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City plans $17 million worth of repairs and upgrades to Nichols Dam

Water, wildfire bills pass Senate Conservation Committee

Several bills focused on water or wildfire recovery passed the Senate Conservation Committee on Tuesday. These bills include funds for acequia disaster response, creating a water protection permanent fund, establishing an acequia bureau within the Interstate Stream Commission and an exemption to the state procurement requirements for the State Forestry Division in certain circumstances. Many […]

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Bonito Lake Reservoir set to open later this year

Santa Fe flood plans murky

.... .... .... .... .... .... .... .... .... .... .... .... .... .... .... .... .... .... Mark Herndon stands along the Santa Fe River that runs by his studio in Santa Fe. (Eddie Moore/Albuquerque Journal) Copyright © 2021 Albuquerque Journal A couple of years ago, when there was a controlled dam release, Richard Ellenberg started wondering what the city of Santa Fe’s flood plans were. That thought stayed with him until a few months ago, so he decided to place a public records request with the city for its flood management plans for the McClure and Nichols dams. ...................... However, the results he got were anything but helpful. Instead, he received several redacted documents and a records request exemption citation stating that the city didn’t have to turn over documents due to the threat of terrorism. The Journal submitted a similar records request and got the same response from the city.

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Repair dams before, not after, a catastrophe

Some 200 dams in New Mexico are rated to be in poor condition, according to the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers. They are a disaster waiting to happen. Crumbling infrastructure is avoidable, though, and legislators, the governor and our congressional delegation must do their utmost to lessen the danger. Find state and federal dollars dedicated to infrastructure projects and fix the dams. This could save lives, as more than 170 of the 500 dams in the state have potential to cause “loss of life” upon failure, the New Mexico Finance Authority Oversight Committee was told last week. Without funding and resources, the Office of the State Engineer’s Charles Thompson told legislators the problem could “turn into a catastrophe.” Thompson, chief of the Dam Safety Bureau, said the dams can be cleaned, updated and made safe. But the cost is expensive, at least $300 million.

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