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Meeting Marty Chavez

Earlier this week, a local blogger attended a house party and met Mayor Chavez. She was pleasantly surprised. Read her full account:

Yesterday evening I attended a house party for Mayor Marty Chavez. Melinda did a great job and the party was very successful. Her house is up for sell and people should take the time to look at it (4300 Anderson SE). To be perfectly honest I was not sure what to expect from this party since I have received different reactions from people when it comes to our current Mayor. I personal don’t know the man very well but friends have warned that he can be very difficult to work with or for but I did not see that last evening.

I saw a very charming, caring humble man who loves his city and is willing to work hard to make it a great place to live. At no point in the evening did he attack either of his two opponents which I found to be a very pleasant change. When he spoke it was about what he wanted to do to deal with issues faced by our city now and in the future.

Marty Chavez loves the city, he has a record of results and he has a vision for our future. Even his critics can't deny how much he cares about our city and it's people.

Marty Wins Debate, Hands Down

Marty Chavez won tonight's debate, hands down.

Tonight, two candidates offered political attacks and idle platitudes… only one candidate offered a record of real, honest results and a comprehensive vision for our city's future. That leader is Marty Chavez.

Marty loves Albuquerque. He was born here, raised here and educated here. He cares deeply about our city and our people.

Marty's campaign is focused on the issues that matter. Public safety is Marty's #1 priority. He's pledged to put 100 more cops on the street. He arrested the Memphis mob and passed the toughest anti-sexual predator law in the nation.

The recession is wrecking havoc on cities across the country. Other cities have slashed jobs and forced shutdowns and furloughs. Thanks to Mayor Chavez' steady, effective and fiscally responsible leadership, Albuquerque has fared better than any major city in the Southwest.

Mayor Chavez is a friend of small business who has encouraged sustainable development across the city. As an ambassador for our city, he's diversified our economy by bringing new employers to Albuquerque. He's encouraged economic growth while ensuring sustainability - it's why we've won multiple awards including being named the "Greenest City in America."

Today, more than ever, we need proven leadership in City Hall with a record of results and a vision for our city's future. If you agree, I hope you'll volunteer for our campaign. There are less than two weeks left until Election Day and we have an all out blitz planned to keep our city moving forward.

IT'S CRUNCH TIME! VOLUNTEER NOW!

The Richards attack, and attack and attack. But, when you go to the polls, ask yourself, what is their vision for Albuquerque? And, what kind of record do they offer? The truth is, neither Richard has outlined a vision for our city's future. Marty again tonight proved why he inspires all of us. He still has the passion and the ability to lift Albuquerque to even great heights.

Impeccably Honest?

Richard "R.J." Berry describes himself as 'impeccably honest,' but, today's New Mexico Independent questions that assertion. Reporter Marjorie Childress writes:

Cumbre Construction, the company that Albuquerque mayoral candidate R.J. Berry describes as a "family-owned business," but is actually owned by his wife, Maria Berry, has secured almost $50 million dollars in federal construction contracts from 2000 to 2008, contracts facilitated by the company's ability to access government sole-source contracts due to its status as a woman- and minority-owned business.

Is R.J. Berry being honest with the voters of Albuquerque about his "family owned" business? Is he being honest with the Federal Government who gives the "family owned" company contracts as a woman and minority owned business? The article continues:

In his stump speech and campaign materials, Albuquerque mayoral candidate Berry refers to his family business, and says he'll run the city "more like a business and less like a political machine."

Let's hope not, for Albuquerque's sake. Read the whole article for yourself.

Animal Protection Voters Endorse Chavez

Mayor Chavez is an animal lover. He's often seen with his cute pound puppy Dukes by his side. And, as Mayor, he's been a friend to our furry friends. That's why he earned the endorsement of the Animal Protection Voters of New Mexico.

Heather Ferguson, the group's legislative director, commented on the endorsement:

Chavez has demonstrated his commitment to the welfare of animals...He has made animal welfare an integral part of the improvements sought across city government...The Mayor's focus has been on efforts to reduce pet overpopulation and improve the care and treatment animals receive in the city's shelters...

Mayor Chavez has received scores of endorsements from a diverse coalition of organizations.

The Election Has Started

The mayoral election in Albuquerque is underway. Thousands of city voters are using absentee ballots to cast their votes from the comfort of their own homes or at four early voting locations across the city.

If you haven't requested your vote by mail ballot yet, there's still time. All you have to do is fill out a form on the City of Albuquerque's Website and the City Clerk will mail you a ballot. Vote for Mayor Chavez from home!

REQUEST YOUR VOTE BY MAIL BALLOT ONLINE!

Starting yesterday, Wednesday, September 16th and running through Friday, October 2nd, you can also vote at four locations across Albuquerque. You can vote at the following locations Monday - Friday, 8 am - 5 pm. Make sure to bring identification.

Albuquerque/Bernalillo County Government Center
One Civic Plaza
City Clerk's Office, Basement Level
Room B2041
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City of Albuquerque Records Center
604 Menaul NW
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APS City Center
6400 Uptown Blvd. NE, Suite 101 West
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Ladera Plaza
5300 Sequoia Rd. NW, Suite G
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Don't wait for a busy Tuesday in early October to vote. Vote early or vote by mail now!

The Mayor's opponents are getting desperate. They're not criticizing Mayor Chavez' vision for our city's future nor are they criticizing the results he's delivered for the city. Instead, they're distorting his record and misleading the voters.

Mayor Chavez is talking about issues and his record of results. He's highlighting his tough on crime policies and his plan to put 100 new police officers on the street. He's talking about how Albuquerque is a national leader in environmental sustainability. And, he's talking about how he's created a city friendly to small businesses and job creation.

If you're sick and tired of the same old attack politics, use your vote to keep a results oriented mayor on the job working for you. Vote early and vote absentee now.

My #1 Priority

Public safety is my #1 priority. My vision for Albuquerque: safe neighborhoods where all crime is dramatically reduced.

It's why I created the safe cities strike force which has cleaned up crime ridden properties across Albuquerque. When the Memphis Mob came to town, we arrested each and every one of them. We passed the toughest anti-sexual predator law in the nation. And, I'll put 100 new police officers on our streets. Watch my new ad and learn about my commitment to public safety.

When it comes to my commitment to public safety - don't take my word for it, ask the Albuquerque Police Officers Association (APOA) or the Fraternal Order of Police (FOP). Both organizations endorsed my candidacy.

APOA President Joey Sigala had this to say, "Mayor Chavez has an unmatched, proven track record of being tough on crime. He's a strong leader with a vision for our future and we're proud to endorse him. No Mayor has worked harder than Marty Chavez to fight crime and to give us the resources we need to make Albuquerque safer."

So, watch my new ad, forward it to your family and friends and reaffirm my commitment to building a safer Albuquerque.

Chavez Brings Non-Profits Together to Help the Homeless

When Albuquerque received $1.7 million to combat homelessness, Mayor Chavez convened the best non-profits in the sector to discuss how to most effectively use the resources.

New Mexico Business Weekly reports:

Don’t waste a good crisis.

That’s one way to look at the current recession, said Dennis Plummer.

“It’s really true,” added the executive director of the Metropolitan Homelessness Project in Albuquerque. “This has pulled voices and people to the table we have not seen before.”

Plummer’s group was among a number of nonprofits that focus on homelessness that were brought together by Mayor Martin Chávez when the city received $1.7 million in federal stimulus funds to prevent homelessness.

“We thought we were there to defend our budgets,” Plummer said. “But that was not the conversation at all. He asked us to tell him how to spend the money.”

What resulted was a series of meetings to cooperate on a strategy for reaching those at risk of becoming homeless. Catholic Charities is coordinating the effort and is the fiscal agent, although all the agencies are sharing in oversight. Plummer said the idea is sort of like a one-stop-shop on wheels, where case managers can connect people with different services so they don’t fall through the economic cracks.

“There was a real clarity about our connectedness,” Plummer said. “We stayed focused on the need, not who was running the program or who gets the money.”

Effective leadership means bringing people together to produce good ideas and, ultimately, deliver results for the city. Mayor Chavez does that everyday in City Hall. We need to keep his strong and effective leadership working for us.

Carpenters Endorse Chavez

Citing his support for working people, the 1,400 member strong Southwest Regional Council of Carpenters (Local #1319) formally endorsement Mayor Martin Chavez.

Dave Barber, financial secretary of the union, explained their vote saying, "the membership endorsed the mayor because he has always been and will continue to be supportive of organized labor unions. His vision for the city is one we believe in."

A cross section of unions and groups have endorsed Mayor Chavez because of both his inclusive vision and his proven track record of delivering results to the people of Albuquerque. Check out the endorsements and read what people are saying about our mayor.

Grant: 'His Horizons Have Always Extended Beyond Our Own'

In a must read piece in this week's Alibi, columnist Gene Grant opines, "Mayor Chavez’ fundamental strength—and deep visceral appeal—is that his horizons have always extended beyond our own."

Mayor Chavez' campaign is about his strong and capable leadership, his record of results and, his vision for our city's future. In this week's Alibi, Gene Grant articulately makes the case for Mayor Chavez' vision for building an Albuquerque we can be proud of. Read the whole piece. Grant:

There’s a research info website called Smart QandA (qanda.encyclopedia.com); plug in a question and an answer comes back. How they hook you is by giving you a list of related local news stories, hoping you’ll want to expand your knowledge on the subject.

I couldn’t help thinking about the current mayoral race when, looking up some info on recently deceased Mayor Louis Saavedra, I stumbled across Smart QandA and this question: When did Albuquerque become a city?

I had to chuckle. The “correct” answer, of course, is when we incorporated in 1890, but for all intents and purposes, it was when Mr. Saavedra’s successor, one Martin Chavez, took office in December of 1993.

For a lot of people both here and elsewhere, Albuquerque virtually didn’t exist as a city until Martin Chavez told them it did. I mean that. Albuquerque to that point was a rumor. There was no postmodern lens to consider it through. Marty invented the lens and told us to take a peek.

That was then, and this is now, but there's something quite familiar in this year's version to 1993. It's all in how one reads the tea leaves and stitches campaign tactics to a vision.

Keep in mind, when Mr. Saavedra took office in 1989 this city was flat-ass broke. The economic downturn then was fairly nasty. He did what he could with layoffs, cutbacks and fights with the Council (and in hindsight, his ruthlessness with cutting budgets could be an object lesson for today). And with that, he made his exit.

By being a one-termer, however, Saavedra opened the door for the ascension of Mayor Chavez at the exact time the country was casting forward into a bold New World Order, with a rather dynamic figurehead in the White House in Bill Clinton.

Change was in the air. It was an exciting time for the nation, but a question was yet to be answered: Could Albuquerque play at the national level? There wasn’t much going on in the city then to say so with any surety.

The first time I laid eyes on Martin Chavez was at a mayoral forum outdoors at Anderson Vineyards in the North Valley. My ex-wife and I lived on the east side of Anderson Field. Now, in those years, virtually anyone could run for mayor and, with apologies to anyone who was running then, my recollection is of a jangled collection of political nitwits.

There were about 15 or 16 of them, nearly all still hung up on an “old” Albuquerque ideal of what the archetype of a mayor should look like. It was a complete mess. Nice people, certainly. Committed and all that, but wildly behind the curve of what was happening.

For perspective, Geraldine Amato was running that year, and the rest of the pack had more in common with her compared to what Marty unleashed that afternoon.

Dude was coming from a completely different solar system. It was startling. The rest could only sit and watch. Not three minutes into his speech, my ex turned to me and said, “That’s the guy, right there.” This mayoral thing was so over it wasn’t even funny.

Marty had a message, a counterintuitive point of view that his current opponents would be well served to note. While everyone was having a crying jag about this or that Albuquerque problem, what Marty did in short was go to the podium, look everyone in the eye and say, “Isn’t this great?”

It was a spectacular position in hindsight. Fantastically bold, given the gloomy headlines of the day. He just got what was happening nationwide and shaped his own local version. With the rest bogged down in the economics and politics of the moment, Marty’s gaze was fixed to an unseen future that held some unspoken promise for everyone ... if they’d let him lead them there.

They did and he did.

And while he’s had his share of epic blunders, sometimes from his own arrogance and blindness, he’s essentially never looked back.

There’s a terrific young entrepreneur in Albuquerque named Lance Maurer. You may know him (Academy, UNM and such). He laid it out quite succinctly during a panel, at August’s Albuquerque Film Festival, on building a post-production community here—another arguably “unseeable” Albuquerque future at this time—when he said, “Where there’s confusion, there’s opportunity.” Bingo.

That’s what Marty essentially told us that summer Sunday afternoon in ’93. Forget the noise, the fear and the confusion of lean times. It’s the opportunity.

I sometimes wonder if Richard Romero and R.J. Berry (his opponents this year) truly understand what they are running against, given their platforms thus far. I really do, because it seems both of them have missed the signal flags. This race really isn’t about Martin Chavez. It’s about the opportunity inside the anxiety and paralysis of the moment—and who can see past it.

So the question for Mr. Romero and Mr. Berry: What is the opportunity? Or put another way, Why should I give a shit?

Do you have a vision that casts Albuquerque forward from this downturn? So far, it’s seemingly all about Marty, what he did or didn’t do, and the past.

Mr. Romero, quite ironically, feels like Mayor Saavedra redux, a solid, no-nonsense administrator who could fix our economy, but not exactly visionary. And with Mr. Berry, one gets the sense he would be as honest as they come and not be pushed around, but would serve a narrow slice of the city and potentially never set foot in the rest.

These are decent, thoughtful men with proven leadership skills, but regrettably, neither seems to have a feel for what’s unfolding in real time before our eyes; a coming of age for an enormous population bubble finding its stroke. One of these challengers had better start talking to people near 30 and do it now, because as it stands this thing is playing out with talk radio issues.

It’s doable, certainly, but this would be a nice time for them to step out with some boldness. And in our current campaign finance scenario, the best forum to do so is debates.

The Alibi, the New Mexico Independent, KUNM radio and my shop, KNME, will host one of the last debates of the cycle on Wednesday, Sept. 16, at the National Hispanic Cultural Center, at 6:30 p.m. If I was the campaign strategist in those challenger camps, the plan for every debate these last few weeks would be rather simple: Out-Marty Marty by leap frogging him with your own shining mansion on the mesa. It's doable.

There’s a strange magic with mayors. You have to literally dare a populace to give you the chance. Yes, it’s about cops on the street, balancing budgets and all that. But it’s equally, if not more, about bringing a populace to a higher consciousness, a new sense of self-worth. That’s essentially the litmus of an effective mayor versus a seat-holder.

You pull that off and you’re no longer just an elected official. You’re a savant.

Mayor Saavedra had a saying back then: “Everyone lives under the same sky, but not everyone has the same horizons.” Mayor Chavez’ fundamental strength—and deep visceral appeal—is that his horizons have always extended beyond our own. How far Mr. Berry and Mr. Romero can see is the question. It's not too late by any stretch for them to lay that out. See you on the 16th.

Let's keep Albuquerque moving forward by keeping a proven leader with a record of results and a vision for our city's future working for us.

'Chavez Looks and Sounds Solid'

Praise is pouring in for Marty's first TV ad of the campaign. Independent political commentator Joe Monahan wrote, "As usual, Chavez looks and sounds solid." And, progressive blog NM FBIHOP said the ad was "forward-looking."

Monahan opined:

As usual, Chavez looks and sounds solid. He carries this thirty second spot himself, with the aid of some video and still shots placed below him...

We're facing challenging times with a nationwide recession and tough issues right here at home...

He then lists a series of initiatives to address the challenges---hiring 100 more cops and pledging to "strive to make ABQ the leader in alternative energy and recruit and grow good paying, high-quality jobs."

He also addresses the issue du jour--New Mexico's disappointing high school graduation rate.

I'm committed to improving our graduation rate and the quality of our education system.

The spot, one of eight the mayor's campaign says he will air, is finished off with a slogan aimed at calming any anti-incumbent feelings and turning the current bad times in his favor.

"Marty Chavez...Today more than ever." Intones a a female announcer.

Chavez also embraces the incumbency visually, seated in a formal setting with the ABQ and NM flags positioned behind his left shoulder. He's dressed in a dark business suit with a gray shaded tie. Early polling shows voters comfortable with him at the helm so show them what they seem to like.

The overall impression this ad leaves is that Chavez is in touch with current issues and not a long-in-the-tooth incumbent. He proposes mild changes, but speaks in a low-key and reassuring voice.

Mayor Chavez is striking a chord with voters because he's in touch with the issues and the people. And, because he has a vision for our city's future. NM FBIHOP:

Chavez vowed to increase the police force by 100 officers, to continue "to strive to make Albuquerque the leader in alternative energy" as well as bring "high-paying, high quality jobs" to the city and increase graduation rates.

It seemed to be a more forward-looking ad than a list of his accomplishments as one might expect from a mayor who has been in office for the last two terms and three of the last four terms.

Mayor Chavez has a record of delivering results all across Albuquerque. Voters know that Mayor Chavez is a man who can get the job done, because they know his record. This ad is forward thinking because he also has a vision for our city's future.