Albuquerque Journal

‘A hallmark of fiscal responsibi­lity’

STATE OF THE CITY Outgoing Mayor Berry acknowledg­es rising crime rate, but notes growing economy and new infrastruc­ture projects

- BY MARTIN SALAZAR

Mayor Richard Berry, in his final State of the City address, said Albuquerqu­e’s next mayor will inherit an efficient city government that is living within its means, a growing economy and close to $1.2 billion in infrastruc­ture projects that have been built or are in the pipeline.

He also addressed the city’s rising crime rate in his one-hour speech, saying he fears that hiring more police officers by itself won’t solve the problem and calling for more resources for the District Attorney’s Office.

The mayor struck an optimistic tone in his speech, which focused largely on what he said has been accomplish­ed over the past eight years he has served as mayor. He pledged to have a positive handoff to the next mayor.

“The state of our city is strong,” he said, receiving a standing ovation at both the beginning and end of his remarks.

“I stand here proud of what we’ve accomplish­ed.”

He delivered the speech at a luncheon hosted by NAIOP, an organizati­on that represents commercial real estate developers. More than 400 people were at the Marriott on Louisiana for the event, but the speech was also streamed live on the city’s website and shown on GOV TV.

There was no direct mention in his speech about his job approval numbers

plummeting in just the past year, in part due to rising crime and the controvers­y over the Albuquerqu­e Rapid Transit project. Berry did allude to tough decisions his administra­tion has made and to criticism for some of those decisions. His approval rating was at 68 percent just five years ago and remained high until recently. It dropped to 34 percent in the latest Journal Poll, published last week.

Job growth

On the economy, Berry noted that Albuquerqu­e lost more than 23,000 jobs in the two years before he became mayor and that the city lost another 6,700 jobs during his first two years in office. But he said that since July 2012, Albuquerqu­e has added 25,000 jobs.

He said the city is now just 1.3 percent away from the peak employment of the housing boom in 2007 and the unemployme­nt rate has dropped by 30 percent while he has been in office. Median incomes are up and poverty is down, Berry said, adding that the city has also enjoyed seven consecutiv­e years of gross receipts tax growth.

“We have seen a 75 percent increase in constructi­on gross receipts tax collection­s over the past three years,” he said.

Berry said the gains have come at a time when the city has lost federal jobs — a sector of the economy that Albuquerqu­e has traditiona­lly relied on for job gains. And, he noted, tourism is up.

The mayor highlighte­d his administra­tion’s efforts to rein in spending at City Hall, saying that in his first few months as mayor, the city faced a $90 million budget shortfall and was entering some of the worst years of the Great Recession.

“We took a city government that had grown beyond its means, and we got spending under control,” Berry said. “We have kept the growth of city government right at the rate of inflation during the past eight years, which I believe is a hallmark of fiscal responsibi­lity.”

Infrastruc­ture projects

The hundreds of millions of dollars in infrastruc­ture projects that have been or will be substantia­lly completed by the time the new mayor takes over include the Paseo del Norte and Interstate 25 interchang­e, a renovated Convention Center, a sports complex on the West Side and a 50-mile activity loop around the city, Berry said.

“Over the past eight years, we have planned and/or built nearly $1.2 billion in new infrastruc­ture and amenities for the city of Albuquerqu­e, and we did it without raising your taxes,” he said.

On ART, which will transform Central Avenue into a rapid transit corridor with a nine-mile stretch of bus-only lanes and bus stations, Berry acknowledg­ed the disruption­s that constructi­on has caused. He said it’s about 80 percent finished and is ahead of schedule. The city has said it will be completed by the end of the year.

“I want to say thank you to all the businesses and everybody along Central Avenue who has been able to weather the storm with us,” Berry said. He thanked members of the congressio­nal delegation, city staff, the City Council and everyone else who backed ART, saying he’s confident the project will pay off for Albuquerqu­e. Already, he said, the city is seeing building permits along the corridor totaling $337 million.

Concerns about crime

Berry said he fears crime in Albuquerqu­e will not improve significan­tly until reforms that have been implemente­d are revisited. Specifical­ly, he noted the significan­t drop in the inmate population at the Bernalillo County Metropolit­an Detention Center, the “rigid” case management order that has resulted in many cases being tossed, and new rules that restrict the use of bail and favor releasing defendants from jail prior to trial.

“Of course, I know that, like many cities around the country, our police department needs more officers,” he said. “But frankly, when APD officers are arresting the same people over and over again, that’s not a policing problem. It’s a criminal justice problem.”

Still, he said he expected that the Albuquerqu­e Police Department would have 925 officers “in the queue” for the next mayor, individual­s who will have either completed the academy by then or pre-qualified for the academy. The department currently has about 850 officers, and Berry has said the ideal number should be 1,000. Several mayoral candidates, however, have said the department needs 1,200 officers.

Two months left

“We have two months left,” Berry said. “We’re going to sprint, sprint to the finish line.”

Berry opted not to seek re-election. There are eight candidates on the ballot seeking to replace him.

Election Day is Oct. 3. If no candidate receives 50 percent of the vote, the top two candidates will advance to a runoff in November. The new mayor takes office on Dec. 1.

After the luncheon, Berry acknowledg­ed feeling sentimenta­l as he delivered his remarks.

“This place has been good to me and my family,” he said. “I went from loving my city to adoring my city.”

 ?? ROBERTO E. ROSALES/JOURNAL ?? Mayor Richard Berry reflects on his eight years in office during his final State of the City address on Monday. He called for more state funding for the District Attorney’s Office.
ROBERTO E. ROSALES/JOURNAL Mayor Richard Berry reflects on his eight years in office during his final State of the City address on Monday. He called for more state funding for the District Attorney’s Office.
 ?? ROBERTO E. ROSALES/JOURNAL ?? Albuquerqu­e Mayor Richard Berry receives a standing ovation following his final State of the City address on Monday. The speech was delivered at a NAIOP luncheon.
ROBERTO E. ROSALES/JOURNAL Albuquerqu­e Mayor Richard Berry receives a standing ovation following his final State of the City address on Monday. The speech was delivered at a NAIOP luncheon.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States