Congress
Gov. Martinez again vetoes money meant for Gallup Detox Center
For the third time in four years, New Mexico Gov. Susana Martinez has vetoed money meant specifically to help keep the doors of the Gallup Detox Center – McKinley County’s only detox and shelter program – open and helping the area’s people with alcoholism and substance abuse issues.
Read KOB.com’s special report on the Gallup Detox Center and the cyclical money problem it faces.
Monday, Gov. Martinez announced she had signed the $6.2 billion budget passed by the state legislature. She line-item vetoed many portions of the budget, but one of those vetoes was $200,000 put specifically into the budget for the Gallup Detox Center, also known as the Na’Nizhoozhi Center, Inc. (NCI). Continue reading
Gallup: A crisis in the cold
Gallup: A Crisis in the Cold from Blair Miller on Vimeo.
GALLUP, NM — Two U.S. senators are calling what is happening along Historic Route 66 in the sprawling high desert of western New Mexico a “public health crisis.”
People are coming weekly in throngs from the vast expanses of Native American land reserves surrounding the city of Gallup – a quiet town along Interstate 40 often used as a stopover for travelers headed west – to work, hang out and drink alcohol.
But many of them never make it back to where they came from.
Over the past two winters, 24 people have died outside in the cold. Their causes of death range from hypothermia to alcohol poisoning and natural causes, but people in and around the city often group the deaths together and refer to them as being caused by “exposure.”
All of the people who died were Native American. Continue reading
Homeland Security: Decision on Real ID for airport travel coming by end of year
The U.S. Department of Homeland Security (DHS) responded Thursday to multiple requests by KOB for further clarification on theimpending Real ID Act deadline in New Mexico.
DHS did not say much that was still unknown, but did tell KOB the department “is in the process of scheduling plans for REAL ID enforcement at airports” and will make that decision by the end of 2015. Then, DHS says it will give “at least 120 days” notice before changes are made affecting travel.
This means, as was reported Wednesday, that New Mexicans should have no trouble flying with state-issued licenses until at least April 2016.
Read the full DHS response here.
“The REAL ID Act places the responsibility for action on the state to provide state-issued identification that meets the Act’s security standards,” the DHS spokesperson said.
Sen. Martin Heinrich, D-NM, also issued a statement regarding the back-and-forth within the state government over New Mexico’s Real ID compliance and a bipartisan bill that passed the state Senatethat would have brought the state into compliance.
“I have called on the Department of Homeland Security and other federal agencies to improve and expand their public outreach. However, the ultimate solution for this problem must come at the state level,” Sen. Heinrich said. “The state Senate passed a bipartisan bill last year that is both Real ID compliant and ensures all New Mexico drivers can continue to drive legally and safely. This pragmatic, bipartisan solution is the clear path forward.”
New Mexico Senate Democrats also Thursday issued further clarification of Real ID standards at different federal and military buildings in the state and the specific forms people visiting those buildings will have to have. Click here for that information.
Senate Democrats also established a phone line, (505) 986-4727, for anyone with further questions.
Gov. Susana Martinez has said she will not call a special session to resolve the matter. Her spokesman, Michael Lonergan, continued to spar with Democrats over the issue Wednesday, when he told KOB, in part, the governor is following “official guidance from the federal government on this issue,” and said she “has been working to resolve this problem year after year.”
Lonergan also said in that statement, “[i]f the Democrats want to gamble on this issue, so be it. And while they are at it, they will continue ignoring a strong majority of New Mexicans who want to end the dangerous practice of granting driver’s licenses to illegal immigrants.”
Lonergan pointed to a 10-month-old Albuquerque Journal poll in which 56 percent of Democrats, 69 percent of Independents and 62 percent of Hispanics said they were opposed to giving driver’s licenses to undocumented citizens – a total of 70 percent.
402 people were polled on the issue, which had a margin of error of plus or minus 4.9 percentage points.
This story was originally published at KOB.com
Navajo Board of Elections in contempt of court; Nov. 4 elections to go forward except presidential election; Deschene likely off ballot
ALBUQUERQUE — Two members of the Navajo Nation Supreme Court – Chief Justice Herb Yazzie and Associate Justice Eleanor Shirley – ruled Friday in Chinle, Arizona that the Navajo Election Board of Supervisors were in contempt of court for not adhering to its demands to postpone the Nov. 4 election and remove Chris Deschene from the ballot.
At the adherence of Executive Director of the Navajo Election Administration Edison Wauneka, who was not held in contempt, the court determined that the Nov. 4 elections will go forth as planned except the presidential election, which will be held in a special election at a later date. Continue reading
Navajo Board of Elections in contempt of court; Nov. 4 elections to go forward except presidential election; Deschene likely off ballot
ALBUQUERQUE — Two members of the Navajo Nation Supreme Court – Chief Justice Herb Yazzie and Associate Justice Eleanor Shirley – ruled Friday in Chinle, Arizona that the Navajo Election Board of Supervisors were in contempt of court for not adhering to its demands to postpone the Nov. 4 election and remove Chris Deschene from the ballot.
At the adherence of Executive Director of the Navajo Election Administration Edison Wauneka, who was not held in contempt, the court determined that the Nov. 4 elections will go forth as planned except the presidential election, which will be held in a special election at a later date.
The court said that Wauneka had asked for legal advice on how to proceed with the prior election rulings but had not received any.
Deschene will be removed from that presidential ballot, as per Wauneka’s adherence to the Supreme Court’s order, effectively ending his presidential hopes.
It is unclear whether or not Leonard Tsosie’s petition to override President Ben Shelley’s veto of the language fluency requirement would do anything to change this outcome, even if the Navajo Nation Council can obtain a two-thirds vote to override the veto. The overriding veto would still have to be applied retroactively to the special election.
Chief Justice Herb Yazzie brought Wauneka before the court before ruling on the issue, asking him whether or not he would adhere to the court’s orders, lest he be held in contempt as well.
Wauneka said 97,000 ballots have already been mailed to polling places across the Navajo Nation, and that it would cost $285,000 to conduct the special election for presidency at a later date. He said that there is already legislation in the hands of the Speaker Pro-Tem’s Office for him to sponsor the bill.
“The court will not order detention [for the board], and quite frankly, when you have a situation like we have now, open defiance and very public statements that the board doesn’t bow to the courts…this court will not further a political atmosphere to it. We won’t create martyrs here, because there has to be an end to this problem that we’ve got,” Yazzie said in his ruling.
“We cannot allow that to occur if this society is allowed to live by the rule of law.”
Yazzie noted the seriousness of the contempt of court proceedings as well.
“Whenever high-level government officials are called to the court in a contempt proceeding, you know and we know that there’s a governmental crisis, and the consequences have to be meaningful for the creation of that crisis,” Yazzie said.
“We have heard in this show-cause hearing the motion and the response. We find that the government did not show cause why the government should not be held in contempt. They offered nothing that would demonstrate that they made an effort to comply with the order.”
Yazzie also said at a hearing 20 minutes later to discuss attorney’s fees that a newer law says that Wauneka, as director of the election administration, will have to send official letters to each Board of Elections member notifying them their seat will be declared vacant.
“The Navajo Nation Election Administration, upon adequate documentation, shall provide written notice to officials that he/she has failed to maintain the qualifications of office, and that his or her position will be declared vacant.”
He added that this law means some of the election board supervisors who are running for re-election could be disqualified as they have not “maintained [their] qualifications.”
PETITIONING ATTORNEY GIVES PASSIONATE ARGUMENT
David R. Jordan, the attorney for petitioner Dale Tsosie, gave oral arguments for the petitioners. He demanded the Supreme Court uphold its own previous decisions in a passionate display to the packed courtroom.
“As we sit here today, on the brink of Election Day, the election has not been postponed, ballots have not been reprinted, and [the Board of Elections] intend to keep Mr. Deschene on the ballot,” Jordan said. “Today, they continue in defiance of your order; there must be consequences.”
Jordan suggested Board of Elections members had violated their oaths of office by not adhering to the court’s orders and suggested the Supreme Court remove every one of them from office and direct the Election Administration to continue the court-ordered election demands without interference.
“The credibility of the court is at stake,” Jordan told the courtroom. “The Navajo Nation is a nation of laws, not a nation run by the mob.”
“The time for talking has passed; the time for deliberation has passed,” Jordan said. “The court’s credibility is only going to be validated if it takes steps today to ensure that, as the highest court of the land, to ensure careful details are honored, obeyed and followed, and if they are not, that consequences – strong consequences – follow.”
RESPONDENTS’ ATTORNEY RESPONDS
Steven C. Boos, a Durango, Colorado-based attorney representing the Board of Elections, Election Administration, and Deschene in this hearing, was then given 15 minutes to address the court.
Boos, who was retained just this week for this specific hearing, began by talking about his previous experience with Navajo Nation law, though he admitted he was inexperienced.
“How awkward it makes me feel as a non-Indian to discuss Navajo Nation law,” Boos said to begin.
He then dug in to his response to the contempt of court motion filed Monday.
“When I first saw the order for a motion to show cause, I was shocked,” Boos said. “Because here, in a system that has tried as hard as it can to be different, to not have same western mentality of punishment rather than finding harmony, there was this coercive document…to strong-arm them into making this choice in a way that is totally inconsistent with what I understand to be the free will of the Navajo people.”
“[This is] the same mistake. The law is not a machine that you can throw something in a machine, crank it, and get a result. And if they don’t like it, throw [the board] in jail and strip them of their offices,” Boos continued.
He then argued that the action of the court to postpone the election was “deeply wrong,” and said, “This isn’t about a postponement, it’s about the termination of an election already taking place. So the board is being asked for those thousands of Navajos who already made their choice and exercised free will.”
He also said that the court’s prior decisions had established that fluency should be up to each individual voter.
But Yazzie fired back, asking Boos if “the Supreme Court’s order is a mere opinion,” to which Boos replied, after some hesitation, “No.”
“The order said the election had to be postponed,” he continued. “The problem is it’s already going on. How can you order the postponement of something that is already happening?”
Associate Justice Eleanor Shirley stumped Boos when she asked him when early voting began and he said he didn’t know. He said about 8,000 people had already voted.
“The right to choose leaders and participate in Navajo Nation political processes are fundamental; they are not absolute,” Shirley said.
ATTORNEY’S FEES SETTLEMENT
The hearing that took place 20 minutes after was the continuation of a hearing from earlier Friday, in which attorney’s fees stemming from Hank Whitethorne and Dale Tsosie’s original petition against Deschene’s fluency were assessed.
David R. Jordan and Justin Jones, the attorneys representing the two petitioners, agreed with Deschene’s attorney that Deschene will pay both Jordan and Jones $3000 each for fees assessed.
STATEMENT FROM DESCHENE
Chris Deschene’s presidential campaign released a statement Friday afternoon following the ruling on the ‘Chris Deschene for Navajo Nation President’ Facebook page:
“Supporters, I’m very disappointed in today’s Supreme Court decisions. This isn’t about the $6,130.83 I was absurdly ordered to pay to remove myself from the ballot by covering my opponents legal fees. Or the presidency I was striving to earn. This is about the message the court sent to you.
This ruling could have a chilling effect on the future of our elections. It sends a dangerous message that your vote doesn’t count.
This upsets me most. Because as Dine, we have an election Tuesday, despite the uncertainty of my candidacy. We have a congressional representative to elect. We have a governor to choose. We have council positions to fill. We have school board and chapter positions to fill. It’s our responsibility to vote.
As far as the future of my presidency, we have one remaining option, and that’s the pending veto override. Call your delegates. Voice your support.
And know that regardless of the outcome, I appreciate your ongoing support. I’m proud of what we have accomplished, together.
Vote Tuesday. It’s critical.”