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September 19, 2006

Council President Heinrich Pushes Protection of Hawkwatch Land in the Sandia Mountains

ALBUQUERQUE – In partnership with the New Mexico Land Conservancy, the Tijeras Canyon Safe Passage Coalition and the New Mexico Department of Game and Fish, City Council President Martin Heinrich is urging the City of Albuquerque to purchase and protect a vulnerable 67-acre property, known as the Hawkwatch property, that is adjacent to the Tres Pistolas Open Space and the Sandia Mountain Wilderness.

The owner of the property, Hawkwatch International, has recently decided to sell what many people have mistakenly believed to be protected public land. In order to facilitate a solution that protects this important property, the New Mexico Land Conservancy acquired a one-year option from Hawkwatch International in July to facilitate the sale of the land to a conservation buyer.

“When people look at the Hawkwatch property, they often assume that it is already protected land, but if the City doesn’t step in and purchase this as Open Space, we could easily see this critical wildlife habitat being developed,” said Scott Wilber, Executive Director of the New Mexico Land Conservancy. The Conservancy is a statewide land trust, based in Santa Fe, dedicated to preserving New Mexico’s land heritage by protecting significant wildlife habitat, productive agricultural land and scenic open space for conservation purposes and public benefit.

The Hawkwatch property is one of the most important and imperiled wildlife connections in New Mexico, and has been recognized recently as one of North America’s five most important wildlife linkages. The corridor connects wildlife habitat in the Sandia Mountains to those of the Manzano Mountains. The New Mexico Department of Transportation and the New Mexico Department of Game & Fish have identified the Hawkwatch property as one of the few viable locations for wildlife to pass under I-40 and Old Route 66 in Tijeras Canyon.

However, the busy transportation corridor along I-40 and associated developments through Tijeras Canyon are making it increasingly difficult for terrestrial animals to travel between the two mountain ranges. The location has become a hotspot for wildlife collisions along Old Route 66, where wildlife are funneled down via the canyon drainage to the north and are crossing Old Route 66 in attempts to access food and water in Tijeras Creek below.

“The Hawkwatch property must be conserved if we are to maintain healthy, long term populations of wildlife in the Sandia Mountains. Protecting this land will help preserve the corridor that deer, bear and other wildlife need to move between the Sandias and Manzanos," says Mark Watson, a Terrestrial Habitat Specialist with the New Mexico Department of Game and Fish.

The Tijeras Canyon Safe Passage Coalition – a group of concerned citizens, conservation organizations and public agencies - has been working with the Department of Transportation and the Department of Game and Fish to improve this area for both the safety of motorists and wildlife alike. The Department of Transportation has agreed to install wildlife fencing, a box culvert and motion sensors, and clear brush under bridges to facilitate wildlife passage. The Department of Game and Fish has indicated an interest in installing a wildlife passage that would go under Old Route 66 at the base of the drainage transecting the Hawkwatch property, but it will only commit funding if there are assurances that the adjacent land is permanently conserved.

“Acquisition and permanent protection of the Hawkwatch property is a critical step toward creating a viable wildlife corridor between the Sandia Wilderness and the Manzano Mountains. The Sandias are becoming increasingly isolated because of habitat fragmentation from rapid development along the I-40 corridor through Tijeras Canyon,” says Kurt Menke of the Tijeras Canyon Safe Passage Coalition.

The cost of the area is estimated to be somewhere between $600,000 and $650,000. Heinrich is excited that a purchase of the property will serve many public benefits to Albuquerque area residents including improved public access from Old Route 66 to the Sandia Wilderness by hikers, bird watchers and sportsmen. The property is part of the scenic view-shed along the I-40 corridor through Tijeras Canyon.

“I’m very excited by this opportunity to step in and protect a vulnerable piece of land that is not only valuable to the residents of Albuquerque, but also to the wildlife that make Albuquerque’s surrounding open space such a treasure,” said Heinrich.

For further information, please contact Javier Benavidez, Assistant to City Council President Martin Heinrich, at (505)768-3152 / TTY 768-2474 or jrbenavidez@cabq.gov.

City Councilors Call for Program to Generate Power from Landfill Gas

ALBUQUERQUE - City Council President Martin Heinrich and City Councilor Isaac Benton are calling for the development of a program to convert the city’s solid waste into electricity and heat power.
“We are asking for a two-part program,” explained Council President Heinrich. “The first part would maximize the conversion of land fill methane to electricity or heat. The second part would be to digest the trash stream coming into the Cerro Colorado Landfill and convert it to electricity.”
“This is a win-win proposition for the people of Albuquerque,” stated Councilor Isaac Benton of City Council District 3. “It will help reduce the electric bill for city government by allowing the City to gain green credits on power by selling the electricity generated at these old landfills to Public Service Company of New Mexico. In addition, it would reduce our reliance on fossil fuels and the relatively greater amount of air pollution that occurs when coal is used to generate electricity. This program will also help remediate the damage and ground pollution at old landfill sites created by decomposing trash,” he said.

In the City’s 2006 goals and objectives, the Administration and the Council committed to initiating the planning and engineering for converting the City’s solid waste stream to methane gas. Currently, only 17% of gas generated at the City’s landfills is captured and turned into electricity, while 83% is flared, or wasted.
Both councilors emphasized that this effort will build upon the City’s groundbreaking work in promoting energy conservation. In the late 1980s, the City won national acclaim for converting its sewage stream into electricity to operate the liquid waste plant. In 2000, the City continued its innovative path towards sustainable energy by becoming the first municipality in the country to dedicate, on a recurring basis, a portion of its capital expenditures to energy conservation projects. The City recoups the cost of these projects from energy savings within two years.
Earlier this year, Councilor Benton introduced a proposal to increase capital spending on energy conservation projects from 1% to 2% of the General Obligation Bond and to expand the scope of this set-aside to include renewable energy projects. This was the result of an energy summit convened by Mayor Martin Chavez and Councilors Benton and Heinrich. The Council will be considering Councilor Benton’s proposal (O-06-34) at their meeting on September 18.
For further information, contact Javier Benavidez, Assistant to City Council President Heinrich at 768-3152 or Kara Shair-Rosenfield, Assistant to City Councilor Isaac Benton at 768-3186.

September 08, 2006

City Council Schedule Change

Please be advised that the October 2, 2006 City Council meeting has been changed to Wednesday, October 4, 2006.

Contact the City Council Office (768-3100) with any questions.

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