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The New Mexico State Ethics Commission (SEC) is an independent state agency [1] tasked with promoting the integrity of New Mexico State Government through the interpretation, enforcement, and improvement of New Mexico's campaign finance, governmental conduct, procurement, and lobbying laws.
She urged New Mexicans who are long-term care residents or family members who have complaints to call the state ombudsman program, which uses staff and volunteers to visit, investigate and resolve ...
In 2023, the Southwest Public Policy Institute (SPPI) initiated legal action against the City of Albuquerque, alleging non-compliance with the New Mexico Inspection of Public Records Act (IPRA). [10] The lawsuit arose after SPPI requested access to the automated speed enforcement citation database, which SPPI argued was incomplete and lacked ...
In 2022, police received a tip that officers were getting paid to make DWI cases disappear—the same allegation that prompted FBI raids in January.
The Eastern New Mexico News - Clovis; Enchanted Circle News - Northeast Taos County and Western Colfax County; Four Corners Business Journal - Farmington; Gallup Independent - Gallup; Green Fire Times - Santa Fe; Guadalupe County Communicator - Santa Rosa; Health City Sun - Albuquerque; El Hispano News Albuquerque - Albuquerque; Hobbs News-Sun ...
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The New Mexico Department of Workforce Solutions is a state government agency in New Mexico. The agency is responsible for economic development, education initiatives, labor relations, unemployment, workforce technology, volunteerism, and workforce development. [1] [2] [3]
The Albuquerque Police Department underwent significant changes under Chief Paul Shaver (1948–1971) who remains the city's longest-serving police chief. [7] During his tenure, Albuquerque's population more than doubled from 96,000 to 250,000 residents, resulting in Albuquerque Police Department growing from 30 police officers to 380.