Opinion

AMA Statement On Sec. Kennedy’s Removal Of All 17 Members Of Advisory Committee On Immunization Practices

By Bruce A. Scott, M.D.
President

American Medical Association

Note: Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. announced on Monday that he is removing all 17 sitting members of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s vaccine advisory committee and replacing them with new members. The Advisory Committee for Immunization Practices (ACIP) makes recommendations on the safety, efficacy and clinical need of vaccines.

“For generations, the Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices (ACIP) has been a trusted national source of science- and data-driven Read More

Community Invited To Take Survey To Help Shape Future Electric Vehicle Charging Infrastructure In Los Alamos

An electric vehicle charging station installed outside the Municipal Building. The public is invited to provide input on the County’s plans for EV chargers by taking part in a survey here. Photo by Kirsten Laskey/ladailypost.com

COUNTY News:

Los Alamos County’s Sustainability Manager Angelica Gurule invites all who live, work, or play in Los Alamos County to take part in an important community survey to help shape the future of electric vehicle (EV) infrastructure across the community.

The survey can be accessed at lacnm.com/EVSurvey and will remain open until 11:59 p.m. on Thursday, July Read More

Robinson: Jet As Symbol Of ‘Greed And Excess’ Hasn’t Changed In 20 Years

By SHERRY ROBINSON
All She Wrote
© 2024 New Mexico News Services

In August 2011 Gov. Susana Martinez stood before her predecessor’s jet, festooned with a big “SOLD” sign.

“Last year when I was running for governor, I not only promised taxpayers that I would not use this state jet as a personal air taxi, I promised New Mexicans across the state that I would get rid of this symbol of greed and excess in state government,” she said. “And today, I make good on that promise.”

Then she hugged the buyers, handed them the keys and waved as the plane taxied down the runway. Sale price: $2.5 million.

Gov. Bill Richardson’s Read More

Community Invited To Provide Input On Wildfire Prevention

COUNTY News:

A research team from Fire Adapted Communities New Mexico and Northern Arizona University is asking the community’s help in understanding local concerns related to human-caused wildfires in the Los Alamos area.

Los Alamos County is hosting a series of public discussion groups to gather resident perspectives and ideas about wildfire risk, forest restrictions (including closures), and other strategies that could be used to protect the community.

These conversations are confidential. Key points will be summarized and shared with local, state, regional and national wildfire Read More

Jones: Discussion Over County ‘Fair Market Value’

By BECCA JONES
Realtor, Associate Broker
Los Alamos

I want to take a moment to discuss the recent property valuation notices (NOV) that include a new line item labeled “Fair Market Value”. In previous years, these notices typically displayed the prior year’s taxable value, the current year’s assessed value, and estimated property taxes. The addition of “Fair Market Value” can understandably raise questions about what this number actually represents.

As a licensed realtor, I believe it’s helpful to understand how this figure is determined per the County Assessor’s Office. The “Fair Market Read More

Bear Trouble

Scene this morning from bear overnight dismantling an unsecured trash can at a local playlot. Courtesy/Katie Bruell

By KATIE BRUELL
Los Alamos

Dear Los Alamos County,

Have you heard the phrase, “a fed bear is a dead bear?” I’m guessing yes, which is why I don’t understand how you persist in attracting the bears out of the canyon into our playlots with unsecured trash.

We citizens are doing our part by getting bear safe trash cans, keeping our trash inside our garages (if we have them) not feeding our pets outside, and doing all the other things your utility bill inserts ask us to. But it doesn’t matter Read More

Op-Ed: DPU Should Consider Shopping Local For Solar

By RICK NEBEL
Los Alamos

Several years ago, my wife Kathy and my son Dan worked for Carol and Tex Felts at Los Alamos Music. Like many small businesses they provided multiple services to the community. They gave music lessons. They sold new and used instruments. They did “rent-to-own” instruments for beginners. They repaired instruments. However, the real money-maker for that business was that Tex tuned pianos.

For many years, Tex had a contract with the County to tune its pianos. One year he put in his usual bid, and the County told him that they had awarded the contract to some outfit from Santa   Read More

Review: LALT’s ‘Copenhagen’ Proves 1941 Meeting Remains Relevant 84 Years Later

Copenhagen’ starring Jeff Favorite as Werner Heisenberg, Angel Virgillio as Margrethe Bohr and Thomas Graves as Neils Bohr, focuses on a conversation between two Nobel Prize winning physicists during WWII. Photo by Ashely Horner/LALT

Review By KIRSTEN LASKEY
Los Alamos Daily Post
kirsten@ladailypost.com

The play, “Copenhagen” focuses on a meeting that occurred 84 years ago when Danish physicist Niels Bohr met with German physicist Werner Heisenberg. What were the exact details of this almost century-old conversation? No one really knows but Michael Frayn’s play presents several Read More

Op-Ed: National Park People … May I Salute You?

By Steve Scarano
Vista, Calif.

Dear National Park People,

May I salute you? I know that this is a particularly challenging season of service for you, and while mine is certainly not the only voice crying in the wilderness to acknowledge that and may even ring a bit hollow in the short view, the option of silence is just not viable to me. So here we are.

I’m a card-carrying property owner and cherish our parks, monuments, historic sites and recreation areas. Thank you for making them available to us. In fact, for decades it has been my practice to express my gratitude when I’ve either coincidentally met Read More

Youth Mental Health: If Outcomes Don’t Matter, Nothing Does

By JAMES WERNICKE
Los Alamos Parent

Since the dawn of humanity, all parents have shared the same experience—watching their children grow into raging balls of hormones as they enter adolescence—and all parents respond the same way—doing the best they can to guide them through it. In the past, there was the village. Generations lived under one roof with extended family biologically hardwired to step in and help.

Today, many of us live far from family in neighborhoods where everyone’s busy, help is a luxury, and community is aspirational. If we’re lucky, we find trusted friends. If not, we rely Read More