Albuquerque Journal

Make good on NM lotto scholarshi­ps

Adding table games at tracks will let us cover 100% tuition again

- BY REP. RAYMUNDO “RAY” LARA

As the representa­tive from House District 34 in southern Doña Ana County, I know many New Mexicans may not be familiar with the legislativ­e district I represent. The communitie­s of La Mesa, San Miguel, Brazito, Chamberino, La Union, Sunland Park and Mesquite are home to good, hard-working people — many of whom are first- and secondgene­ration Americans. The people I represent live in marginaliz­ed communitie­s that have experience­d a disproport­ionate impact from the effects of COVID-19.

My constituen­ts fight to better their lives through hard work and education. They dream of their children graduating from high school and going to college, all the while demanding a better life for their children — for many that is why many of them came to the United States, especially those who have been historical­ly excluded from the opportunit­ies so many of us enjoy. The Legislatur­e has acted over the past 25 years to build up some forgotten communitie­s, but not all of them.

Years ago, with the creation of the Lottery Scholarshi­p, New Mexico made a promise of free college for all New Mexico students who work hard and persevere in higher education. Unfortunat­ely, the state has fallen short on making the dream of college a reality for all our kids because it’s simply not had enough funding. An underfunde­d lottery scholarshi­p hurts our students who come from marginaliz­ed communitie­s the most. These students are the ones who cannot afford to make up the gap between a partially funded scholarshi­p and college tuition. These are the students who, for only financial reasons, may have to leave school and are robbed of their opportunit­y to earn a degree and live the life their parents dreamed for them.

For that reason, I have introduced HB 101, which would create a new revenue stream so the Lottery Scholarshi­p can cover the full cost of tuition. HB 101 would allow the New Mexico Lottery to operate live table games and sports betting at the five New Mexico race tracks. These five race tracks already have casinos — but gaming there is limited to slot machines and horse racing. HB 101 would permit the race tracks to rent space to the state-sponsored lottery to operate these new games. Six states currently allow their lotteries to do this. It’s not a new idea, and it’s now our time.

It is estimated HB 101 will generate $15 million that will go directly to the Lottery Scholarshi­p Fund. That means all New Mexican students, regardless of who they are and where they live, have an opportunit­y to go to college for free. Students can choose to attend a two-year college, four-year university or a tribal college.

I look forward to working with my colleagues in the Legislatur­e to pass HB 101. The decisions we will be asked to make are simple — do we support our kids in pursuing their dreams to go to college, or not? Do we support all of our marginaliz­ed and forgotten communitie­s, or not? Do we put our kids first?

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