The Elections and CNM: Attorney General’s Race

First in an occasional series

The Chronicle has been interviewing candidates on their thinking about community colleges, specifically CNM, and how their ideas would translate into their jobs following the Nov. 6 general elections. This package features responses from candidates for the New Mexico Attorney General’s Office, in the order of their positions on the ballot: Hector Balderas, Democrat, the incumbent; A. Blair Dunn, Libertarian; and Michael Hendricks, Republican.

 By Audrey Callaway Scherer

Chronicle reporter

Balderas: Safety, Access

N.M. Attorney General Hector Balderas

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Photo courtesy of Hector Balderas

In addition to improving college opportunities and campus safety for students, District Attorney Hector Balderas will continue to protect vulnerable children from violent crime, combat corruption and work to recover restitution from fraud, he said.

The Attorney General’s Office is committed to strengthening the lottery scholarship and improving campus safety across New Mexico to provide students with safe spaces to learn.

“We are aggressively committed to . . . providing greater opportunities for students to attend college,” said Balderas.

He said he will work with local and federal authorities to target Medicaid fraud, fraud against taxpayers, and human trafficking to recover millions of dollars in restitution.

“I will protect hard-working consumers by combatting political and corporate corruption,” he said.

Dunn: Transparency, Accountability

  1. Blair Dunn

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Photo courtesy of A. Blair Dunn

As he addresses corruption in government and holds officials accountable, A. Blair Dunn encouraged CNM students to do their research and vote for the candidates, not the party in this fairly historic election.

“Students at CNM and across the country, young people in general, are looking at broken system- red versus blue, tribalism,” he said. The way to break that up is to do their research.

“I strongly encourage everyone to do their research on what each candidate is concerned with and not vote per party or a philosophy that may not give them what they want,” he said.

He wants to ensure that the government is more transparent and thinks that is the chief job of the attorney general, he said.

But when we do see examples of officials who abuse their power, the job also means making sure they’re held accountable regardless of their party or whether they’re your friend.

“The most important thing I’m doing is addressing the corruption and holding officials accountable to the law and the constitution,” he said.

“In order to thrive, we need an economy that works and to get government under control,” he said. This will allow New Mexico students to make a living, be entrepreneurs and have a future in New Mexico.

Hendricks: Crime, Jobs

Michael Hendricks

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Photo courtesy of Michael Hendricks

Crime is a central issue for CNM students because it affects the availability of jobs, students’ safety on campus, and parent-students’ peace of mind while in class, according to Michael Hendricks.

“It all starts with crime and trickles down to everything else,” said Hendricks.

CNM students have trouble getting jobs out of college in the fields they studied for when the crime rate affects businesses coming to New Mexico, and without jobs, people can’t pay back student loan debt, either, he said.

Jobs are especially important for CNM students, because four-year degrees are not always necessary or better and people are often pigeonholed into a home they don’t belong in, he said.

“We have cheap land, great weather, lots of people; there’s no reason for people not to come,” he said.

Students’ ability to move around campus freely is important, he said.

In addition, parents shouldn’t have to worry about their kids when they are in class.

“If people don’t know if their kids are safe at home, how are they supposed to do well?” he said.

Without stress, people are more able to succeed, he said.

Helping addiction, addressing the actual mechanisms and helping people come out of those issues rather than throwing them behind bars or letting them walk free, is important to getting them what they need to have successful jobs, Hendricks said.

He said he wants to establish crime-fighting coalitions, including coalitions to protect children, and believes that currently there is no support from the Attorney General’s Office and local law enforcement.

Coalitions would lower the crime rate and more businesses would come to New Mexico, he said.

With more people paying taxes into the system, we could lower tax rates, too, he said.

As attorney general, he would have the resources needed to share expertise in certain areas where people lack.

Hendricks asks readers, “It’s been over three years, do you feel safer today?” Doing the same thing over again and expecting different outcomes is the definition of insanity, he said.

He said he would like to move forward to a brighter future.

“I would like to be that change.”

 

 

Viable Earth: Upcycling for environment and society

By: Stefany Olivas, Guest Writer

The effects of sustainability can be difficult to grasp. Health, energy, economics and inevitably, the environment have a single concept that links them — sustainability. Over the course of this term, guest writer Stefany Olivas, a biology major with a concentration in sustainability, will explore the issues and concepts involved in “going green.”

Upcycling, the practice of repurposing an object for another use, has become a popular practice. Communications Major Dana Chandler and Nutrition Major Ernest Padilla-Garcia are two such people.

C h a n d l e r said she started Project Reuse New Mexico to encourage resi­dents to reuse dis­posable products, as a way to help the environment.

The idea began after a geology class in which students studied the Great Pacific Garbage Patch and a Public Speaking class where she used persuasive speech to encourage her classmates to use reus­able plastic bottles and grocery bags, she said.

Continue reading “Viable Earth: Upcycling for environment and society”

Special Series: The deal with drugs: Pills

By: Daniel Johnson, Staff Reporter | Photo By: Stefany Olivas, Managing Editor

“The Deal with Drugs” is a special series that looks at aspects of drug use and addiction.

Prescription medica­tions, like Percocet; Vicodin; morphine and Fentanyl, are opiates that can induce sleep and alleviate moderate to severe pain. They can assist in the treatment of opium addiction. These drugs can also cause fatigue, depres­sion, restlessness, anxiety, dry mouth, muscle and bone pain, confusion, severe respiratory depression, or cardiac arrest, according to Opiates.com.

Director of the Student Health Center Marti Brittenham said opiates are used for pain relief, but if misused can slow respiratory functions to fatal levels.

“If not taken as pre­scribed, a person could fall asleep and never wake up,” she said.

Continue reading “Special Series: The deal with drugs: Pills”

Special Series: The Deal With Drugs

By: Stefany Olivas, Managing Editor | Photos By: Stefany Olivas, Managing Editor

“The Deal with Drugs” is a special series that looks at various aspects and issues of drugs and drug addiction.

Psychedelics are a clas­sification of drugs that have mind-altering effects because they affect the brain chemistry easily, said Director of Nursing Programs Diane Evans-Prior.

Psychedelics can alter neural transmission and cause visual or auditory hallucinations, she said.

“It’s that they change the perceptions. Visually, the colors seem brighter, your sensations feel intense. Some people will report that the experience is like synesthesia, where people will smell music or hear color,” she said.

An experience can be posi­tive or negative. Taking peyote is almost always associated with heavy vomiting, she said. If someone takes the drug on a whim and has depression or anxiety, the psychedelic trip can make the effects of the disorder worse, she said.

“A lot of people who are pursuing this are looking for something to stop the pain, something to make them forget their bad lives. Often times it is considered a bad trip when the hallucinations end up being very terrifying,” she said.

Continue reading “Special Series: The Deal With Drugs”

The Deal With Drugs: Marijuana

By: Christopher Pope, Staff Reporter

Marijuana can have potentially harmful psycho­logical side effects, but it can also yield short-term benefits, said part-time CHSS instruc­tor Karren Johnson.

Marijuana also contains THC which turns into tar when smoked and impairs lung func­tion. Cannabis can have many positive psychological effects, such as calming people with anxiety disorders and PTSD, she said.

“It’s highly psychologically addictive, even though it’s not physically addictive. What we mean by that is someone can become psychologically depen­dent on it, but quitting won’t cause physical withdrawals like with cocaine or heroin. That’s why everyone always says ‘it’s not addictive; it’s not a prob­lem,’” she said.

Liberal Arts major Daniel Berry said he thinks marijuana use is much safer than alcohol use. He said he does not think there is anything wrong with it. It should be legalized because it does not do damage to the body like alcohol does, said Berry.

Continue reading “The Deal With Drugs: Marijuana”

Special Series: The Deal with Drugs

By: Shaya Rogers, Staff Reporter | Photo By: Stefany Olivas, Managing Editor

Part One of a Series

“The Deal with Drugs” is a special fall term series that looks at various aspects and issues of drugs and drug addiction. Look for “Marijuana” in issue nine.

Drugs, both illicit and prescribed, and drug addiction are hot discussion topics for a variety of reasons. This CNM Chronicle special series will look at the social, legal, medicinal, economic and health arguments and issues for and against drugs of all types.

Students, faculty and staff have the opportunity to express their thoughts on subjects sur­rounding drugs, and their ben­efits or drawbacks.

Part-time CHSS instruc­tor Monie Arfai said drug addictions are not limited to any certain group of people and everyone knows some­one who has had some type of drug problem, he said.

“You will see people from all walks of life. It’s not only poor people, or one race. Every race, this is a commonality we have. Every ethnicity, every age, you will see them,” said Arfai.

There needs to be more social awareness and proper support systems for individuals who may have a drug dependency. Increased awareness will also help individuals learn to say no to drugs if they are confronted with that situation, he said.

Continue reading “Special Series: The Deal with Drugs”