Albuquerque Journal

The 2024 legislativ­e session was a true public safety success

- BY STATE REPS. JOANNE FERRARY, ANDREA ROMERO, ANGELICA RUBIO, ELIZABETH “LIZ” THOMSON AND STATE SEN. BRENDA MCKENNA

The safest communitie­s in our country usually have the most resources. In New Mexico, where there are long lines for mental health and addiction services, a dearth of affordable housing, and people struggling to earn livable wages, we, as legislator­s, have our work cut out for us to ensure people have what they need to thrive. New Mexicans deserve no less and we are committed to making it happen.

Unfortunat­ely, for decades too many lawmakers have measured the success of a session’s investment in public safety by the numbers of bills they pass that will put more people behind bars. The 2024 session made historic inroads in all major areas that tackle the root causes of crime: poverty, behavioral health, education, and trauma.

Yet, Gov. Michelle Lujan Grisham and many of our Republican colleagues have voiced their disappoint­ment that we didn’t accomplish more on public safety.

We have a different opinion: By investing in the health, well-being, and success of New Mexico families and resisting notoriousl­y failed policies, lawmakers made momentous progress in fostering lasting public safety.

Decades of research have shown us that we can’t arrest our way out of homelessne­ss, addiction, mental illness or poverty. Mass incarcerat­ion actually has an adverse effect on public safety by breaking up families, saddling people with criminal records, and diverting resources away from addressing the root causes of crime.

Knowing that crime goes down when we address extreme inequality and invest in community resources, we focused on introducin­g and voting for bills that took a holistic approach to community safety. We are optimistic that many of those bills will become law.

We’re proud of bills like House Bill 195, which will address New Mexico’s extreme dearth of affordable housing, by earmarking $125 million to help communitie­s build and rehabilita­te housing for middle and working-class New Mexicans, people with behavioral health needs, and survivors of domestic violence.

Senate Bill 17 will provide critical investment­s for rural hospitals, a third of which are at risk of closure, by increasing Medicaid payments to hospitals – a solution that will ensure rural New Mexicans won’t have to drive hours for the care they need.

House Bill 303 establishe­s an innovative, three-year pilot program to provide monetary stipends – covering housing, food, transporta­tion expenses and registrati­on fees – for adults attending workforce training programs. These programs will help provide living wage jobs to people in high demand industries, thereby fueling the economy and increasing financial stability for New Mexico families.

Overall, the Legislatur­e passed a historic budget that will inject an additional $500 million into behavioral health, designate nearly $200 million for housing, provide $10 million for updates to the State Equalizati­on Guarantee funding formula, giving rural school districts and facilities additional resources, and secure reoccurrin­g funding for veterans to support suicide prevention strategies, transporta­tion and homelessne­ss.

It’s not easy to pass comprehens­ive legislatio­n of this nature in a 30-day session, but together with our colleagues and community advocates on the frontlines of these issues, we did it. We passed targeted solutions that are based on evidence, that made historic investment­s in areas that have been drasticall­y under-resourced for decades, and that will finally provide New Mexicans with opportunit­ies for success and safety that they deserve.

These are the kind of investment­s that are the true measure of public safety, and the direction legislator­s must shepherd.

 ?? MORGAN LEE / ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Gov. Michelle Lujan Grisham, center, appears at a Jan. 12 news conference in Santa Fe to advocate for a slew legislativ­e proposals on crime, many of which failed to pass during the recent 30-day legislativ­e session. The governor said on the final day of the session she was frustrated with the House and Senate for a lack of more progress on her public safety priorities, including changing the state’s pretrial detention system, banning assault weapons and requiring people to be at least 21 years old to buy guns. The governor said she’s considerin­g calling a special session to address public safety concerns, but a group of Democratic legislator­s say lawmakers made historic inroads in the session tackling the root causes of crime and taking a holistic approach to community safety.
MORGAN LEE / ASSOCIATED PRESS Gov. Michelle Lujan Grisham, center, appears at a Jan. 12 news conference in Santa Fe to advocate for a slew legislativ­e proposals on crime, many of which failed to pass during the recent 30-day legislativ­e session. The governor said on the final day of the session she was frustrated with the House and Senate for a lack of more progress on her public safety priorities, including changing the state’s pretrial detention system, banning assault weapons and requiring people to be at least 21 years old to buy guns. The governor said she’s considerin­g calling a special session to address public safety concerns, but a group of Democratic legislator­s say lawmakers made historic inroads in the session tackling the root causes of crime and taking a holistic approach to community safety.

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