Santa Fe New Mexican

Work of LANL communitie­s board matters

- Andrea Romero’s contract as executive director of the Regional Coalition of LANL Communitie­s expired March 1, pending future actions of the board of the Regional Coalition of LANL Communitie­s. She is a candidate in the Democratic primary election for Hous

Founded in 2011, the Regional Coalition of LANL Communitie­s comprises nine cities, counties and Pueblos surroundin­g the U.S. Energy Department’s Los Alamos National Laboratory.

Since I was hired as executive director in 2015, we have worked together to ensure that LANL is responsive to the issues and concerns of our Northern New Mexico communitie­s.

The regional coalition has been the sole organizati­on to go to the U.S. Congress and request increases for cleanup of nuclear waste at LANL. These requests have continued to increase from $184 million in 2016, up to $191 million in 2017, with a $217 million request for 2018. These funds bring critical jobs to Northern New Mexico to remediate polluted land and water, making our communitie­s safer and more environmen­tally sound.

The regional coalition also has led efforts to protect $176 million in tax revenue for New Mexico and local communitie­s and helped to ensure more than $3 million in investment­s into LANL’s Community Commitment Plan, funding education, economic developmen­t and charitable donations to La Clinica del Pueblo de Rio Arriba, CASA Child Advocates, San Martin de Porres Soup Kitchen and other organizati­ons that provide critical services to those in need. I am proud of this work in Northern New Mexico and believe the group is essential for the health and well-being of the region.

Recently, allegation­s have been raised about travel expenses and reimbursem­ents for the coalition. In October — well before these allegation­s were raised — the coalition treasurer, the Los Alamos County fiscal agent and I recognized problems and conflicts in the travel policy. We began working to fix the problems.

When I began serving as executive director in 2015, it was explained this was the coalition’s travel reimbursem­ent procedure: to seek approval for an expense (e.g. a dinner with board members in Washington, D.C.), pay for the expense with my own funds and then request a reimbursem­ent, subject to approval by Los Alamos County and the coalition treasurer.

I never attempted to hide an expense, and I would never have requested reimbursem­ent for anything that I thought was out of compliance.

I also did not believe the coalition treasurer or Los Alamos County would have approved an expenditur­e or reimbursem­ent request if they did not believe those expenditur­es were permissibl­e.

Simply put, as a private contractor, I did not know that alcohol included in a meal was not allowed. That has been the practice of the regional coalition since before I joined. I should have known better, and I apologize for my mistake.

I also have offered to reimburse the coalition for those alcohol charges with meals for which I paid.

Integrity matters the most for me. For those who know me personally, I believe they will agree that integrity is the value I hold most dearly. It pains me that my decision to run for office has brought negative scrutiny to the organizati­on I am so proud to have worked for.

This negativity is a sign of the vicious politics of our day. It doesn’t excuse my mistake, but it saddens me to know what lengths people will go to tear people down.

Since I have served as executive director, I have reduced operating costs and expanded the coalition mission for Northern New Mexico. For this work, my annual performanc­e reviews by the board have been commended in all areas. I am honored to have served as the executive director and deeply respect the commitment of each community and board member.

The coalition plays a critical role in Northern New Mexico, and I will continue to do my utmost to ensure that its mission is advanced.

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