Albuquerque Journal

Martinez’s policies hurt state economy

Focus is more on corporate welfare instead of on the bottom lines of families

- BY SEN. MICHAEL S. SANCHEZ SENATE MAJORITY FLOOR LEADER Sen. Michael S. Sanchez is a Belen Democrat.

While the rest of the nation and the region’s states have seen their economic prospects brighten, New Mexico has fallen further behind, losing jobs, economic activity, tax revenue and even population. It is worth noting that the cause for our revenue woes are not due solely to the fall in oil and gas prices.

Texas and Colorado are doing well economical­ly, and they too depend on oil revenues. Even before the price of oil and gas plummeted, the economy of our state was stagnant.

The collapse of other revenues beyond oil and gas has been a major cause of our lower revenues. These revenues are determined by the amount of economic activity and jobs in the private sector, and they have plummeted.

The economic policies of Gov. Susana Martinez’s administra­tion over the last five years have put New Mexico in a downward spiral.

Martinez promised that her policies would create jobs. She has even claimed recently that New Mexico’s economy is doing well. In her State of the State just five weeks ago, she painted a rosy, if unrealisti­c, picture of our economy, stating that “the fundamenta­ls are changing. Companies are taking note. Our recruitmen­t pipeline is filling up.” If only it were true.

That is why I said at the time that she must be living in a parallel universe.

The bitter truth is that New Mexico today is at the bottom for job growth in the nation. New Mexico has the highest unemployme­nt rate in the country at 6.8 percent.

The reason is that for the last five years, too many of the administra­tion’s policies were about handing out corporate welfare; too few focused on families’ bottom lines. Those policies left New Mexicans struggling, and small businesses hurting.

We have the same number of jobs in the private sector now as we had in 2008: 640,000. All that time, and no job growth. We have the highest rate of children living in poverty. We have relatively low incomes and wages, and high income inequality.

Look at a few of the high profile private sector jobs losses that have touched every part of the state recently: Sprint closed in Rio Rancho, wiping out 400 jobs. UTC Aerospace closed in Albuquerqu­e, costing 150 jobs. Caterpilla­r will leave Santa Fe, taking 50 jobs. Coke Bottling will leave Portales, eliminatin­g 50 jobs. Mining operations in Silver City will close, and there goes 200 jobs. CNM is cutting 100 positions.

It was not long ago that Martinez announced $1 million worth of state infrastruc­ture investment­s in Moriarty to create more than 200 new aviation and aerospace-related jobs after Google purchased Titan Aerospace. But Google later moved operations to California — a strong union state.

When she boasts that New Mexico has enjoyed 40 months of year over year job growth, the growth rate was a pittance, 0.4 percent while the national average was almost five times the rate at 1.9 percent.

Albuquerqu­e Sunport passenger traffic continues its seven-year slide, down 31 percent from its peak of nearly 7 million passengers in 2008. That’s another indicator of how much economic activity New Mexico has lost.

And when the governor wrongly accused 15 behavioral health provid- ers of fraud and forced them out of business that cost us 1,600 jobs.

Unfortunat­ely the recent session of the Legislatur­e was a missed opportunit­y in regards to jobs, but not for lack of trying. Senate Democrats pushed hard for action to create jobs for New Mexicans and to kick start economic activity with a host of bills. But the governor ruled them out, and tried to distract attention away from the dismal economic performanc­e by pressing only crime.

The messages for bills the governor sent to the Legislatur­e did not support a single measure to create jobs — unless you are correction­s officer or state police officer.

Senate Democrats offered ample jobcreatin­g legislatio­n such as the Solar Market Developmen­t Tax Credit, to support renewable energy jobs across our sun-drenched state, for example. We have a very different vision for New Mexico.

But it now seems clear that all of that must wait until we get a new governor, one who will take a new approach to our economic challenges.

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