Albuquerque Journal

Time to break the ‘Land of Mañana’ cycle

State needs a new way forward to address its multitude of problems

- BY REP. BILL MCCAMLEY DEMOCRAT, LAS CRUCES

Anyone paying attention knows New Mexicans have it tough. Our state ranks near last in unemployme­nt and income. We are one of the worst places in the country to be a child. Our income inequality keeps growing, and many families face chronic, multigener­ational poverty.

More people move away from New Mexico than from any other state in the region.

We’re in a downward spiral. Like a developing country, our economy is over-reliant on fossil fuels and federal jobs, leading to high unemployme­nt and a low standard of living. The resulting “brain drain” — where educated young people move elsewhere for good jobs — hurts economic developmen­t and state tax revenue, reducing resources for education and investment.

This has been going on so long we can sometimes be content keeping the lights on, refusing to see we stand in quicksand.

Breaking our “Land of Mañana” cycle is possible, but it will require bold solutions and real action.

Our state Land Grant Permanent Fund has over $14 billion. Our neighborin­g states of Arizona and Colorado don’t have huge funds. Over time, they have chosen to invest in their workforce, infrastruc­ture and research institutio­ns rather than storing their money, giving their citizens better jobs and lives.

So let’s think about spending some of the fund to improve infrastruc­ture, educate our youngest residents and develop cutting-edge research institutio­ns for clean energy and water technology. This investment will create a healthy economy, long-term jobs and a quality of life that will benefit New Mexicans for generation­s.

Our university bureaucrac­ies are outdated and inefficien­t. Arizona and California have three administra­tions for all of their universiti­es. New Mexico has 17. This increases costs and fosters conflict.

For instance, recently New Mexico State University and New Mexico Tech applied to manage Sandia National Labs. The University of New Mexico made an independen­t proposal. The result? Both teams lost.

Additional­ly, community colleges administer­ed by large universiti­es may be sending their students to main campuses even though a technical degree could be a better option.

Want a good example? I have a master’s degree from Harvard. But my girlfriend, with an associate’s degree in radiology from a community college, makes more than twice as much as I do.

Let’s consider creating one administra­tion for our research universiti­es (UNM, NMSU and Tech), one for our regional schools (Eastern, Western, Northern and Highlands), and one for all community colleges. The system will increase cooperatio­n and focus each school on what it does best.

We spend $33 million per year enforcing cannabis laws. Taxing and regulating it like alcohol will take money away from drug dealers, grow local businesses and give New Mexico a much-needed $60 million to $70 million for education, economic developmen­t and health care. It will allow law enforcemen­t to spend resources on real crimes. And recently, a study found that teen use of cannabis in Colorado has dropped since they legalized it. Over 60 percent of New Mexicans support this policy, ensuring that it will happen eventually. Why not do it this year?

These aren’t the only areas needing improvemen­t. Real tax reform, reducing the amount of money in politics and creating better financing systems for small businesses are all things we can do.

The bottom line is that we don’t have to accept our current situation. We can do better if we constantly examine what we do right and wrong, growing the former and reducing the latter. And we must take risks as we strive to be greater.

I am willing to try if you are.

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