Santa Fe New Mexican

What’s the holdup in Senate Finance Committee?

- JUAN CISNEROS Juan Cisneros lives in Questa.

Sen. George Muñoz, D-Gallup, is the chairman of the Senate Finance Committee, stated in a Santa Fe New Mexican article on Feb. 9, “I want to be known as the guy that had agreements to move New Mexico forward.”

Really? How has Sen. Muñoz done that? Senate Bill 197, sponsored by Sen. Bobby Gonzales, D-Taos, and co-sponsored by Rep. Kristina Ortez, D-Taos, and Sen. Pete Campos, D-Las Vegas, passed the Senate Conservati­on Committee with an 8-1 vote on Jan. 30.

From there, SB 197 went to Muñoz’s committee and died while waiting for a hearing. This was a bill to appropriat­e $12.7 million for water infrastruc­ture in Taos County — including funds for acequias, mutual domestic water associatio­ns, the village of Questa and the town of Taos. All these projects are shovel-ready. Two projects would have helped in implementi­ng the crucial Abeyta Settlement, in partnershi­p with Taos Pueblo — a top priority for the state of New Mexico.

Muñoz chose to hear the following bills in his committee, instead of SB 197:

◆ SB 189 — Connie Mack World Series Advertisin­g.

◆ SB 106 — Declaratio­n of Independen­ce Anniversar­y.

◆ SB 93 — Chile Harvesting Funds.

While these might be good bills, do they really take priority over struggling rural communitie­s of Taos County? These are communitie­s that are in danger of losing their water rights due to a lack of sufficient water infrastruc­ture.

A question I have for Muñoz is, “What’s the process?” How does the Senate Finance Committee determine what bills set precedence over other bills. What’s important enough to get the attention of the committee? Who makes that decision? How is it determined? What harm would there have been to simply hear SB 197 in his committee for the benefit of Taos County? It was passed 8-1 in the previous committee, but that appeared to hold little merit.

I had the honor of assessing the needs of the northern acequia associatio­ns, and helping Sen. Gonzales draft SB 197, I have the honor of being one of his expert witnesses for the Senate Conservati­on Committee for this bill, which, as I stated before, passed 8-1. Although it is discouragi­ng that SB 197 didn’t make it to be heard in the Senate Finance Committee, we have to give a big thank-you to Sen. Gonzales for not giving up. Although the bill never moved forward, Sen. Gonzales is actively working with state agencies to get funds appropriat­ed so the projects can be completed. But the question remains, why wasn’t it heard? That’s not moving New Mexico forward.

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