Some lawmakers say it’s time to get New Mexico school kids to lock up their cell phones during class. Now, a bill to help school districts do that is already winning approval in the Roundhouse. The bill is being called the “Anti-Distraction Policy” and it would make millions of dollars available for schools to start up programs to lock and store cell phones during teaching hours.
Both Albuquerque and Santa Fe officials say they are preparing for the colder weather. Santa Fe officials say they have activated Code Blue through Wednesday. The city
Boyle Historic LLC purchased the Boyle House at 301, 313-327 E. De Vargas St. in the third quarter of 2024 and started listing it as a short-term rental in late November 2024, John Cox, managing partner of the LLC, said.
A winter storm has been bringing rain and snow across New Mexico Wednesday. Most of the snow will end overnight, but some snow showers will stick around through Thursday. A dynamic winter storm
Two southern New Mexico Democrats are trying to establish a new state park. State Rep. Nathan Small and Sen. Jeff Steinborn, both of Las Cruces, have introduced a bill to designate 783 acres of land in the Sierra de Las Uvas as Slot Canyon Riverlands State Park.
The New Mexico strike team of firefighters are back in the Land of Enchantment after a southern California deployment.
Two auto dealerships, occupying a combined 46,000 square feet on 12 acres in Santa Fe, were approved by the Santa Fe Planning Commission last week.
The family-owned store in a 9,500-square-foot space in the Plaza Santa Fe shopping center on Zafarano Drive has drawn long lines of patrons.
Gasoline prices throughout New Mexico and much of the rest of the nation increased again last week, defying the historic pattern of decreased demand leading to lower prices in the
We’re not an all-caps kind of newspaper, so the front-page headline for the Wednesday, Jan. 22, 2025, edition of The Santa Fe New Mexican hinted you didn’t need reading glasses to start the day. “NEW BEGINNINGS” was the headline that greeted readers for a story by The New Mexican’s Daniel J.
The scandal, referred to by prosecutors as the "DWI enterprise," implicates Bernalillo County sheriff's deputies and New Mexico State Police officers as well as Albuquerque police. Prosecutors allege certain law enforcement officers participated in a yearslong scheme to arrange for drunken-driving cases to be dismissed in exchange for cash.