New Mexico

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The New Mexico project on Sunshine Review


The New Mexico Constitution of 1912, as amended, dictates the form of government in the state.

The State Legislature is comprised of a 70-seat House of Representatives and a 42-seat Senate. The Democratic Party generally dominates state politics, and as of 2008 50% of voters were registered Democrats, 33% were registered Republicans, and 15% did not affiliate with either of the two major parties.

Help to build a transparent and accountable government in New Mexico


New Mexico Breaking News...

Open records case: State racks up hefty attorney fees

November 15, 2008: The state Taxation and Revenue Department spent at least $31,000 on outside attorneys for a public-records lawsuit against it, and thousands more on in-house attorneys.

The state last month announced it was settling the lawsuit filed by Albuquerque private investigator Eric Griego, who claimed the state was illegally withholding documents he uses in his business. Read the full article here.

Public-records lawsuit settled
October 11, 2008: The state Department of Taxation and Revenue has settled a two-year-old public-records case and agreed to pay $117,500 to a private investigator who sued the department for access to the records.

A lawyer for the New Mexico Foundation for Open Government said the settlement amount was the largest ever made in such a case. Read the full article here.

Judge rules in Sandia landfill public records case
October 8, 2008: A state district judge has ruled that a report concerning groundwater monitoring at Sandia National Laboratories' mixed waste landfill is public record.

The state Environment Department had sued Albuquerque-based advocacy group Citizen Action last fall to keep the report secret. The department cited executive privilege in preventing the disclosure of the 2006 report by TechLaw, a consulting company. Read the full article here.

New Mexico Tech Resorts to Snake Oil
August 17, 2008: New Mexico Tech is an institution widely respected as a purveyor of science and knowledge. So it's especially sad to see it sink to peddling snake oil as a way to justify its ill-advised refusal to turn over documents in response to a request under the state's Inspection of Public Records Act. Read the full article here.

...more New Mexico news

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Portions of this article were taken from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia under the GNU license.