NM Gov's Office of Housing moving to state workforce agency
The Village Center Project, including 204 affordable housing units, under construction in Los Ranchos de Albuquerque in July 2023. (Photo courtesy Village Of Los Ranchos)
A small team of state employees focused on solving New Mexico's housing crisis will move from the governor's office to the state's workforce agency, a temporary move while the informal office seeks a permanent home.
Gov. Michelle Lujan Grisham has sought statutory authority for a state Office of Housing from the New Mexico Legislature for the last two years, but legislation doing so failed in both sessions. Legislation would have empowered the four-person team to create a statewide strategy to solve the housing shortage and attached it administratively to the New Mexico Department of Finance and Administration, which received more than $100 million this legislative session to spend on housing and homelessness.
In a news release Monday, the governor's office said the move to the Department of Workforce Solutions will create a strong connection between job creation and housing, plus allow for more accountability after the state's significant investment in solving the housing crisis here.
Record number of housing bills introduced this session, but little to show for it, advocate says
'This move will ensure that the Office of Housing has the resources it needs to put these dollars to use solving our state's housing shortage as we continue pursuing legislation to make the state's housing and homelessness initiatives permanent,' Lujan Grisham said in a statement.
The move comes a few weeks after the governor fired Daniel Werwath, her senior housing policy adviser tasked with, among other things, convincing lawmakers to approve a state Housing Office. Werwath told Source New Mexico after his departure that he tried to achieve 'some systemic change around housing, which apparently there's less appetite for than I had hoped.'
The state lacks more than 30,000 housing units, according to recent estimates. Employers in Albuquerque, where lawmakers hope the majority of new housing spending will occur, added 31,000 jobs in the last three years, but city developers added only 9,000 new housing units in that period, according to a January report from Pew Charitable Trusts.
In the coming months, Workforce Solutions Secretary Sarita Nair will come up with a recommendation for the office's permanent home, governor's spokesperson Michael Coleman told Source New Mexico.
'It could remain at DWS, move to another agency, or stand alone. There is no firm deadline for the recommendation. The governor is confident that DWS is the right place for the Office of Housing at this time,' Coleman said in an email Tuesday.
Nair, in the news release, said one of the state workforce's biggest challenges is finding affordable housing. Merging the housing office and the workforce agency will enable 'strong collaboration and accountability,' she said.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
a day ago
- Yahoo
Governor's Office: Operation Zia Shield is different than situation in California
ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. (KRQE) – The situation in California comes as the New Mexico National Guard looks to help Albuquerque police fight crime. A spokesperson for Governor Michelle Lujan Grisham sent this statement: In Albuquerque, the deployment of the National Guard represents a fundamentally different approach to public safety than what we're witnessing in California. New Mexico National Guard members are working collaboratively with local law enforcement at the direct request of the city's police chief, and the Guard is supporting, not replacing, law enforcement officers in their efforts to combat illegal drugs and violent crime. In California, President Trump disregarded Gov. Newsom's authority as commander-in-chief and deployed armed members of the National Guard to Los Angeles even though State and local law enforcement stated emphatically that they did not need the assistance. Gov. Lujan Grisham's measured approach in Albuquerque aims to strengthen public safety through cooperation and partnership, while helping to address real community needs. The president's deployment of the National Guard in Los Angeles is inflaming social tensions rather than resolving them. Michael Coleman, Communications Director, Office of New Mexico Gov. Michelle Lujan Grisham Albuquerque Mayor Tim Keller echoed a similar sentiment, saying that, unlike Los Angeles, the National Guard here will be doing non-enforcement activities. But Republican state Senator Bill Sharer, of Farmington, disagreed, saying, 'The governor….has no business opposing similar actions taken by the president to improve public safety.' Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

Yahoo
a day ago
- Yahoo
Saying 'I do' in New Mexico will now cost twice as much as marriage license fee increases
Formalizing a marriage these days is often not the difficult part; walk in and the paperwork is there waiting for you. But in New Mexico, it's about to become more than twice as expensive. For the first time in decades, the cost of a marriage license in New Mexico will increase, jumping from $25 to $55, effective June 20, following the passage of bipartisan legislation during the 2025 legislative session updating the fee structure. While the price is more than doubling, New Mexico's fee remains lower than in Texas or Arizona, where the cost can exceed $80. Some states charge as much as $115. According to a news release from the Santa Fe County Clerk's Office, the fee change supports long-term recordkeeping, child welfare programs and local services across the state. Santa Fe County is one of New Mexico's most popular wedding destinations. 'Most people only think about their marriage license once — on their wedding day,' Santa Fe County Clerk Katharine Clark said in a statement. 'But it's a legal document that can be needed decades later to access benefits, prove identity or navigate end-of-life paperwork. We want to ensure your record will be securely stored, easy to find, and legally valid when you need it." Senate Bill 290, signed by Democratic Gov. Michelle Lujan Grisham this year, was sponsored by Sen. Linda Trujillo, D-Santa Fe. It increases marriage license fees and changes how they are distributed. The changes will result in increased funds for counties, according to a Legislative Finance Committee fiscal impact report for the bill. With the updated fee, the fund is expected to gain an estimated $32,500 annually to expand prevention programs and family support services statewide. Beginning June 20, according to the County Clerk's Office, the $55 marriage license fee will be distributed as follows: * $20 to county clerk's offices * $20 to the Children's Trust Fund, which supports community-based programs to prevent child abuse and neglect * $15 to the county general fund The Children's Trust Fund, administered by the Children, Youth and Families Department, previously relied mostly on specialty license plate revenue, the release from the clerk's office said. The higher fees could give pennywise couples an excuse to hold off on the nuptials; however, the Legislative Finance Committee analysis noted even with New Mexico's comparatively low license fees, the state's marriage rate has been skidding for the last decade. "In 2022, New Mexico had the lowest marriage rate in the country at 4.2 per 1,000 people," the report said. "Nevada, Utah, and Colorado were among the highest at 25.9, 9.9, and 7.5 per 1,000, respectively."

Yahoo
4 days ago
- Yahoo
Four Trump administration officials to travel to Santa Fe for regional governors event
Jun. 6—SANTA FE — New Mexico's capital city frequently touts its art galleries, restaurants and progressive policies, but there's a different brand of politics coming to the City Different. Four Cabinet secretaries from President Donald Trump's administration will join seven western governors — including Gov. Michelle Lujan Grisham — later this month at the Western Governors' Association's summer meeting in Santa Fe. The two-day event, which starts June 23 at a luxury downtown hotel, will feature discussions about housing shortages, outdoor recreation and wildfire response efforts, according to an online agenda. It will also allow attendees to mingle with corporate sponsors of the event, and travel to the Santa Fe Opera and other local spots. The Trump administration officials slated to attend the meeting are Interior Secretary Doug Burgum, Education Secretary Linda McMahon, Labor Secretary Lori Chavez-DeRemer and U.S. Environmental Protection Agency Administrator Lee Zeldin. All four will headline the group's annual meeting as keynote speakers, a WGA spokesman confirmed Friday. Burgum, the former governor of North Dakota, took over as Interior secretary from former New Mexico congresswoman Deb Haaland in January, after Trump won the election. As for the governors slated to attend the event, the list includes Mike Dunleavy of Alaska, Jared Polis of Colorado, Kelly Armstrong of North Dakota, Spencer Cox of Utah, Mark Gordon of Wyoming and Arnold Palacios of the Northern Mariana Islands. Five of those governors are Republicans, with Polis and Lujan Grisham the lone Democrats. Additional governors could also end up attending. As for Lujan Grisham, who will be the event's official host, the governor has vowed to work with Trump administration officials when possible, even while criticizing a Republican-backed plan to trim federal spending on Medicaid and other programs. "My job is to create stability in every single relationship in the federal government," she said during a Bloomberg TV interview last month. The Western Governors' Association is a bipartisan group that includes 19 states and three U.S. territories — American Samoa, Guam and the Northern Mariana Islands. Previous WGA annual meetings have been held in Olympic Valley, California, and Boulder, Colorado. Meanwhile, Santa Fe has also hosted big political gatherings in past years, including a National Governors Association summer meeting in 2018. That event included a Western-themed reception and a private burning of Zozobra for governors and their family members.