Hot off the Press... A Visual and Verbal Treat about One of Albuquerque's Sacred Spots

Bearing Witness:  25 Years of Refuge is a delightful collaboration between North Valley artist Margie O'Brien and local writer and teacher Lou Liberty. Bearing Witness has 68 pages of art, poetry and prose and a foreword by VB Price. It sells for $30; a limited edition is available for $50. 
 
Bearingwitness

It's  just been released in time for the Rio Grande Nature Center's 25th Anniversary, and will debut with a book signing Saturday Nov. 10 at the Rio Grande Nature Center State Park at 6:00 p.m. 

Seventeen of the original watercolors will be on sale at the Nature Center through Dec. 1.  This is sure to stir your heart strings, if you're at all called to the outdoors, right in our backyard, as I am.

Other book signings:
Nov. 11 (Sunday) at Bookworks at 3pm
Nov.18 at Acequia Booksellers at 3pm,
Nov. 27 at Page One at 7pm.

Sen. Dede Feldman honored with a Pacesetter Award from Women Legislators’ Lobby in Washington, DC

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Senator Dede Feldman just returned from a national conference in Washington, DC, where she joined hundreds of women strategizing about how women can help change our national priorities and build a better future. "Women at the Table of Power" brought together luminaries, women state legislators, and women activists - all working to empower women to step up to the tables of power and make our country safer, more democratic, more respected.

Senator Dede Feldman joined hundreds of women activists and state legislators from across the country earlier this month in Washington, DC to say:
"We can change our national priorities.
And women will set the course in a new direction."

Sen. Feldman was one of 22 women legislators honored with the organization's Pacesetter Award. WiLL Pacesetters are recognized for their noteworthy legislative service, their contributions to sound, progressive policy, and their groundbreaking leadership in the states. Feldman was lauded for her environmental, consumer and health legislation. The Award was presented on October 1, 2007, at a ceremony on Capitol Hill that also honored Marian Wright Edelman, founder and president of the Children's Defense Fund.

At the conference, women from across the country shared ideas and strategies about how to move forward toward greater peace and security. Among those speaking were Jane Fonda, Marian Wright Edelman (founder and president, Children's Defense Fund), Ellen Bravo (founder, National 9 to 5), and many more. On October 2, the women headed to Capitol Hill, where they visited Members of Congress and lobbied for better federal budget priorities and a fresh look at our national security.

Activists Maria Santelli, of the Another Side Project, Ruth Koury, of the Pockets of Poverty Alliance, and Jessica Wilbanks, of Women's Action for New Directions, were part of the New Mexico delegation.

"The staggering amount of money that we are spending for the Iraq war and a continued build up of obsolete weapons has its prince back in the states," says Feldman. "The opportunities that we are sacrificing can be counted in the number of children that will continue to live without health care insurance, and the number of people who cannot afford a decent home."

So far the US has spent almost $610 billlion on the Iraq war. The cost to the taxpayers of New Mexico now totals $1.4 billion, according to the National Priorities Project. That's in addition to the 31 New Mexico soldiers who have paid the ultimate price, and the 245 who have been wounded.

"We need to readjust our priorities to provide real security here," says Feldman. "$1.4 billion could have covered 136,000 New Mexico kids with health insurance."

Feldman says she was heartened to join with women legislators from around the country who would like to see a shift of funding from military spending to helath and human services in their own states. "This conference gave me hope that women can help steer our community in a new direction. And we must do this. And it's not just the Iraq war, which is ruining our world standing and robbing us of our best and brightest young people. Our state, and our country, are seeing dangerous trends. Over the last few years, the current administration has chipped away at things that are vital to our country's peace and security. Today, we are more isolated in the world; our poorest are more at risk than ever; our economy grows weaker each day."

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Getting out of Town, to the Valle Grande in the Jemez

Vallegrande_2 Two weeks ago, Mark and I went on a seven-mile hike in the Valle Caldera National Preserve, We joined the “Friends” of this great endeavor to preserve one of the West’s classic landscapes and largest volcanic craters for public use. It took a lot to make this happen, both in Congress and here in New Mexico.  Rep. Roger Madelena and I sponsored a Memorial in 1998 requesting that this land be bought by the federal government from the Dunigans, a Texas oil family who owned much of the remaining Baca Land Grant. It finally was purchased, under the Land and Water Conservation Fund in 2000, with support coming from the entire NM delegation, and finally, Sen Domenici,. However, the proviso was, that it had to be self-sufficient in five years or so. A tall order, but the Trust is going to do it, with more public tours—van tours, cross country events, marathons—as well as with the more traditional ranching, and hunting (there are from 2,500-3,500 elk on the 89,000-acre property.)

Dedecraigmartin Our guided hike, sponsored by the Friends of the Valle Grande, walked around Cerro del Abrigo, a mountain in the middle of the preserve from which you could see several different valleys – Valle San Antonio, and Valle Toledo-- and mountains, including Redondo Peak and Pajarito Mountain. There were great volunteers along who were wild flower and bird specialists from Los Alamos, and tour guide Craig Martin, who wrote a great book about the Baca Location called, Valle Grande: A History of the Baca Location No. 1.  It’s a paperback from All Seasons Publishing ( ISBN 0-9639040-4-3) that’s available from Bookworks in the North Valley and other local bookstores. After the hike, we had a barbecue with a power point from Craig on the history of the land. I’m not a huge fan of power points but for history buffs and naturalists, though, this was great.

To Find out more hikes and other activities at the Valles Caldera Preserve, go to www.vallescaldera.gov.

Celebrate These Anniversaries by Making Use of these Great Community Resources

Naturecenter499 The Rio Grande Nature Center turned 25 this summer and they are celebrating over two decades of bosque preservation, outdoor education for kids, recreational opportunities and access to nature in an urban setting. Join the Friends of the Rio Grande Nature Center on summer bird festivals (Aug. 4), full moon walks, seminars on the bosque for teachers, and many other great activities. Call 505-344-7240 for more information on festivals and events for all ages or go to the website (google Rio Grande Nature Center or go to nmparks.com and follow the links).

The nature center was started by a band of intrepid open space advocates who wouldn’t take 'no' for an answer. It grew into one of the state’s great collaborative efforts. The park is located in the near North Valley at the end of Candelaria NW in the Rio Grande State Park on land owned by the state, and operated jointly with the City of Albuquerque Open Space Division and the Middle Rio Grande Conservancy District. The headquarters, designed by then little-known architect, Antoine Predock, has been home to thousands of school kids who have caught tadpoles in the “Discovery Pond” and watched sandhill cranes in the nearby Candelaria Farms. In honor of the anniversary, the Friends are raising money to help build a new education building. Call 344-7240 to help.

River Field Trip: Stories of Drought, Competing Uses, and the Never-ending Battle against Silt

May 28 - Every two years New Mexico Tech. organizes a Field Conference for legislators, agency staffers and other policy makers on a topic like hard mock mining, oil and gas exploration or water use. As arcane and technical as these topics sound, I've come to look forward to these outdoor, moveable feasts of knowledge more than almost anything else in public service (although throwing out the first pitch at the North Valley Little League is a tough one to beat, even if I did have to practice).

The two-day conferences are for non-scientists like me who have to help decide, for example, how to balance the uses of water in the Middle Rio Grande between agriculture, drinking water, endangered species, delivery of water to Texas as per our contract obligations, and municipal development. The days went like this: after a hearty breakfast in Socorro, we travel by bus to various stops along the middle-reach of the Rio Grande where geologists, scientists, water officials, farmers, biologists and others each give their five-minute pitch on what's happening. No long speeches. Sometimes great maps and other visual aids that blow away in the wind. Questions and answers. Boat rides. Stops along the bank. One-on-one discussions among river managers, camaraderie on the bus.

This year's keynote was given by naturalist and historian, Bill DeBuys, one of my all-time New Mexico heroes. The author of River of Traps, Enchantment and Exploitation (a History of the Sangre de Cristos) and now The Walk (see below), Bill made us think about whether the river's current troubles result from over engineering since the 1930s, and whether the natural ebb and flow might not have been better for bosque and fish. He, like many others, worries about global warming and drought. We've just left one of the wettest twenty-year periods in New Mexico, he says, and we're headed for prolonged drought. One casualty may be rainbow trout-which probably won't exist in these waters by the end of this century, disappearing like scores of other fish species.

Another may be the river itself. With demands for agriculture, downstream deliveries and swimming pools taking precedence in other Southwestern states, rivers through cities have been replaced by pipelines and dry ditches. Just look for the river Phoenix or Tuscon. There's nothing there. That could be us in seventy years, unless we put on our thinking caps and collaborate. That's what this event was all about.

One of my buddies on this trip, and in the NM Senate, is Sen. Carlos Cisneros, from Questa. ( See photo) Together, we've pushed for alternative car fuels, solar energy and protection for aceqias, to name a few of our more successful causes. In 1998, Carlos and I asked the Attorney General for an opinion on whether "instream flow" constitutes beneficial use of water in New Mexico. In other words, is there any intrinsic, legal value to the river just continuing to flow to provide for the riparian environment, recreation and uses other than compact delivery, irrigation, etc. The opinion, out of now - Rep. Tom Udall's shop, was yes, a verdict we'd hoped for but one that didn't make us especially popular with anti-environmentalists and many other users.
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Caption- Up in the Air Junior Birdmen :Sen. Dede Feldman and Sen. Carlos Cisneros, all suited up, tour the upper part of Elephant Butte Reservoir and the channel that allows the Rio Grande to flow into it, despite a never ending battle against silt. The Bureau of Reclamation-along with their Cajun allies who man the amphibian dredging equipment as well as a fleet of air boats that usually ply the bayous-continually clear the channel as it dries, silts up, and floods each season.


Summer Reading Recommendations from the Senator
My ideal summer day is to get up early, take a hike in a beautiful setting, then, with a feeling that I've accomplished something, come home and read for a few hours, with a cool drink at my side. Oh come on, I can dream, can't I? Two of the books that I'm currently reading are about New Mexico themes. They are purchases I made after meeting the authors at book signings, and falling in love, so to speak. Yellowcake is a novel by Ann Cummings about two families, one Navajo and one Anglo, who worked in the uranium mines and mills in the Shiprock area, when there was little protection against what we now know was deadly. Another is The Walk, by Bill DeBuys, which is about familiar natural landscapes and how they interact with one's personal history. His own walk on land that he has irrigated for 25 years near Las Trampas is the case in point.

Ask the Governor to Sign My Bills

        This week I’m asking everyone to contact the Governor’s office by mail (Office of the Governor, 490 Old Santa Fe Trail, Room 400, Santa Fe, NM 87501) or  phone (505-476-2200) or via fax ( ask for the number)  with a request that he sign the bills that I was able to pass during the regular session, especially:

SB 165 & 448: The Credit Security Freeze sponsored by Sen. Sharer and Sen. Feldman to allow consumers to protect themselves vs. identity theft

            SB 407:  Mandate HPV Vaccine Insurance Coverage

SB 428:  Small Employer Health Coverage Wait Period  to allow small non-profits to join a state insurance program without a period of no insurance

SB 486: Conservancy District Liability Immunity to enable Ditches with Trails and other trail projects along conservancy ditches

They really do count the phone calls!

Legislation Audio Updates -Take A Listen

Legislation is moving through both houses of the legislature. Here are some updates on legislation you maybe following and/or are interested in.

--> Identity Theft Protection - listen to the audio - ( Download and play ID-theft.mp3 )

Missnm2006199                                                 
The Credit Security Freeze-aimed at Identity Theft-- will hits the Senate Floor today.

Please call all Senators to pass Senate Judiciary Committee Substitute for 448 and 165.  

    Senator Bill Sharer (R-Farmington) had an industry-backed bill. We got everyone together and hammered out a compromise, which was passed by the Senate Judiciary Committee on Friday. We are still trying to accommodate the auto dealers-who want consumers to be able to "thaw" their credit almost immediately.

    Miss New Mexico, a victim of identity theft, who has made this her platform, was at the Capitol Friday to help. And many others have sent e-mails. Keep 'em coming. We're a long way from home.


--> Victory for Young Women with Passage of HPV Vaccination Coverage
- listen to audio -
Download HPV.mp3 )
I'm pleased that my SB 407 passed which requires insurance companies to cover the cost of HPV vaccinations. This is good news for young women in New Mexico. Listen to find out more.


--> Ditches with Trails Hits a Snag
- listen to the audio - ( Download ditches-trails.mp3 )

    One of the most encouraging projects for both the North and South Valleys- the Ditches with Trails Project-was dealt a setback Friday when Democrats on the Senate Judiciary Committee failed to pass a bill that would have transferred liability from the Conservancy or other Irrigation Districts to the State Parks Department, the City or other entities agreeing to manage and accept responsibility for the public trail.

    SB 486 was aimed at resolving a problem that has kept the MRGCD from opening the ditches running up and down the valley to full public access, a necessary ingredient for trail development now planned in the Los Griegos area of the North Valley and the Atrisco area in the South Valley.   

Call member of the Judiciary Committee, particularly Senator Linda Lopez (D- Albuquerque), who represents the South Valley, and Senator. Cisco McSorley (D-Albuquerque) to get them to change their vote and move the bill along.

Agree with these Bills? Here’s How You Can Help Me Pass ‘em

A number of people have asked me what I’ve introduced so far this session and how they can help. Here’s a partial answer.  This week, I introduced three bills that will help consumers:

Listen to my audio description of Senate Bill 448 Here ( Download & Play SB448.mp3 .) Senate Bill 448 pre-empts identity theft by allowing consumers to place a freeze on access to their credit reports whenever they want.  So, if your mail has been stolen, or your n’ere-do-well brother-in-law "borrowed” your credit card, and you fear the worst, you can just call the credit bureau and put on the freeze.  Whenever you want to unfreeze the access, to shop for a car, say, you can use a pin number to unfreeze it for as long you want.  It’s a measure that is law in 25 other states.  I’m working with the new AG, Gary King, on the bill, which is backed by the AARP.  Current laws only allow you to protect yourself in this way after your identity has been stolen, and new accounts have been opened in your name, or new charges start appearing on your credit card bill.

You can express your support by contacting members of the Senate Public Affairs Committee at 1-505-986-4300 and asking for their extension,  or by emailing them directly by clicking their email links below:

Sen. Mary Jane Garcia
Sen. May Kay Papen
Sen. Gerry Ortiz y Pino
Sen. David Ulibarri
Sen. Steve Komadina
Sen. Steve Neville
Sen. Gay Kernan
Sen. Stuart Ingle

Here's a link to the actual text of the bill:
SB448 (
CREDIT REPORT SECURITY ACT)

Or you can send them an e-mail at first name.last name@nmlegis.gov.  (i.e. dede.feldman@nmlegis.gov )

Listen to my audio description of Senate Bills 542 & 543 Here ( Download SB542-543.mp3 )
Two green energy bills: Senate Bill 542 & SB 543 will help reduce dependence on oil and gas and reduce global warming by spurring conservation and alternative energy.

SB 542 encourages consumers to buy energy efficient appliances like washing machines, refrigerators, dishwashers, etc. through a tax holiday on those appliances during the month of November, when the gross receipts tax will not be charged.  It also gives an income tax credit for heating and cooling systems that are energy-efficient. Both measures will go to the Senate Corporations Committee in a week or so. Here's more information about SB 542 which tells you how to take advantage of SB 542 ( Download & Play SB542.mp3 )

SB 543 gives tax credits for people and companies who build green, sustainable buildings that meet certain LEED standards. Both bills are backed by the Governor.

You can express your support by contacting members of the Senate Corporations Committee at 1-505-986-4300 and asking for their extension,  or by emailing them directly by clicking their email links below:

Sen. Shannon Robinson
Sen. Gerry Ortiz y Pino
Sen. Diane Snyder
Sen. Mark Boitano
Sen. Dianna Duran
Sen. Phil Griego
Sen. Stuart Ingle
Sen. Cynthia Nava
Sen. David Ulibarri

You can send an email message to any Senator or Representative by sending an an email at first name.last name@nmlegis.gov.  (i.e. dede.feldman@nmlegis.gov)

Here are links to the actual text of each of the two bills:
SB 542 (ENERGY-EFFICIENT APPLIANCE TAX CREDIT)
SB 543 (SUSTAINABLE BUILDING TAX CREDITS)

Or you can get the full texts of the bills on the legislative website: http://legis.state.nm.us. Just click on my name, then the 2007 session, and a list of my bills will flop down. You can also get committee schedules and agendas, which really help.  The best time to contact committee members is a few days before the bill is heard. 

Thanks for any help you can give.

What's At Stake In The Land Commissioner Race & Why You Should Care

Fundraise250_2 A student of voting age recently said, "There are too many races. I can't keep track of all of them and I don't have the time." Jim Baca explains why the race is important and it only takes him ten minutes to let you know what's on the line.

New Mexicans who were born here as well as more recent transplants know there is something special about New Mexico, something worth preserving and protecting. Jim, who has probably explored more of New Mexico than any candidate for any office in the state, says it's about preserving sacred places and those special places we each cherish. Besides Jim's considerable experience, he has a vision and a plan for doing just that.

The key to Jim's plan is to halt a trend which effects every Western state -- the gradual loss of public lands  to unplanned growth and the disposal of public resources at a price which doesn't compensate states at fair market value. States also lack plans to develop resources which benefit state residents and the state as a whole.  Jim's plans include a significant alternative energy, and natural science initiative together with a comprehensive independent auditing capability which protects state resources and maintains accountability. He also hopes to extend the capability of the state constitution to permit the designation of protected areas.

Savvy voters understand that Jim's  opponent, Patrick Lyons, has raised 4 times as much money as Jim and 80% of that money has come from special oil and gas interests.  Jim's campaign money has come from ordinary citizens - lots and lots of people making modest donations. In an era when we've become used to the undue influence of lobbyists and special interests, the choice is easy.   Some voters are unhappy with the Rovian smear tactics of Lyon's campaign.  We're pretty sure that when you don't have a plan and you're prone to false accusations, you're not the guy we want. What we do want is a land commissioner who never allows the voice of special interests to drown out our voices, who preserves New Mexico's sacred and special places for ourselves and our children. Jim has the experience, the plan and the integrity to represent our interests.

(This is a guest post by Suzanne Prescott who holds a Masters Degree in Environmental Science and blogs at The Plaza)

The Race between Patricia Madrid and Healther Wilson Is Heating Up

The race between Patricia Madrid and Heather Wilson is heating up with the TV airwaves buzzing. Meanwhile, Patricia Madrid has been quietly doing a great job on the environmental front. With the federal agencies controlled by conservatives who often were industry executives and Congress slacking on oversight-- many of our landmark environmental protections are at risk.

Attorney General Madrid has joined with other states to protect us against further global warming with a lawsuit charging that EPA's failure to regulate power plant emissions of carbon dioxide violates the Clean Air Act. She has also challenged the EPA's rules weakening mercury emission standards for most coal plants and challenged the highway administration's failure to improve fuel economy standards for SUVs and light trucks. I'm glad somebody is not just complaining.

This kind of thing doesn't hit the airwaves, but it might just be indicative of what a great Congressperson she'd make.

Courtesy of JHFarr.com

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