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   alt.war.civil.usa      Discussing American civil war.. and 2.0      44,056 messages   

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   Message 42,190 of 44,056   
   ..The Black Plague.. to All   
   'Fed up:' ABQ Chamber calls for movement   
   31 Jul 24 15:39:49   
   
   XPost: talk.politics.guns, alt.politics.democrats, sac.politics   
   XPost: nm.general   
   From: democrats@caused.it   
      
   The New Mexico governor is a Democrat whore, nothing will be done.   
      
   Businesses and families are fed up. So is the governor.   
      
   That’s what Terri Cole, president and CEO of the Greater Albuquerque Chamber   
   of Commerce, said about the crime and public safety issues that plague New   
   Mexico.   
      
   She said it’s difficult to even know where to start with what happened   
   during the special session meant to focus on public safety held earlier this   
   month.   
      
   “It ended up only being five hours with absolutely no debate on any bill at   
   all,” Cole said.   
      
   The Chamber supported all of Gov. Michelle Lujan Grisham’s crime bills going   
   into the special session, none of which even made it to committee. Only one   
   bill passed that included money for disaster relief and pilot programs   
   related to assisted outpatient treatment and competency diversion pilot   
   programs.   
      
   Cole said she doesn’t understand why the Legislature couldn’t debate and   
   narrow even just a few crime bills, especially when it comes to keeping   
   violent criminals off the streets.   
      
   House Minority Leader Rod Montoya, R-Farmington, said the Legislature did   
   nothing about the state’s crime problem.   
      
   “The governor — I don’t agree with her often. But I agree that New   
   Mexico,   
   Albuquerque in particular, is just suffering from out-of-control crime,” he   
   said.   
      
   Democratic leadership told the governor before the session they need more   
   time to consider the complex issues she’s trying to solve.   
      
   Rep. Marian Matthews, D-Albuquerque, said these are really critical issues,   
   but the Legislature needs to ensure there’s the capacity and infrastructure   
   in place for new laws before passing legislation.   
      
   She said she anticipates continued work with the state’s business chambers   
   for the upcoming 60-day session and said public safety passages will   
   “absolutely” happen in 2025.   
      
   “Their concern about reducing crime, having a better level of public safety   
   is absolutely critical,” she said. “I agree with them on economic   
   development and economic vitality.”   
      
   Matthews added that she asked the governor’s office to add bills focused on   
   human trafficking and violent juvenile crime on the special session agenda,   
   but it didn’t happen.   
      
   “I think what caused some concern — and I can only speak for myself —   
   was I   
   was sort of just making some suggestions … but it was sort of like we   
   weren’t being encouraged to do that. (The governor) had an agenda,”   
   Matthews   
   said. “And I think most of us expect that we try to work more in partnership   
   than as individual branches of government as we develop laws.”   
      
   Cole said the Chamber worked on two dozen public safety-related bills in the   
   2023 session, and all the legislation either died in first committee or   
   wasn’t debated at all. The package included pretrial detention changes and   
   increased penalties for fentanyl trafficking or felons in possession of a   
   firearm, all of which the Legislature failed again to pass in either the   
   2024 regular session and special session.   
      
   “So for the Legislature to say, ‘This is all too complicated, and we need   
   more time,’ doesn’t ring true when, for example, last year — and in   
   sessions   
   prior, for that matter — they’ve had either 30 days or 60 days to debate   
   these,” Cole said.   
      
   Montoya said Democrats approached the special session very politically,   
   listening to progressive organizations that donate to their campaigns. The   
   week of the special session, about 40 left-leaning advocacy groups asked   
   Lujan Grisham to hold off on the session.   
      
   “(Democrats) do not care about the citizens — the law-abiding citizens —   
   and   
   they don’t care about the law-abiding, tax-paying businesses,” Montoya   
   said.   
   “They worry about those special interest groups.”   
      
   Cole said the Legislature can’t debate these issues with a partisan lens.   
      
   “Any time you introduce politics in that way, you don’t get to the   
   solutions   
   very easily,” she said.   
      
   Another special session still wasn’t off the table, as of Friday. Cole said   
   the Chamber would support the governor if she calls an additional special   
   session.   
      
      
   “I think it’s a good strategy on her part to take the issue to the public,   
   and ask them what they think. She’s going to try to get input from what   
   residents and businesses believe,” Cole said.   
      
   Cole said she must remain hopeful for the 2025 Legislature in order to   
   represent the Chamber’s board of directors and businesses on public safety   
   issues.   
      
   “I’m hopeful that we can reset and look at these bills differently,   
   especially bills that will give us some relief on the violent offenders that   
   roam our streets in every city in the state of New Mexico,” she said.   
      
   Otherwise, she said, the 60-day session will be a repeat of the last six   
   years.   
      
   “And I can understand the governor’s position here. She’ll be the first   
   one   
   to say that patience isn’t her greatest virtue, but she has been very   
   patient with this Legislature for the last several years on public safety   
   issues,” Cole said. “And I think the governor has just gotten fed up …   
   and a   
   lot of New Mexicans and businesses, for that matter, have gotten fed up,   
   too.”   
      
   Matthews agreed that criminal law needs to be updated to improve public   
   safety and, subsequently, create a more vibrant economy.   
      
   “This is a big problem in New Mexico, and we need to be joining hands and   
   working together in the 60-day session,” she said.   
      
   https://www.abqjournal.com/business/fed-up-abq-chamber-calls-for-movement-   
   on-crime-issues/article_d8801508-4ab7-11ef-a8ee-475be7312b34.html   
      
   --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05   
    * Origin: you cannot sedate... all the things you hate (1:229/2)   

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