Albuquerque Journal

Lujan Grisham signs education package, trapping ban

Busy week begins with decisions on schools, environmen­t, elections

- BY DAN MCKAY

SANTA FE — Gov. Michelle Lujan Grisham began a critical week Monday by signing legislatio­n that will deliver extra money to some schools and ban animal trapping on public land — a burst of action as she faces a Friday deadline to act on dozens of bills.

She approved 50 bills altogether Monday, touching on public financing for judicial candidates, community solar projects and medical debt.

Much of Monday’s action centered on children — including the creation of an independen­t office to review special education and a ban on hair discrimina­tion in schools.

Two of the measures are expected to send more money to schools serving large Native American communitie­s and low-income families. Still awaiting action by Friday are proposals that would require private employers to offer paid sick leave, establish a Civil Rights Act and allow medical aid in dying.

But Lujan Grisham signed a number of bills Monday.

A wildlife measure she approved, Senate Bill 32, passed the House this month by one vote, 35-34. The legislatio­n will ban traps, snares and wildlife poisons on public land.

Jessica Johnson of Animal Protection Voters described it as the culminatio­n of a decade of work to protect animals from unnecessar­y cruelty. The measure is named after Roxy, a dog who died of strangulat­ion by a snare in 2018.

The bill, Johnson said, will “enhance the life of humans as

well as companion animals, boost the safety of communitie­s, and continue the important work of conservati­on and protection of the wildlife and public lands across New Mexico.”

Education measures

Approval of the education legislatio­n, meanwhile, comes as New Mexico confronts the loss of in-person classroom time during the COVID-19 pandemic, on top of already-poor academic outcomes.

One measure signed Monday, House Bill 6, is expected to send an extra $60 million in federal Impact Aid to districts with vast amounts of tribal and other taxexempt land. The state had previously deducted much of the federal money from the districts’ funding allocation, blocking the funds from reaching their intended target.

Lujan Grisham said the legislatio­n ends “a long-standing practice that was fundamenta­lly unfair, disadvanta­ging too many Native American students and communitie­s.”

Another measure, Senate Bill 17, is expected to distribute $30 million over the next two years to schools serving a concentrat­ion of low-income families. The funding is for math, reading and other programs to support students.

“The need is great, and resources are limited,” Public Education Secretary Ryan Stewart said in a written statement. “That’s why it’s critical to target extra funding to the schools where it is most needed.”

Also signed Monday is legislatio­n, Senate Bill 42, that will increase taxpayerfu­nded contributi­ons into the pension system for educators. It calls for employers to boost their contributi­ons into the fund by 1 percentage point each of the next two years, an amount expected to cost $34 million next year and $68 million the year after that.

The bills signed Monday also included measures on the environmen­t, elections and health care.

She signed bills that will protect lowincome New Mexicans from medical debt collection, make New Mexico the first state to extend public financing to District Court judicial candidates and enable groups of energy consumers to participat­e in community solar projects.

Budget awaits action

A $7.4 billion budget plan is awaiting action this week — an appropriat­ions bill for which Lujan Grisham has line-item veto authority. Also on deck are bills to expand tax breaks for working families and create a citizens’ redistrict­ing committee.

Any bill the governor doesn’t sign or veto by Friday is automatica­lly rejected, a procedure known as a pocket veto. The deadline applies to bills passed in the final days of the regular 60-day session, which ended March 20.

A proposal to legalize retail sales of marijuana, by contrast, has extra time. It was passed in last week’s special session, so the governor has until April 20 to act.

As for the regular session, Lujan Grisham has signed 67 bills and vetoed one — out of 158 bills sent to her by legislator­s.

Lujan Grisham, a Democrat in her first term, has generally vetoed far fewer bills than her predecesso­r, Republican Susana Martinez. Democrats hold majorities in both legislativ­e chambers.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States