Albuquerque Journal

Scholarshi­p advocate appointed to lottery board

Think NM field director one of five named by governor

- ASSOCIATED PRESS

Gov. Michelle Lujan Grisham has appointed five people to the board that oversees the state lottery, including an official with a nonpartisa­n think tank that has advocated for changes in New Mexico’s lottery-funded scholarshi­p program.

The appointmen­t of Othiamba Umi, field director at Think New Mexico, was announced

Monday. A native New Mexican, Umi received degrees from the University of New Mexico and worked as an attorney in the 2nd Judicial District Attorney’s Office before joining Think New Mexico in 2014.

Others appointed to the New Mexico Lottery Authority are Leo Romero, former dean of the University of New Mexico School of Law; Key Investigat­ions owner David Keylon; accountant Reta Jones; and Nina Thayer, who is retired from Los Alamos National Laboratory.

Umi is among those at the think tank who have been fighting efforts in recent years to roll back the percentage of lottery revenues that are funneled to the scholarshi­p program. Currently, at least 30% of revenues go toward the scholarshi­p fund.

Think New Mexico Executive Director Fred Nathan praised the appointmen­ts, saying the new board members can help “refocus the lottery on its purpose of maximizing dollars for scholarshi­ps, rather than maximizing dollars for the CEO and the politicall­y connected multinatio­nal gaming corporatio­ns that contract with the lottery.”

Lottery officials and others have argued that

eliminatin­g the guarantee would allow for more money to be spent on prizes and promotion, which could result in more money flowing into the scholarshi­p fund.

According to Think New Mexico, the 30% guarantee has resulted in an average of about $9 million more going to scholarshi­ps each year.

“As a past recipient of the lottery scholarshi­p, I appreciate the importance of this funding for students and I am honored to have a chance to make sure they have a strong voice on the lottery authority,” Umi said in a statement.

New Mexico has been struggling for years to address the cost of higher education. It took a leap forward in the 1990s with the creation of the lottery scholarshi­p, which for nearly two decades covered 100% of tuition at state institutio­ns, erasing most of the costs eligible students had to pay.

State lawmakers in recent years were forced to lower the amount the scholarshi­p covered and tighten eligibilit­y requiremen­ts as demand for financial aid and increases in tuition outpaced revenue generated by lottery ticket sales.

From 1996 to 2018, $740 million in lottery proceeds and other state funding was funneled to the program, benefiting nearly 117,000 students. Legislativ­e analysts report that 56% of lottery scholarshi­p recipients graduated.

Lujan Grisham earlier this year proposed a new scholarshi­p program to bridge the gap between federal aid and the state lottery-funded scholarshi­ps so more people can afford college. The Legislatur­e, which begins its 30-day budget session in January, would have to approve the use of general fund dollars to cover the new scholarshi­ps.

Although New Mexico is enjoying a surplus because of an oil production boom, some economists have cautioned that state spending on education and other government programs is increasing­ly vulnerable to possible downturns in the oil and gas sectors.

 ??  ?? Gov. Michelle Lujan Grisham
Gov. Michelle Lujan Grisham
 ??  ?? Othiamba Umi
Othiamba Umi

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