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NM will pay farmers to stop groundwater use

Copyright © 2021 Albuquerque Journal Nearly 20 farms in southern New Mexico are one step closer to receiving state grants to stop using groundwater for a year as part of a water management pilot project for the Lower Rio Grande. An irrigation ditch is filled with water for alfalfa fields in the Mesilla Valley just west of Las Cruces. (Roberto E. Rosales/Albuquerque Journal) Grants considered by the Interstate Stream Commission last week ranged from $9,000 to $90,000, and totaled more than $500,000. The Office of the State Engineer has certified that the farms, trusts and corporations have valid water rights. The staff will now verify land deeds before signing the grant agreements, which represent about 1,600 acres.

Healers & Builders 2021: Community Foundation and CEO Terra Winter help guide nonprofits

Healers & Builders 2021: Community Foundation and CEO Terra Winter help guide nonprofits Michael McDevitt, Las Cruces Sun-News © Nathan J Fish/Sun-News Terra Winter is CEO and president of the Community Foundation of Southern New Mexico. Pictured Thursday, Dec. 17, 2020. Editor s note: This is one in a series of stories on Healers and Builders, citizens who will heal, safeguard and push forward the greater Las Cruces area in 2021. LAS CRUCES – Business leaders have for months warned rampant coronavirus restrictions will permanently shutter many local shops and restaurants. While less discussed, nonprofit organizations are also in danger of closing, local leader Terra Winter said.

New Mexico youth can text CYFD for support with Reach NM program

Judith Lee Patton Wood | The Pagosa Springs SUN

Judith Lee Patton Wood Judith Lee Patton Wood passed away Dec. 10 in Las Cruces, N.M., at the age of 97. Judy was born June 6, 1923, in Ashland, Ky. She met her husband, Forrest Wood (Woody), at the high school rifle team dance. It was love at first sight for both of them.  During Woody’s term of service as an Army Air Corps pilot of a B29 bomber during WWII, they married in 1945. Woody received a scholarship to Socorro School of Mines and they made their way to New Mexico. After graduation, they lived in Hobbs and then Farmington. For the next 30-plus years, Woody worked there as a petroleum engineer for El Paso Natural Gas and Northwest Pipeline, and they raised their children, Hank and Ellen. Judy was a wonderful homemaker and also worked as a secretary for a U.S. congressman, a hospital and Red Cross volunteer, a Sunday school teacher and elder at First United Presbyterian Church, and a library assistant at Farmington High School. She and Woody were avid golfers

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