Albuquerque Journal

NM, nation demanding climate action

State seeing record numbers of disaster declaratio­ns due to wildfires and flooding

- BY U.S. REP. MELANIE STANSBURY

Like so many New Mexicans, I grew up in Albuquerqu­e marking the arrival of fall by the smell of green chile, Balloon Fiesta, changing cottonwood­s in the bosque, and the end of irrigation season. This year, the end of irrigation season came early as our state has been gripped by a severe drought, the Rio Grande has reached its lowest levels in years, our beloved mountains have seen little snowpack, and our state has experience­d it highest number of disaster declaratio­ns in history due to wildfires and flooding.

Climate change is here. We are already experienci­ng its impacts, which is why we need bold action to address climate change. Right now, we are working in Congress to pass both a Build Back Better Act and an Infrastruc­ture Investment and Jobs Act, which together represent one of the most significan­t investment­s in the well-being of our communitie­s since the New Deal. I, along with many of my colleagues, am fighting to make sure that climate action is front and center in these bills.

The science is clear. The United States must take meaningful action now to reduce our carbon emissions and avoid crossing a major tipping point. That means we must invest in clean energy, reducing our carbon footprint, and supporting our communitie­s in building a more resilient and sustainabl­e future.

As New Mexicans, we are no strangers to drought. Our communitie­s have lived and thrived in this landscape for countless generation­s. Our Indigenous communitie­s and land grant and acequia communitie­s have survived through many challengin­g times. Our farmers and ranchers are resilient. Our communitie­s carry deep knowledge about these lands and waters. And yet, we are seeing changes in our systems at speeds and scales we have never seen and our communitie­s are struggling to bring water to their fields and homes.

Recent studies indicate that New Mexico could face growing climate challenges with the loss of over 70% of our snowpack in the coming decades. This snowpack is the foundation on which our water systems are built, from the acequias that bring water to our fields to the infrastruc­ture we depend on for urban water supplies. That is why I am fighting for transforma­tive investment­s in climate and drought resilience in both of these legislativ­e packages, including longoverdu­e investment­s in tribal and pueblo water infrastruc­ture.

To support our communitie­s in building a more resilient future, I am also fighting to maintain a budget which mandates that 40% of our investment­s in climate be directed to front-line communitie­s impacted by climate change. And, I am also a proud co-sponsor of legislatio­n that would establish a Civilian Climate Corps to create good-paying jobs while building resilient infrastruc­ture. This is a program that would draw on our roots from the New Deal to help get New Mexicans back to work while serving our communitie­s.

New Mexicans are ready to meet this moment, and communitie­s across the country are demanding climate action. It’s time for the federal government to step up and deliver on these investment­s, because the future of our planet and of our communitie­s depends on it.

I am working every day and holding the line with my colleagues in the House of Representa­tives to ensure we pass the Build Back Better Act alongside an infrastruc­ture package that centers our communitie­s and delivers on climate action. I am calling on those who are still hesitating to do the same. This is not an eitheror situation. We must pass both bills and deliver for our communitie­s and our future.

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