NMIPL IN THE NEWS
Carlsbad Current Argus. Sep. 3, 2020 New Mexico finalizes oil and gas wastewater regulations, lawmakers hear testimony (Rev. Nick King Quoted)
Las Cruces Sun-News, Aug. 19, 2020, Report on solving climate crisis brings hope (Co-authored by Michael Sells, Clara Sims and Edith Yanez)
Santa Fe New Mexican, Aug. 15, 2020 Vote your values this November (Commentary by Larry Rasmussen and Tabitha Arnold)
The 2023 Interfaith Power and Light National Conference was wonderful and packed!
/in Earth & Faith, Faithful Citizenship, Featured Articles, NEWS, Reflections /by admin(Clara Sims and Sister Joan Brown, osf, represented Interfaith Power & Light New Mexico and El Paso at national IPL’s annual conference and lobby day in Washington, D.C., earlier this month)
By Clara Sims
Our first full day of programming focused on the conference theme of “Climate Solutions Through Truth, Justice and Reconciliation,” with a Diversity Equity and Inclusion (DEI) Training. This training was led by the wonderful leaders of the Spark Mill and Innerwork Center. We spent time sharing our personal experiences and learning together about the many intersecting identities and concerns of IPL and different state affiliates who hold both shared and distinct concerns about pathways to greater racial equity and justice.
In representing New Mexico, we lifted up the need to continue to work closely with our indigenous siblings and partners especially, and we must continue to center how the impacts of colonial legacies and worldviews remain so present in the extractivism and dumping our communities experience as “sacrifice zones.” As a minority majority state we know NM IPL holds unique work in racial justice and reconciliation, and we wholeheartedly affirm the need to move into ever deeper work at state and national levels to reckon with the many ways racial injustice and climate vulnerability powerfully overlap and reinforce one another.
Our day ended with the extraordinary keynote speaker, Jacqui Patterson – Founder and Executive Director of the Chisholm Legacy Project: A Resource Hub for Black Frontline Climate Leadership. Jacqui shared so much wisdom, grit, and inspiration with us – lifting up the voices of many prophetic artists, musicians, and poets in her remarks. The opening poem Jacqui shared, “Hope Isn’t A Vacant Lot,” is worth spending time with especially…
Lobby Day
The next day we got to prep for our lobby days at the Capital with panels on target legislation as well as “best practice tips” from veteran advocates, including our very own Sr. Joan Brown. Joan acted in a role play about visiting with legislative representatives, displaying *excellent* acting skills in her role. No surprise, when it comes to getting the non-committal staff member of a moderate Iowan congressman to listen to the climate concerns of small family farmers, you know which Kansas-born Sister to call!
Our legislative focus this year at the national IPL level centered on the Farm Bill, Recovering America’s Wildlife Act (RAWA), and Permitting Reform. For the first time ever the Farm Bill, which is updated every five years, has the potential to include comprehensive climate-conscious legislation. We are thrilled to report that our New Mexico congressional representatives are championing this legislation and others and were so engaged in our raising of concerns for New Mexico communities, especially for those in southeast and Permian Basin where much more accountability is needed for methane pollution and set-backs from oil and gas wells and so much more. Above all, we offered gratitude to our congresspeople for all their hard work and service and persistence. They recognize how much we are also offering dedication and persistence in our service to New Mexico communities.
The challenges are many and multiplying but there is also such hope in our working together and dreaming of what can still grow in goodness for all.
Joan and I are both grateful to be returning home to keep persisting with you, and, as a parting thought – these words from Rasheena Fountain:
“Home is where footprints survive and all life thrives
In my dream, Chicago blues join the songbirds in melodies of hope,
a vision I imagine as skyscraper promises to you, the skies
I wish in new heights, in treetop rebellions the oaks and maples offer
to the children, from our ancestors, for the continuation of breaths
I love beyond white picket fences into avenue streets
I reenvision vacant lots as forests—spaces where we can plant new seed
Home is where footprints survive and all life thrives”
Webinar to Examine Use of PFAs in Fracking in New Mexico
/in Campaigns, Earth & Faith, Featured Articles, NEWS, Permian Basin /by adminPhysicians for Social Responsibility is publishing an important report entitled Fracking with “Forever Chemicals.” The report presents previously unpublicized evidence that major oil and gas companies, including ExxonMobil and Chevron, have used per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances (PFAS), or substances that could degrade into PFAS, in hydraulic fracturing (“fracking”) for oil and gas in more than 1,200 wells in six U.S. states. One of those states is New Mexico.
Citizens Caring for the Future, an IPL-NM/EP affiliate, invites you to a virtual webinar to examine the the report and present information from local PSR experts. Read PSR Report
Click here to register for the webinar
Water in the Mid Rio Grande Area: A Tale of Two Cities
/in Featured Articles, NEWS, Sacred Land and Water /by admin(Excerpt from mid Rio Grande Times)
Many of us in the mid Rio Grande area take water for granted when we open the faucet or flush the toilet. We may not know anything about the processes for supplying potable water or its disposal after use. We probably notice that our water bills also contain a bill for wastewater disposal, and we may realize that our water disposal is related to our water use. But we may know very little about the water management system.
In the larger metro area, the Albuquerque Bernalillo County Water Utility Authority (ABCWUA) manages drinking water and wastewater disposal. The Albuquerque Metropolitan Statistical Area (MSA) for which census data is regularly collected includes Albuquerque as well as towns such as Estancia, Moriarty, Edgewood, Cedar Crest, and surrounding areas. Not all of the MSA is served by ABCWUA, though. ABCWUA draws on the Middle Rio Grande Basin for groundwater, while the Estancia Basin is used by many non-urban water users in the area.
Households in non-urban settings have more direct involvement in their own water supply and disposal. Non-urban households – outside of towns with municipal water supplies – get their water from groundwater wells and dispose of their wastewater through onsite (septic) treatment systems.
Read full article