City of Albuquerque
Recent News About City of Albuquerque
-
A popular Albuquerque restaurant has been forced to close temporarily because of damage caused by thieves who broke into the establishment to steal copper wiring.
-
New Mexico has taken an unprecedented step in fighting child hunger by becoming the first state to combine two specific health services.
-
Local businesses are encouraged to join forces with the Albuquerque Police Department to help fight crime by utilizing their surveillance cameras to catch criminals.
-
Downtown Albuquerque is turning into a hotbed for new businesses, thanks to the distribution of $500,000 in grant money to revitalize the area.
-
A dangerous stretch of road in Albuquerque has become even more dangerous these days.
-
She may have run her final marathon, but Ann Hager is just starting her journey to raise awareness about dealing with anxiety.
-
In a recent phone call about Albuquerque’s acute homelessness problem, an aide to city council member Tammy Fieblekorn essentially called long-time community organizer, activist and policy analyst Valere McFarland a Nazi who wants to "put the homeless into concentration camps," McFarland said.
-
Albuquerque residents will soon have an option when it comes to purchasing internet service.
-
Bill Warren makes his living treating his customers to sweetness, but it’s seldom that the owner of “I Scream Ice Cream” in northeast Albuquerque is the recipient of a treat himself.
-
On July 19, the New Mexico Sun broke the story that applications for “safe outdoor spaces” have been filed with the city Planning Department and that private funding is being sought for at least 6 encampments.
-
California-based renewable energy developer Pattern Energy recently acquired rights to a transmission-line project to connect its New Mexico wind farms with larger markets in the West.
-
An Albuquerque-area horse rescue organization is celebrating 20 years of rescuing and rehoming horses.
-
Bricker Theitten is the head zookeeper of Albuquerque BioPark.
-
Jason Casuga is the CEO and chief engineer of Middle Rio Grande Conservancy District. The Middle Rio Grande Conservancy District was formed in 1925 to manage the irrigation systems and control floods in the Albuquerque Basin. On July 21 Casuga said that if the area doesn't receive rain soon, there is likely to be drying on the Rio Grande in the area.
-
Mark Ronchetti, a gubernatorial candidate in New Mexico, said that New Mexico's government is rich, but questioned whether New Mexicans are better off because of it.
-
On July 21, Tim Keller, Mayor of Albuquerque, a city in New Mexico, said that a new project will be a landmark that is powerful and impactful.
-
On May 19 and July 19, APD officials proclaimed they had a 97% homicide clearance rate for 2022 with 47 suspects arrested, charged or identified in 40 recent and past homicide cases. The 97% figure is very misleading.
-
The first probable case of monkeypox in New Mexico was announced July 11, the Albuquerque Journal reported.
-
Attorney Jacob Candelaria, of Candelaria Law LLC, is filing a lawsuit against New Mexico Child, Youth and Families Department due to the fact that they feel the agency has broken its promise of more transparency in the department, KRQE reported.
-
Student artists have their dreams, and they were recently given the chance to use art to showcase their visions for life.