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HM42 • 2026

STUDY EMPLOYMENT FOR CERTAIN EMPLOYEES

STUDY EMPLOYMENT FOR CERTAIN EMPLOYEES

Labor
Did Not Pass

The latest official action shows that this bill did not move forward in that session.

Sponsor
Representative Michelle Paulene Abeyta, Representative Anita Gonzales
Last action
Official status
[5] HJC-HJC API.
Effective date
Not listed

Plain English Breakdown

Using official source text because the generated explanation was unavailable or could not be confirmed against the official bill text.

STUDY EMPLOYMENT FOR CERTAIN EMPLOYEES

STUDY EMPLOYMENT FOR CERTAIN EMPLOYEES

What This Bill Does

  • STUDY EMPLOYMENT FOR CERTAIN EMPLOYEES

Limits and Unknowns

  • This entry is temporarily using official source text because the generated explanation could not be confirmed against the official bill text during the last sync.

Bill History

  1. 2026-02-03 New Mexico Legislature

    Sent to HJC - Referrals: HJC

  2. New Mexico Legislature

    Action Postponed Indefinitely

Official Summary Text

STUDY EMPLOYMENT FOR CERTAIN EMPLOYEES

Current Bill Text

Read the full stored bill text
HM042

HOUSE MEMORIAL 42

57
th legislature
- STATE OF NEW MEXICO -
second session
, 2026

INTRODUCED BY

Anita Gonzales and Michelle Paulene Abeyta

A MEMORIAL

REQUESTING STUDIES REGARDING EMPLOYMENT OPPORTUNITIES FOR
EMPLOYEES OF CERTAIN DETENTION CENTERS AND OPPORTUNITIES FOR
THE REUSE OF FORMER DETENTION FACILITIES.

WHEREAS, House Bill 9, introduced in the second session of
the fifty-seventh legislature, would enact the Immigrant Safety
Act and would prohibit public bodies from being party to
agreements to detain individuals for federal civil immigration
violations; and

WHEREAS, New Mexico is home to three detention facilities
that contract with United States immigration and customs
enforcement, located in Cibola, Otero and Torrance counties;
and

WHEREAS, the three existing detention centers together
have more than seven hundred employees whose jobs may be lost
if those detention centers are closed; and

WHEREAS, the closure of those detention centers would have
a severe negative impact on the local communities in which they
are located; and

WHEREAS, if the physical facilities comprising those
detention centers were used for different purposes, the adverse
employment and economic impact of closing those detention
centers would be reduced; and

WHEREAS, since 2000, twenty-one states have partially
closed or fully closed at least one correctional facility,
resulting in a trend of prison repurposing in which old prisons
are converted for community and commercial use;

NOW, THEREFORE, BE IT RESOLVED BY THE HOUSE OF
REPRESENTATIVES OF THE STATE OF NEW MEXICO that the economic
development department and the workforce solutions department
be requested to study ways in which jobs related to the
existing detention facilities that contract with United States
immigration and customs enforcement might be replaced with new
employment opportunities; and

BE IT FURTHER RESOLVED that the children, youth and
families department, the corrections department and the health
care authority be requested to study ways in which the existing
detention facilities that contract with United States
immigration and customs enforcement might be used for other
purposes, including juvenile detention and patient health care;
and

BE IT FURTHER RESOLVED that the economic development
department be requested to study ways in which the state might
assist communities adversely affected by the closure of
existing detention centers through the use of state programs,
including rural development funds, the innovation in state
government fund and preferences in state procurement; and

BE IT FURTHER RESOLVED that the results of the studies and
recommendations be delivered to the appropriate interim
legislative committees on or before October 1, 2026; and

BE IT FURTHER RESOLVED that copies of this memorial be
transmitted to the secretary of children, youth and families,
the secretary of corrections, the secretary of economic
development, the secretary of health care authority and the
secretary of workforce solutions.

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