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Latest New Mexico news, sports, business and entertainment at 3:20 a.m. MST

  • New Mexico lawmakers among beneficiaries of relief grants

SANTA FE, N.M. (AP) — A $100 million burst of grants to small business across New Mexico illustrates the overwhelming breadth and depths of economic distress brought on by the coronavirus. Public records obtained by The Associated Press show that successful applicants included businesses run by leading state legislators and a family amusement park that has sued the governor twice to reopen. Others include Catholic charities, local chambers of commerce and near-empty restaurants and hotels run by lone proprietors and local business magnates. The money ran out too soon for thousands of applicants that were denied grants. State lawmakers are now devising new lifelines for local businesses crippled by the pandemic. 

  • Biden halts oil and gas leases, permits on US land and water

BILLINGS, Mont. (AP) — The Biden administration has suspended new oil and gas leasing and drilling permits on U.S. lands and waters for 60 days as officials move to reverse the energy and environmental policies of the Trump administration. The suspension announced Thursday follows campaign pledges by President Joe Biden to halt new drilling on U.S. lands and end the leasing of federal energy reserves as part of his plan to address climate change. It drew a quick backlash from the oil industry and Republicans who said it could kill jobs. The order did not ban new drilling outright and a small number of senior Interior Department officials can still issue approvals.

  • New Mexico universities feel pinch of pandemic

ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. (AP) — Officials at New Mexico's two largest universities say freshman enrollment is holding steady if not increasing despite the challenges brought on by the pandemic. However, University of New Mexico President Garnett Stokes acknowledged that enrollment overall has decreased and officials are concerned about the negative trend. Stokes on Thursday delivered her annual state of the university address as colleges and universities across the country grapple with shrinking enrollments. At New Mexico State University, President John Floros expects spring enrollment to hold steady. He said the challenges going forward will be finding more ways to make higher education accessible to more people.

  • 'Your Land'? Some Native Americans question inaugural song

FLAGSTAFF, Ariz. (AP) — Native Americans celebrated as Joe Biden revoked a pipeline permit and halted border wall construction on his first day as president. But amid the revelry, some saw a glitch in his swearing-in ceremony with the lyrics of the song "This Land is Your Land." The folk tune is popular around campfires and in grade schools, but it also called to mind the nation's long history of land disputes involving tribes. Woody Guthrie wrote the song in the 1940s as a retort to "God Bless America." Other inaugural events showcased tribes across the country wearing traditional regalia, dancing and praying.

  • Prison inmates among latest confirmed cases in New Mexico

SANTA FE, N.M. (AP) — Ten inmates at a state prison and one inmate at a federal lockup in central New Mexico are among the latest confirmed COVID-19 cases. State health officials on Thursday reported an additional 997 cases. That puts the statewide total since the pandemic began at nearly 167,000 cases. Another 35 deaths were also reported, bringing that tally to nearly 3,050. Hospitalizations also remained steady, with more than 640 people being treated around the state. Nearly all New Mexico counties remain in the higher risk red zone, with spread and positivity rates above the targets set by health officials.

  • New Mexico governor signs bill to fund legislature, security

SANTA FE, N.M. (AP) — Gov. Michelle Lujan Grisham is signing the first bill of the 2021 legislative session, funding the work of the legislature amid heightened security concerns. The $32 million bill is a sliver of the approximately $7 billion in general funds the legislature will deliberate allocating in this year's longer 60-day session. New this year, the bill includes $2.1 million in additional security costs amid an unprecedented hardening of the capitol complex following the Jan. 6 riot in Washington, D.C. The New Mexico legislative session has been closed to the public because of the pandemic, and the capitol is guarded by soldiers, sheriff's deputies and state police due to threats.

  • Biden halts border wall building after Trump's final surge

SAN DIEGO (AP) — President Joe Biden has ordered a "pause" on all border wall construction, one of 17 executive orders issued his first day in office. The move leaves billions of dollars in unfinished work under contract after his predecessor, Donald Trump, worked feverishly to successfully to build 450 miles. A Senate aide tells The Associated Press that the government has spent $6.1 billion of $10.8 billion under contract. The full amount under contract would have extended Trump's wall to 664 miles. The Biden administration will negotiate cancellation fees and and look into whether what's left can be spent elsewhere.

  • Albuquerque, county, water authority to promote pay equality

ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. (AP) — The city of Albuquerque, Bernalillo County and their joint water authority say they will promote gender pay equality by giving a 5% contract preference to businesses that pay men and women equitably. A statement released Thursday said the preference being offered by the city, the county and the Albuquerque Bernalillo County Water Authority means that a company's bid amount will be considered 5% lower if equal pay is verified within the company. According to the statement, agencies in the three governments will implement the change starting Monday and that a company's pay equity reporting from is valid for one year.