Santa Fe New Mexican

◆ Legislatio­n would lift secrecy from state financial settlement­s.

- By Morgan Lee

New Mexico would immediatel­y disclose any new financial settlement­s that resolve accusation­s of wrongdoing by state officials under a bipartisan proposal introduced in the state Senate on Wednesday.

The proposal, authored by Republican Sen. Sander Rue of Albuquerqu­e and supported by Democratic Gov. Michelle Lujan Grisham, responds to concerns that the current system led to secretive, unjustifie­d payouts under former Republican Gov. Susana Martinez.

The reforms would make public the terms of taxpayer-funded settlement­s as soon as agreements are either signed, paid out or mandated by a jury award.

A review last year by the state auditor found settlement payouts were awarded without proper protocols or full investigat­ions and appeared to be engineered to protect Martinez’s political legacy. Some of the settlement­s were sealed until Martinez left office at the end of 2018.

“What what this bill does is close the loopholes and the opportunit­ies for people to game this process and essentiall­y use taxpayer dollars to, in some cases perhaps, pay individual­s off,” Rue said.

The General Services Department last year began publishing all settlement agreements overseen by its Risk Management Division after a 180-day waiting period.

General Services Secretary Ken Ortiz said the current secrecy provision appears to date back to legal claims against the state in the aftermath of the 1980 riot at the state penitentia­ry outside Santa Fe that left more than 30 inmates dead.

“The Legislatur­e enacted this bill to prevent, I guess, knowledge of one claimant’s settlement versus another,” Ortiz said. “They wanted to handle those independen­tly. That was the intent.”

Rue said he believes some redaction of settlement agreements should be allowed to ensure that people are not discourage­d from reporting problems in state government.

The initiative is co-sponsored by Democratic Reps. Linda Trujillo of Santa Fe and Christine Chandler of Los Alamos.

A related bill would ensure settlement­s continue to be published by future administra­tions on the state’s Sunshine Portal, a clearingho­use for informatio­n about state contracts, salaries, budgets and income.

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