Login

Gallup Sun

Friday, May 03rd

Last update09:54:53 AM GMT

You are here: News Sun News

Sun News

What’s the Plan?

E-mail Print PDF
Legislators in the Yazzie/Martinez case seek answers

As the new school year gets underway in the midst of the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic, educators are doing everything they can to secure the necessary equipment to ensure their students have the capability and access to remote learning.

While larger school districts in...

Grants to support local governments, businesses

E-mail Print PDF
Gallup mayor feels disappointed

On the first day of September, Gov. Michelle Lujan Grisham and the Dept. of Finance and Administration announced $150 million in CARES Act grants to local governments across the state to cover the costs brought about by the COVID-19 pandemic.

In applying for CARES Act funds, Gallup Mayor Louis Bonaguidi said he took into account the three city lockdowns, police checkpoints and setting up motel rooms for homeless people being tested for COVID-19.

Bonaguidi told the Gallup Sun Sept. 1 that there was some confusion about how to fill out the request for the grant.

A news release from Gallup City Clerk Alfred Abeita says Gallup requested about $1.7...

Navajo Nation says Impact Aid dollars not for Yazzie/Martinez court case

E-mail Print PDF
WINDOW ROCK, Ariz. — Navajo Nation President Jonathan Nez and Vice President Myron Lizer issued a letter on Sept. 2 to New Mexico Gov. Michelle Lujan Grisham and Public Education Secretary Ryan Stewart, reaffirming the Navajo Nation’s position that federal Impact Aid dollars should not be used to address the mandates set forth by the 2018 Yazzie/Martinez court decision that found that the state of New Mexico had failed to comply with its constitutional mandate to provide sufficient education for “at risk” students including Navajo students.

In July 2018, Judge Sarah Singleton ruled that all New Mexico students have a right to be college and career-ready and that the state...

Climate changes occurring across N.M.?

E-mail Print PDF
As pollution from oil and natural gas aggravate respiratory conditions and worsen symptoms of COVID-19, New Mexico lawmakers are currently in the rulemaking process for methane/ozone regulations.

New Mexico political leaders hosted a webinar on Aug. 26 to discuss climate and public health issues within the state.

Topics addressed by the panel included the effects of global warming and air pollution across the state.

Pollution from oil and natural gas, according to data from the state, can “aggravate respiratory conditions and worsen symptoms of COVID-19.”

“Passage of the Energy Transition Act has put our state on a path to ensure that by 2045, the electricity grid will be 100...

Earthweek: Diary of a Changing World

E-mail Print PDF
Week ending Friday, August 28, 2020


No COVID Respite

The sharp decline in greenhouse gases spewed into the atmosphere during the global pandemic this year will have virtually no impact on the future of global heating, scientists predict. Even with far fewer vehicles on the world’s roadways and industrial production sharply curbed, a new analysis says global temperatures will be only 0.01 degree Celsius lower by 2030 than earlier predictions. Writing in the journal Nature  Climate Change, Piers Forster, from the University of Leeds, and colleagues say that only strong green energy stimulus efforts can keep the world from exceeding the 1.5-degree Celsius warming target by...

Page 308 of 705