[LWVNM Action] Making the case for Legislative Salaries - on the ballot in November 2026
Richard Mason
polirich at aol.com
Tue Feb 24 19:26:43 MST 2026
All of that would be taken care of in enabling legislation. You cannot put that much language in a constitutional amendment.
Dick Mason
On Tuesday, February 24, 2026 at 11:58:13 AM MST, kwentworth17 at comcast.net <kwentworth17 at comcast.net> wrote:
I've been wondering. If it passes, would this be considered a full time job? A half-time Job? A part-time job. Would legislators have regular office hours? It would be nice to have info about what this amendment means, exactly.
KarenFrom: Action <action-bounces at mailman.swcp.com> on behalf of Richard Mason via Action <action at mailman.swcp.com>
Sent: Tuesday, February 24, 2026 8:33 AM
To: LWVNM Action <action at mailman.swcp.com>
Cc: Richard Mason <polirich at aol.com>
Subject: [LWVNM Action] Making the case for Legislative Salaries - on the ballot in November 2026 This has been a priority for the LWVNM for years. We need a rea effort to pass it in November.
I suggest local Leagues consider educational on the subject.
The League will be joining in a coalition to pass this ballot question.
Add to this list if you wish:
Making the case for a paid legislature. The question will be on the Novemberballot
Being a New Mexico legislator does not only involve participating in the 30 day and 60day sessions. Here is what else it involves:
Time spent on capital outlay – Each legislator gets capital outlay to allocate to government entities in their districts for projects. Legislators have to meet with city & county governments to identify and prioritize needs. Overseeing the projects started.
GRO money – In the last 6 years, each legislator gets money for special smaller projects. Need to go thorough government entity but can be directed towards community groups.
The legislator needs to meet with groups to identify & prioritize needs.
Meeting with constituents and doing community forums.
Working with Legislative Council Service and advocates to draft legislation
Attending interim committees:Starting in June of each year, the legislators have to attend interim committee meetings. Usually, 4 for each committee and each legislator is assigned at least 2 committees. They are held at various locations throughout the state.
Note: In the corporate world, a factor in compensation is how much the person is responsible for overseeing. For New Mexico legislators that means voting on the state budget (11.7 billion in FY27) and direct control over capital outlay and GRO allocations.
-------------- next part --------------
An HTML attachment was scrubbed...
URL: <http://mailman.swcp.com/pipermail/action/attachments/20260225/4ec4ab98/attachment.htm>
More information about the Action
mailing list