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New Mexico lacks more than 90,000 housing units across the state a much larger shortage than previous estimates according to a keynote presentation Thursday at the ongoing New Mexico Housing Summit in Albuquerque.
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Two Albuquerque City Council candidates will remain on the Nov. 4 ballot following a judges ruling that led to the dismissal of two lawsuits against them, attorneys involved in the cases said Tuesday.
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University of New Mexico President Garnett Stokes, the first woman to hold the position, is retiring after more than seven years.
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Thirteen current and former pueblo governors and lieutenant governors are in Washington, D.C., this week to meet with members of Congress from both sides of the aisle and convince them to maintain the buffer zone, something Congress could accomplish with legislation.
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Union workers at the Creamland Dairy plants in Albuquerque and Farmington reached a tentative agreement with the company after a weeklong strike and months of negotiations.
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A Santa Fe school evacuated Thursday afternoon due to bomb threats at the nearby home of Democratic New Mexico Senate Majority Leader Peter Wirth. House Majority Floor Leader Reena Szczepanski also received a similar threat.
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Political leaders from both parties condemned the fatal shooting of conservative activist Charlie Kirk.
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New Mexico environment officials on Monday gave permission for Los Alamos National Laboratory to vent a radioactive gas within the next six months.
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New Mexico will offer child care at no cost to all residents, regardless of incomes, Gov. Michelle Lujan Grisham announced on Monday, thus becoming the first U.S. state to offer universal free child care, she said.
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In an abrupt announcement Friday, New Mexico governors office announced the same-day retirement of Teresa Casados, the latest secretary of the states beleaguered Children Youth and Families Department.