Pandemic aid helps New Mexico tribe fix damaged adobe homes
TEYA VITU, Santa Fe New Mexican
April 3, 2021
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1of8This March 30, 2021 image shows Santo Domingo Pueblo Gov. Sidelio Tenorio speaking among tribal leaders in front of the newly-rebuilt adobe home of Diane Garcia at Santo Domingo Pueblo, New Mexico. It s the first home completed in a new housing initiative to rebuild or restore more than 150 traditional adobe buildings within the pueblo. (Matt Dahlseid/Santa Fe New Mexican via AP)Matt Dahlseid/APShow MoreShow Less
2of8This March 30, 2021 image shows Joyce Zamora, center, walking through her home at Santo Domingo Pueblo, New Mexico, seeing it for the first time since work began on rebuilding the traditional adobe structure that had been damaged by storms. Work has just begun on rebuilding and restoring more than 150 traditional adobe homes in the pueblo. (Matt Dahlseid/Santa Fe New Mexican via AP)Matt Dahlseid/APShow MoreShow Less
Pandemic aid helps New Mexico tribe fix damaged adobe homes
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John Henderson, left, of the Albuquerque Woodworkers Association, and City Council President Pat Davis, right, talk to students Gael Cruz, 10, second from left, and Jeremiah Lucero, 10, second from right, about the new desks they are getting to take home during an event Wednesday at the Mesa Verde Community Center. (Roberto E. Rosales/Albuquerque Journal)
Copyright © 2020 Albuquerque Journal
It wasn’t exactly Santa’s sleigh, but it was not far off.
The 18-foot flatbed trailer that arrived Wednesday afternoon at the Mesa Verde Community Center came bearing gifts – handcrafted wooden desks – for children inside.
Members of the Albuquerque Woodworkers Association spent the past week building 45 new desks for students forced into remote schooling due to COVID-19. Staff at the city’s community centers helped identify families who could use furniture for their learn-from-home setups, a