Albuquerque Journal

Legislatur­e opens in closed Capitol

Sen. Sedillo Lopez enters quarantine after virus exposure

- BY DAN MCKAY AND DAN BOYD JOURNAL CAPITOL BUREAU

SANTA FE — Behind locked doors, New Mexico lawmakers plunged into a historic special session Thursday only to run into repeated technical problems that interrupte­d their work.

It was a strange start to what’s expected to be a fastmoving session.

The Capitol itself was nearly empty as legislativ­e leaders banged the gavel about noon calling the session to order.

One lawmaker — Democratic Sen. Antoinette Sedillo Lopez of Albuquerqu­e — was quarantine­d in her office after having been exposed to COVID-19, the respirator­y disease that has killed 456 New Mexicans.

Throughout the day, meanwhile, lawmakers periodical­ly halted floor sessions and committee hearings because the public video stream went offline. Both legislativ­e chambers stopped work for the night at 11 p.m. because of technical problems.

House Speaker Brian Egolf, D-Santa Fe, started the day by saying lawmakers had a chance to aid in the state’s recovery in what he called New Mexico’s first legislativ­e session amid a pandemic. His chamber voted 43-24 to adopt temporary rules allowing members to vote from home, their office or other remote locations to protect their health.

“This is a heavy moment,” Egolf said, “but I know everyone here is up to the task ahead.”

The unusual session did nothing to ease tension inside the Roundhouse.

House Republican­s assailed their Democratic colleagues for moving forward with an ambitious agenda even though the legislatio­n, for the most part, wasn’t available ahead

of time. The bills were published online about 2½ hours after the session started.

“We don’t want to ask people to vote on something they haven’t seen before today,” said House Minority Leader James Townsend, R-Artesia.

Battling challenges

Unexpected challenges surfaced almost immediatel­y.

Sedillo Lopez, a retired law professor whose district covers the university area in Albuquerqu­e, isolated herself inside her Capitol office after the state Department of Health notified her that she’d been exposed to someone with COVID-19.

She said she fears the quarantine will damage her ability to advocate for legislatio­n she believes is vital for the state.

“It just makes it very difficult,” Sedillo Lopez said in a telephone interview.

She is sponsoring legislatio­n, Senate Bill 17, aimed at strengthen­ing and standardiz­ing the procedures for investigat­ing police shootings or use of force resulting in death or great bodily harm.

Sedillo Lopez said she doesn’t have any coronaviru­s symptoms. She was tested Friday and the results came back negative.

But since then, Sedillo Lopez said, the state Department of Health called to notify her that she had come into contact with someone who has tested positive for the virus.

Consequent­ly, she asked the Senate for permission to vote and participat­e in the session remotely from her office. Each chamber sets its own rules on what it means to be “present.”

The Senate late Thursday agreed to allow remote participat­ion — from the member’s Capitol office — in limited circumstan­ces. Any member who tests positive for the virus or knows they were exposed to it may vote and fully participat­e from their office.

Sedillo Lopez said state health officials directed her to quarantine for 14 days, but that she received permission to stay in her Capitol office or hotel because of the nature of her work.

The exposure, Sedillo Lopez said, didn’t come at a legislativ­e event. She added that she had been wearing a mask in public and maintainin­g her distance from people even before she was notified of the exposure.

The proposal for remote participat­ion triggered much debate.

“Some of us may have been exposed to the virus this morning and we don’t even know it,” said Senate Minority Leader Stuart Ingle, R-Portales.

Somber mood

Inside the Roundhouse, the mood was somber — a contrast to more typical opening days, when the building is crowded with lobbyists, school kids and activists.

Almost every lawmaker wore a mask Thursday. Some House members sat in the public gallery to accommodat­e social distancing instructio­ns.

About 50 protesters gathered outside to oppose the closing of the Capitol to the public, business restrictio­ns and the requiremen­t to wear masks in public settings.

Earlier this week, the state Supreme Court upheld the decision of topranking lawmakers to close the building to the public because of the health emergency.

Lawmakers pledged to ensure their work was broadcast online to allow people to monitor the session. Public testimony will also be allowed, though committee chairs have the authority to limit such comments.

Each legislativ­e chamber halted its work periodical­ly Thursday when the public video stream went down.

During one outage, members of the House took turns telling bad jokes as they paused debate and waited for approval to begin again.

Senate Majority Leader Peter Wirth, D-Santa Fe, also vowed to halt legislativ­e proceeding­s when technical difficulti­es interfere with legislativ­e webcasting.

“We will not take any action on the floor if the webcast is down,” Wirth said at one point.

That pledge was quickly put to the test as the Senate had to halt its business for about 10 minutes due to webcast problems. It was just the first of multiple delays throughout the day.

Nine proposals

Legislativ­e leaders say they hope to wrap up the session by Saturday, but there’s no formal end date — other than a constituti­onal provision that caps special sessions at 30 days.

Egolf warned late Thursday that the session may stretch beyond Saturday because of technical difficulti­es.

Gov. Michelle Lujan Grisham, who controls the session agenda, issued a proclamati­on Thursday directing lawmakers to take up nine proposals, including budget-balancing measures and economic relief.

The agenda included emergency procedures for this year’s general election — to allow voting by mail — and police legislatio­n requiring officers to wear cameras, banning chokeholds and guaranteei­ng public access to disciplina­ry records.

 ?? EDDIE MOORE/JOURNAL ?? Sen. John Sapien, D-Corrales, left, talks with Sen. John Arthur Smith, D-Deming, during the first day of the special session at the Roundhouse in Santa Fe on Thursday.
EDDIE MOORE/JOURNAL Sen. John Sapien, D-Corrales, left, talks with Sen. John Arthur Smith, D-Deming, during the first day of the special session at the Roundhouse in Santa Fe on Thursday.
 ?? EDDIE MOORE/JOURNAL ?? Rebecca Allen, from Sandia Park, and around 50 other people protested outside the locked Roundhouse Thursday, calling for the Capitol to open during the special session that started at noon.
EDDIE MOORE/JOURNAL Rebecca Allen, from Sandia Park, and around 50 other people protested outside the locked Roundhouse Thursday, calling for the Capitol to open during the special session that started at noon.

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