Albuquerque Journal

Councilors OK Eclipse warehouse renovation

Sunport site on city-owned land to get LEDA funds

- BY MARIE C. BACA JOURNAL STAFF WRITER

City councilors have unanimousl­y approved the renovation of the former Eclipse Aerospace headquarte­rs by CSI Aviation, a project funded in part by $250,000 in state Local Economic Developmen­t Act funding.

The project required city approval because the hangar is on city-owned land at the Albuquerqu­e Internatio­nal Sunport, and the city will act as the administra­tor for the LEDA funds.

The ordinance passed by the council Monday evening includes a stipulatio­n that “no direct city-initiated funds distribute­d for the project may be used to support or facilitate immigratio­n enforcemen­t efforts.”

As previously reported by the Journal, CSI received more than $383 million in contracts with U.S. Immigratio­n and Customs Enforcemen­t Detention Compliance and Removals office for air charter services over the past five years, according to federal databases. The databases show that many of the most lucrative awards are scheduled to expire this summer.

Earlier this year, Councilor Pat Davis raised questions about the hangar project in a letter to the city’s chief administra­tive officer, Sarita Nair. Davis asked whether the city’s role in the project might violate Albuquerqu­e’s “immigrant-friendly” resolution because of CSI’s immigratio­n contracts. The resolution bans the use of city resources to identify undocument­ed immigrants or apprehend people based on their immigratio­n status.

But at the Monday meeting, Nair said the company “does not at the current time have that federal immigratio­n enforcemen­t contract.” She said the city had obtained a written commitment from CSI that it would not do anything that would violate the ordinance. Out of an “abundance of caution,” city staff who worked on CSI’s applicatio­n were compensate­d out of a non-general city fund.

Michele Martinez, CSI’s vice president of marketing, said in a statement that the company is “very pleased to have the city’s approval” for the project. The company declined to comment on the status of its immigratio­n contracts.

CSI has maintained that the hangar project is related primarily to the expansion of its air ambulance services and has no connection to immigratio­n contracts. The company estimates the hangar renovation will create and maintain an additional 60 full-time jobs over the next decade. Those include pilots, maintenanc­e personnel and administra­tive staff, among others, with an average annual wage of $50,000.

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