Albuquerque Journal

We can’t sacrifice the gains of the past two years

NM needs to stay on course and protect schools, hospitals, green energy

- BY ORIANA SANDOVAL EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR, CENTER FOR CIVIC POLICY AND CAMILLA FEIBELMAN EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR, SIERRA CLUB RIO GRANDE CHAPTER

We’ve been here before. During the 2008 Great Recession, New Mexico lawmakers largely mishandled the loss of revenue by enforcing harmful budget cuts to our schools, our hospitals and other public services. The result was the slowest economic recovery for our families and businesses compared to the rest of the country.

Now New Mexico legislator­s enter a special session in response to the unpreceden­ted health and economic crisis inflicted by a global pandemic. All of this while a powerful moment in history plays out nationwide as demands for racial equity continue to grow. Right now good governance and thoughtful yet decisive leadership can make all the difference.

Part of good governance is ensuring our electoral systems remain accessible to all voters. New Mexicans made it clear with an unpreceden­ted number voting by mail in the June primary election that they value their ability to vote safely. Our Legislatur­e should grant the secretary of state emergency powers through the November election to adjust vote-by-mail deadlines and make sure mail and in-person voting are accessible, easy and safe. The Legislatur­e should also allow ballots to be sent to voters automatica­lly while maintainin­g the number of in-person polling locations so rural and tribal communitie­s are not disenfranc­hised.

The pandemic has also provided more evidence that the inequities many communitie­s of color have faced for centuries are a matter of life and death. The higher COVID-19 death rates for people of color is the result of hundreds of years of policies and systems that were designed to advantage white people and disadvanta­ge people of color.

It’s time to chart a new path forward. A state economy that works for everyone, guided by our shared values of fairness and equity.

Like many states, New Mexico is taking in significan­tly less revenue than we anticipate­d when the fiscal ‘21 budget was crafted. Adding to the pain of a recession is our state’s reliance on the boom-or-bust oil and gas industry. It is time to work to diversify our economy to ensure that we have enough revenue from stable sources and move away from the boom-and-bust cycles of the extractive industry.

This overrelian­ce on oil and gas is the product of scarcity-minded budgets and ineffectiv­e tax breaks. Tax cuts for the very rich and out-of-state corporatio­ns failed to produce the jobs we were promised. Instead, they are draining our budget of the funds we need to invest in education, health care and clean energy — all of which actually do create jobs and make our state a place where people and businesses want to be and can thrive.

And while a special legislativ­e session is necessary to deal with immediate budget shortfalls, our lawmakers should proceed with conviction. We must push for flexibilit­y for the federal COVID funds and use our reserves as intended to shore up the budget — keeping it as intact as possible — through January 2021.

Lawmakers made great strides toward investing in a stronger New Mexico during the 2019 and 2020 regular legislativ­e sessions. We mustn’t sacrifice those gains. We must double down on the policies that have been proven to work — including investment­s in our schools, our hospitals and green energy — and cast aside those that have not, including tax cuts for the well-connected that fail to produce jobs.

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