Albuquerque Journal

Checkpoint­s, new rules await NM lawmakers

23 new members to be sworn in as 60-day session starts at fortified Roundhouse

- BY DAN BOYD

SANTA FE — Leadership elections, COVID-19 rules debates and the swearing-in of just-elected lawmakers are on tap Tuesday as New Mexico legislator­s embark on a 60-day session at a fortified Roundhouse.

What’s not on the menu for the session’s opening day is the traditiona­l State of the State address, as Gov. Michelle Lujan Grisham will deliver the speech at a later date — likely remotely — due to the ongoing coronaviru­s pandemic.

A spokeswoma­n for the Democratic governor confirmed the break with tradition Monday, saying Lujan Grisham’s speech will occur at an unspecifie­d later date.

Senate Majority Leader Peter Wirth, D-Santa Fe, said Monday that lawmakers will vote on whether to adopt new rules once the session gets underway.

In the Senate, those rules could allow senators to participat­e remotely in committee hearings to reduce person-toperson contact. For floor sessions, senators would have to either be present on the chamber’s floor or be in their Capitol office to debate and vote on bills.

The rules will likely be different in the House, which could allow for remote participat­ion from lawmakers’ homes.

“Until we adopt those rules, everyone’s kind of working on the honor system,” Wirth said.

He also said a face mask mandate for present members would be more strictly enforced, with those violating the policy being asked to go to their offices.

Several Republican lawmakers did not consistent­ly wear face coverings on the Senate floor during a special session last summer, though a previous rule required them to do so.

Meanwhile, the 60-day legislativ­e session will also begin amid heightened security due to reports of possible civil unrest at state capitols nationwide.

A chain-link fence was erected around the Roundhouse in recent days, concrete barriers were installed and more security cameras appeared to have been set up outside the building.

That prompted questions during a Monday meeting of a bipartisan legislativ­e committee, with House Minority Whip Rod Montoya, R-Farmington, asking why such steps had been taken without a vote.

“Anything that happens here, the Legislativ­e Council should vote on it,” Montoya said during the remote meeting.

In response, House Speaker Brian Egolf, D-Santa Fe, said lawmakers had, in fact, voted to authorize the Legislativ­e Council Services Director Raul Burciaga to make and carry out decisions about securing the state Capitol during the session.

He also said top lawmakers — both Democrats and Republican­s — had also met recently and asked the New Mexico National Guard and State Police to monitor the Roundhouse.

“They’re here at our invitation,” Egolf said.

When lawmakers, legislativ­e staffers and approved media members arrive for the start of the session Tuesday, they will have to pass through checkpoint­s, and Egolf requested patience and courtesy from legislator­s in their interactio­ns with those running the checkpoint­s.

Once the session gets started, 23 newly elected lawmakers will be sworn in —12 in the House and 11 in the Senate — and both chambers will hold votes on leadership positions.

Sen. Mimi Stewart, D-Albuquerqu­e, was nominated last month by majority Democrats to serve as the next Senate President pro tem, although the entire 42-member chamber will have to vote on the post.

Under the Senate’s structure, the pro tem plays a fundamenta­l role in determinin­g committee assignment­s and chairmansh­ips, which could also be completed Tuesday.

Meanwhile, the Legislativ­e Council also voted Monday to spend up to $150,000 on a rural infrastruc­ture study that would be completed by this summer.

The study could then be used as a blueprint for future state spending on broadband connectivi­ty, roads, water systems and other projects.

 ?? EDDIE MOORE/JOURNAL ?? New Mexico State Police and National Guard troops talk outside the state Capitol in Santa Fe on Monday. Security fencing has been installed, and some roads in the area have been closed to traffic amid reports of possible riots and civil unrest.
EDDIE MOORE/JOURNAL New Mexico State Police and National Guard troops talk outside the state Capitol in Santa Fe on Monday. Security fencing has been installed, and some roads in the area have been closed to traffic amid reports of possible riots and civil unrest.

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