe Outdoor Spaces, which, if approved by Council, will enable ultra-low barrier encampments to set up in vacant dirt lots across the City, plus an additional $200 thousand for developing other sanctioned encampment programs.

(Editor’s Note: This line item has been taken out of order and placed first for emphasis.)

• $4 million in recurring funding and $3 million in one-time funding for supportive housing programs in the City’s Housing First model. In addition, as recommended by the Mayor’s Domestic Violence Task Force, the budget includes $100 thousand for emergency housing vouchers for victims of intimate partner violence.

• $1.3 million for a Medical Respite facility at Gibson Health Hub, which will provide acute and post-acute care for persons experiencing homelessness who are too ill or frail to recover from a physical illness or injury on the streets but are not sick enough to be in a hospital.

• $4.7 million net to operate the first Gateway Center at the Gibson Health Hub, including revenue and expenses for emergency shelter and first responder drop-off, facility operation and program operations.

• Full funding for the Westside Emergency Housing Center, which has operated at close to full occupancy for much of the year.

• $500 thousand to fund the development of a technology system that enables the City and providers to coordinate on the provision of social services to people experiencing homelessness and behavioral health challenges.

• $500 thousand to fund Albuquerque Street Connect, a highly effective program that focuses on people experiencing homelessness who use the most emergency services and care, to establish ongoing relationships that result in permanent supportive housing.”

KOB NEWS STORY ON CITY SANCTIONED HOMELESS ENCAMPMENTS

On April 9, KOB Channel 4 ran the news story entitled “Albuquerque officials consider designated homeless camps”. Publication of the news story is in order:

“There is a new plan to give those without a home a new and safe place to stay in Albuquerque. [Weekend news anchor Tommy Lopez added the plan is contained in the proposed 2022-2023 city budget.]

Mayor Tim Keller is now saying a city-managed and designated homeless camp could be a solution to some homelessness problems in the city. KOB 4 spoke with a city council member about the idea and where those potential locations would be.

“We see them every day, who are not ready to get into permanent supportive housing,” said Albuquerque City Councilor Pat Davis.

Even with Tiny Homes Village and the proposed Gateway Center, Davis says it’s a way to address the issue of those who don’t want to be placed in a home.

“Even though we are putting $40 million into housing every year, we still have a waiting list, and we still have people who aren’t willing to get into those other places and we need to come up with an answer for some of them. Maybe this is an option we should explore,” said Davis.

While the plan is still very much in it’s beginning phase, the goal is to clear out homeless camps at parks and move them to empty dirt lots. Now, the city says they don’t plan on picking just any dirt lot, they are looking for locations that are near homeless services and ones that are far from any homes.

“This is not about turning your neighborhood park into an encampment. This is about incentivizing in certain parts of town where they are not disruptive to other residents or other uses,” said Davis.

And the camps wouldn’t be open to just anyone.

“Some of the early things we have learned is that they have to be small enough to be manageable, they have to be managed, it can’t just be a free for all, there needs to be a structure and a system for it,” said Davis.

This isn’t a new idea Santa Fe is also looking into it and Las Cruces has already created these types of camps.

“Done right, other cities have seen a lot of success with it, but we got a lot of details yet to be sorted out before the City of Albuquerque will start doing these,” Davis said.

The city council knows this is going to be a big topic of discussion in Albuquerque. They say in April and the start of May, there will be multiple meetings where citizens will be able to speak their minds about this.

But the city will have to make a decision soon, it has until the end of May to finalize the budget.

https://www.kob.com/albuquerque-news/albuquerque-officials-consider-designated-homeless-camps/6441590/?cat=500

Much of the information contained in the Channel 4 news report on the the encampments, such as location and screening of occupants, has not been rendered to writing in that the proposal is very much in the planning stages.

2021-2022 APPROVED FUNDING FOR CONTRACTS TO DEAL WITH HOMELESS

It is the city’s Family and Community Services Department that manages and deals with city services, programs and federal grants for the homeless and assist with affordable housing programs to help low-income people in need of financial assistance to avoid becoming homeless.

The Family and Community Services Department had a total budget of $54,868,986 with 313 full time employees for the fiscal year 2021-2022. According to the 2021-2022 fiscal year approved city budget for the Department of Community Services, the city spent upwards of $35,145,851 to help the homeless and those in need of housing assistance. A breakdown of the amounts spent includes:

$18,191,960 for affordable housing and community contracts (Budget page 175.)

$6,421,898 for emergency shelter contracts (Budget page 176.)

$4,378,104 for mental health contracts (Budget page178.)

$3,624,213 homeless support services(Budget page 178.)

$2,529,676 substance abuse contracts for counseling (Budget page 179.)

You can review the detailed line-item funding of programs, contract and grants administered by the Family and Community Services Department in the 2021-2022 approved city budget on the pages provided above with the link here:

https://www.cabq.gov/dfa/documents/fy22-approved-budget-numbered-w-hyperlinks-final.pdf

2022-2023 PROPOSED FUNDING FOR CONTRACTS TO DEAL WITH HOMELESS

Mayor Keller’s 2022-2023 proposed budget significantly increases the Family and Community Services budget by $24,353,064 to assist the homeless or near homeless by going from $35,145,851 to $59,498, 915 . The 2022-2023 proposed budget for the Department of Community Services is $72.4 million and it will have 335 full time employees, or an increase of 22 full time employees.

A breakdown of the amounts to help the homeless and those in need of housing assistance is as follows:

$42,598,361 total for affordable housing and community contracts with a major emphasis on permanent housing for chronically homeless. It is $24,353,064 more than last year. (Budget page 101)

$6,025,544 total for emergency shelter contracts (Budget page 102.), down $396,354 from last year.

$3,773,860 total for mental health contracts (Budget page105.), down $604,244 from last year

$4,282,794 total homeless support services(Budget page 105.), up $658,581 from last year

$2,818,356 total substance abuse contracts for counseling (Budget page 106.), up by $288,680 from last year.

The link to the proposed 244-page 2022-2023 budget it here:

https://www.cabq.gov/dfa/documents/fy23-proposed-final-web-version.pdf

2021 POINT-IN-TIME (PIT) REPORT

On June 22, 2021, Albuquerque’s 2021 Point-In-Time (PIT) report was released that surveyed both sheltered and unsheltered homeless. Major highlights of the 2021 PIT report are as follows:

There were 1,567 sheltered and unsheltered homeless people living in Albuquerque, a slight increase over the 2019 count of 1,524 homeless. The 2020 homeless count is 2.8% higher than in 2019 and 18.9% more than in 2017, despite the pandemic limiting the 2021 counting effort’s.

The 2021 PIT count found the good news that 73.6% of the homeless population was staying in emergency shelters, transitional housing or using motel vouchers rather than sleeping in alleys, parks and other “unsheltered” locations. The 73.6% in the 2021 count is much a higher than the 2019 and 2017 PIT counts.

Albuquerque’s unsheltered homeless decreased from 567 people in 2019 to 413 in the 2021 count.

42% of Albuquerque’s unsheltered were defined as chronically homeless, meaning they had been continuously homeless for at least a year and had a disabling condition

21% said they were homeless due to COVID

37% were experiencing homelessness for the first time

12% were homeless due to domestic violence.

30.19% of the homeless in Albuquerque self-reported as having a serious mental illness.

25.5% self-reported as substance abusers.

In the rest of the state, 37.92% of the homeless self-reported a serious mental illness, while 63.3% self reported as substance abusers.

The combined PIT numbers for the areas outside of Albuquerque is defined in the report as “Balance of State” (BOS). The 2021 BOS PIT count reports that 1,180 sheltered and unsheltered homeless, a 31% decrease from the 1,717 counted in 2019.

Operators of programs that provide services to Albuquerque’s homeless say the actual number of homeless is far greater than indicated in the PIT count. The Albuquerque Public Schools says the number of homeless children enrolled in district schools, meaning kids from families that have no permanent address, has consistently been more than 3,000.

The link to quoted statistics is here:

https://www.abqjournal.com/2402560/homeless-numbers-see-little-change.html

https://www.cabq.gov/family/documents/2019-albuquerque-pit-count-final.pdf

KELLER’S 2021 MUNIPAL ELECTION COMMENTS RECALLED

During the 2021 municipal election where Keller ran and was elected to a second term, Keller claimed the worsening homeless crisis in Albuquerque is partly because homelessness, just like violent crime, is “exploding” around the country. Responding to the arguments by his opponents that more arrests need to be made, Keller had this to say:

“This is a good example of folks just not doing their homework. … It’s just naive to think that a mayor can come in and [just start arresting people who are homeless]. … Mayors have to understand they are not the all-powerful kings of the city and they can just do stuff that’s illegal. It’s a good lesson to learn, because their ideas will never fly in court, and it’s just going to end up costing the city a bunch in lawsuits. … My administration … [is] going to continue working with our partners, but we unfortunately have to own this problem, because we need to do more.”

Keller acknowledged that the city has laws and ordinances that allow it to dismantle homeless encampments, he said there is a “line” to walk between respecting individuals’ rights and enforcing ordinances.

When it came to government sanctions and operated outdoor, public place encampments, Keller said during the campaign he was open to the concept if faith-based organizations or other agencies want to try it. However, he would want the authorized camps to be small, scattered and controlled to mitigate issues like substance abuse. Keller said this:

“I think we need an all-of-the-above approach because homelessness and unsheltered is such a terrible problem for our city.”

COMMENTARY AND ANALYSIS

“Safe outdoor spaces” is the popular term now being used by municipal governments across the United States to refer “government sanctioned encampments for the homeless”. City hall sanctioned encampments are a bad idea for Albuquerque and will likely make things worse while millions are being spent to alleviate the homeless crisis in the city.

The April 9, KOB Channel 4 news story makes it abundantly clear that the Keller Administration has given very little next to no thought to city hall sanctioned “safe outdoor spaces” or “homeless encampments” yet the Keller Administration is asking for $950,000 for a first phase development and “other sanctioned encampment programs” . Nothing is mentioned on the number of phases or amounts that will eventually be spent.

Keller’s own budget summary says:

“$750 thousand for the first phase of Safe Outdoor Spaces, which, if approved by Council, will enable ultra-low barrier encampments to set up in vacant dirt lots across the City, plus an additional $200 thousand for developing other sanctioned encampment programs.”

These are 2 appropriations that come as “a particular surprise” to use Keller’s words. Keller has yet to make any sort of formal “public announcement” or press conference his is known for of city sanctioned encampments. There is little doubt that government sponsored encampments will be controversial, especially when the homeless encampments will be spread throughout the city on vacant “dirt lots” in plain site for all to see.

During his 2021 reelection campaign for Mayor, Keller said he was “open to the concept if faith-based organizations or other agencies want to try it”. A $950,000 allocation by the city and the city sponsoring “open space homeless encampments” is a major difference from faith-based organizations or other agencies doing it on their own.

MEDIA HOG PAT DAVIS

It is not all clear nor likely that Mayor Keller or his Administration briefed Pat Davis on the subject government encampments for his Channel 4 interview seeing as the budget was released by Keller 7 days before the interview was published. Pat Davis is not the City Council President nor Vice President nor the Chairperson of the budget committee and can only speak for himself and the exact reasons why he was interviewed by Channel 4 is suspicious.

Davis has the reputation of being a “media hog”, a politician always on the prowl for self-promotion. Davis does not hold a leadership position on the counsel, but he inserted himself into the discussion on city homeless encampments as if he was speaking for the City Council as a whole or for Mayor Tim Keller. Why Channel 4 did nor reach out to the city council leadership or the Mayor is a mystery.

Pat Davis is also the same City Councilor who stuck his meddling nose into the Gateway Homeless Shelter being located at the old Lovelace Hospital complex by attempting to place a cap of only 30 residence on the facility when the facility was being designed for as many as 150. Davis stuck his nose into it only after the city had bought the facility and after he saw residents in his district, where the facility is located, raise hell about it. During protests and zoning hearings on the project, Davis was nowhere to be found.

It is not at all likely that Pat Davis was asked by the Keller Administration to discuss city sanctioned homeless encampments and very doubtful he told the Keller Administration that he was going to be interviewed by Channel 4. The fact that Channel 4 interviewed Davis and not the council leadership nor the Mayor on encampments raises a degree of suspicion as to the true motives of the station and its reporters or perhaps they were just lazy.

Davis was nothing more than a “media hog” when he spoke as if he knew exactly what the intent of the new initiative sounding like he has already decided to support city sponsored encampments when he said:

“This is not about turning your neighborhood park into an encampment. This is about incentivizing in certain parts of town where they are not disruptive to other residents or other uses. … Some of the early things we have learned is that they have to be small enough to be manageable, they have to be managed, it can’t just be a free for all, there needs to be a structure and a system for it. … Done right, other cities have seen a lot of success with it, but we got a lot of details yet to be sorted out before the City of Albuquerque will start doing these.”

AN ADVERSION TO RULES AND DESIRE TO BE LEFT ALONE

City hall sanctioned encampments programs, especially those on city owned property, can not and must not be offered with no strings attached as to usage otherwise they will only make things worse for the city’s homeless crisis and to an extent interfere with the city’s other programs and encourage a life style as being sanctioned by the city.

A difficult realty that many who want to help the homeless have a hard time dealing with is that many homeless want to live their life as they choose, without any government nor family interference, and simply do not want anyone’s help. Many homeless do not seek help, even though they may desperately need it, especially those who suffer mental illness. It’s an aversion to rules, a desire to live as one chooses and many times the inability to qualify for help that makes things difficult for the homeless. The Tiny Home Village complex off east Central which serves as transitional housing for the homeless is a prime example of the problem.

Bernalillo County is having a hard time finding people to stay at the Tiny Home Village complex. The county spent $5 million to build the facility even as homeless encampments keep popping up all over the city. One year after the Tiny Home Village opened in the International District, 25 of the 30 homes are empty as nearby streets are lined with tents.

One of the city’s largest homeless encampments is right outside the Tiny Home Village. One of the biggest reasons for the Tiny Homes village being empty is all the rules that must be adhered to. To qualify for a Tiny Home, one must be free of drugs and alcohol. In addition to following the rules, residents are required to help around the complex. Many applicants for the Tiny Homes project can not make it past the vetting process.

https://www.krqe.com/news/albuquerque-metro/tiny-home-village-struggles-to-fill-vacancies-as-homeless-encampments-surge/

WHEN IS ENOUGH ENOUGH?

As it stands now, city hall and the Keller Administration are spending upwards of $40 Million a year on city services to benefit the homeless or near homeless. That will increase next year by another $24,353,064. What is clear from the 2021 POINT-IN-TIME (PIT) REPORT is that progress is being made when it reported that 73.6% of the homeless population was staying in emergency shelters, transitional housing or using motel vouchers rather than sleeping in alleys, parks and other “unsheltered” situations. The 73.6% in the 2021 count is much a higher than the 2019 and 2017 PIT counts.

$950,000 out of a $1.4 Billion dollar budget does not sound like much for “ultra-low barrier encampments to set up in vacant dirt lots across the City” but when you add that amount to the millions already being spent to help the homeless, it must be questioned. City sanctioned encampments have the potential of making a crisis even worse, especially when such encampments will have negative impacts on surrounding neighborhoods.

There is very little doubt that once the public finds out about what Keller is up to in his budget, there will be significant opposition. At a very bare minimum, what needs to be disclosed to the public is the actual plan Mayor Keller and the city has for “city sanctioned homeless encampments”.

At a bare minimum, the full city council needs to demand answers to the following before funding city sanctioned homeless encampments:

1. Exact size or physical area of the encampments and visibility.
2. What areas of the city and locations being considered?
3. Will the Keller Administration ignore city zoning code requirement and special use permits or attempt change zoning laws on their own to simply allow for government sanctioned encampments where ever the administration wants them?
4. Will under-utilized city parks and city owned open space be allowed to be used? Bullhead park near the Veterans Hospital or even the vacant airport industrial park are comee to mind when there is talk of open space locations that are near homeless services in that both are in walking distance to the soon to be open Gateway Homeless Sheltet Center on Gibson.
5. Exactly what is “ultra-low barrier” usage and will allow visibility of the camps.
6. The number of people allowed on the camp site, the length of time of occupancy and the extent of screening of campers.
7. Location and site selection criteria, including proximity to residential areas, school, churches, hospitals and bars and recreational marijuana dispensaries.
8. The extent of rules imposed for usage, such no drug use, no weapons nor firearms or open fires
9. Security and management oversight to be provided by the city.
10. To what extent is the city assuming liability for any injury sustained to anyone who uses the camps?
11. To what extent the city council will be allowed to review and decide if “city sanctioned homeless encampments” will be allowed.
12. Will the city Mayor Administration be given exclusive authority to make the decisions on the encampments without any input from neighborhoods and the city council.

FINAL COMMENT

City hall sanctioned encampments programs for the homeless need to be fully vetted by the city council. At this point, the are a bad fit for the city and it will not be money well spent. Until such time as the Keller Administration can present a well thought out, detailed plan on the program, the City Council should deny the funding request of $950,000 from the proposed 2022-2023 budget. City sanctioned homeless encampments will only make things worse for the city’s homeless crisis and to an extent only encourage a life style as being sanctioned by the city.

The link to a related blog article is here:

Keller’s “Pretty Bland” $1.4 Billion 2023 City Budget Far From Bland With 18% Increase; 13% Pay Raises For Cops With Performance Measures Down And More Overtime; Anemic 2% Pay Raises For City Workforce; $900,000 For Open Space City Sanctioned “Homeless Encampments”