NMS January 2022

Page 12

JUST THE FACTS ... & THEN SOME

There is no such thing as a “normal” legislature.

by Caren Cowan, Publisher New Mexico Stockman

T

he 2022 Legislature is just days away, commencing on January 18 and finishing on February 18, 2022. Being a 30-day Session there are supposed to be only budgetary items introduced. However, the Governor may add as many issues as she wishes on “The Call.” The Call is generally not disclosed until the first day of the Session or after. There are lots of hints in the media about issues various groups plan on bringing forward. Additionally commencing on January 3rd, legislators may begin to prefile their bills, memorials, or resolutions. Hopefully the picture may clear up some over the coming days. One of those things that will affect all businesses in New Mexico, including ranches and farms, is paid leave. The paid leave bill passed in 2021 but it is not scheduled for implementation until 2022. Those

supporting the measure admitted that it needed work and that work should be done prior to the implementation. This is another issue that pits businesses against special interests groups. More and more people fail to realize that private businesses do not have unlimited dollars to run their businesses. They can’t just print more money like the government. As employee demands increase, the ability to pay employees decreases. New legislation to create a Conservation Special Use Valuation is likely to come back. Previous iterations of this legislation have had one goal — to remove the requirement to keep livestock or some kind of agriculture on the land in order to receive the agriculture special use valuation on taxes. Although other cases have been made, the reality is that this is a new law for rich people who come into New Mexico, buy

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12

JANUARY 2022

land, and don’t want to pay the full value of the taxes due on the property if they do not participate in agriculture. In the past the legislation has attempted to create the conservation special use valuation within the agriculture special use valuation. To get the conservation special use valuation, land must come out of agriculture. Conservation provides no income to pay taxes. Not only will this change in law provide a free ride for those who can more than afford to pay their taxes, but it will take existing agricultural families off the land as well as hurting county coffers. This time the effort is under the guise of New Mexico First (NMF1st). Although agriculture participated step by step it was only a matter of time before the Resilience in New Mexico Agriculture Plan from NM1st would take a big swipe at agriculture in the state. Agriculture made it abundantly clear that the Resilience plan was not be used for changing tax policy for the community in numerous meetings across the state with this recommendation that was adopted for the plan: RECOMMENDATION 17: TAX REGULATIONS IMPACTING AGRICULTURE Protect existing tax exemptions for agriculture and enact others that fairly keep food costs low while protecting producers’ ability to maintain their businesses. It appears that new staff at NM1st worked hard to find a way around the long adopted recommendation in the Resiliency Plan. With funding from House Bill 2 (the state funding bill) probably in 2020, to the Rural Heritage Task Force, they hired a researcher at the University of New Mexico, Bureau of Business & Economic Research to look at Economic Security & Vitality for New Mexico. The researcher was also apparently involved in obtaining funding for the study. As it turns out, that “Economic Security & Vitality” study looked at only four recommendations of the Resiliency Plan (including recommendation 17). A NM1st staffer tried to cover the comcontinued on page 14 >>


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Articles inside

Decker Places 7th in World Standings

1min
pages 89-91

Youth Rodeo Reigns

3min
page 88

In The Arena

5min
pages 86-87

WSTR Pads Ropers Pockets in Las Vegas

4min
page 85

NRCHA Board of Directors Make Major Increases to Payouts, Finals Berths in 2022

5min
page 83

In Memoriam

18min
pages 58-64

Real Estate Guide

13min
pages 70-78

American Angus Association Congratulates Heritage Foundation Inductees

1min
page 82

American Gelbvieh Association Elects Board of Directors

1min
page 57

New Report Gives Red Meat a Clean Bill of Health

2min
pages 54-55

Boehler Inducted into American Gelbvieh Hall of Fame

2min
page 56

The Government’s Word: Should We Trust it

3min
pages 52-53

Monitoring is the Key

3min
page 41

New Mexico’s Old Times & Old Timers

5min
pages 42-45

USDA Opens 2022 Signup for Dairy Margin Coverage, Expands Program for Supplemental Production

5min
pages 46-47

New Mexico Federal Lands Council News

6min
pages 50-51

Coyote Populations Continue to Grow Throughout U.S.

2min
page 40

View From the Backside

3min
pages 36-37

New Mexico CowBelles Jingle Jangle

5min
pages 14-17

CoBank Releases 2022 Year Ahead Report Forces that will Shape the U.S. Rural Economy

4min
pages 18-20

Just the Facts ... and Then Some

3min
pages 12-13

New Study Sizes Up Alt-Meats’ Protein Values vs. The Real Thing

3min
pages 34-35

Use Animal Welfare to Get Meat Customers Engaged with Sustainability

6min
pages 38-39

2022 Southwest Hay & Forage Conference

3min
pages 28-29

American Agri-Women Honors William “Perry” Pendley with Veritas Award

4min
pages 32-33
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