About Alex McCausland

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So far Alex McCausland has created 1211 blog entries.
Jan 24 2019

Improving College Affordability to Support New Mexico’s Education, Workforce, and Economic Goals

2022-03-16T15:04:20-06:00Economic Security Publications, Education Publications, Local Data, Publications|

Report States that graduate more college students and ensure that their workers have the skills needed for 21st century jobs have stronger and more competitive economies, higher wages, lower unemployment rates, and lower poverty rates. But New Mexico has not been focused on improving access to post-secondary credentials for lower-income students and older adults that would help lead to a more broadly shared prosperity. Rather, the state is ignoring long-term economic demands, choosing, instead, to continue to be a low-wage state with the highest long-term unemployment rate, have the highest poverty rate among the employed, and have the second worst student loan default rate in the nation. (A Working Poor Families report; state-level data on state-funded financial aid and some characteristics of college students)

Jan 23 2019

Democrats’ competing bills aim to boost state’s minimum wage

2024-04-04T15:20:13-06:00Economic Security News Coverage, News Coverage|

Santa Fe New Mexican--New Mexico has some 245,000 people, or 31 percent of its workforce, earning low wages at or near a proposed minimum wage of $12 per hour. About 159,000 or nearly 20 percent of workers are paid less than $12, said Sharon Kayne, a spokeswoman at the nonprofit New Mexico Voices for Children, which issued a report in August on the minimum wage based on data from the Economic Policy Institute.

Jan 22 2019

Time to restore fairness to the personal income tax and break the boom-or-bust cycle

2019-01-22T14:27:29-07:00Blog Posts, Economic Security Blog, Tax and Budget Blog|

Now is the time to enact bold tax reform and improve our tax system so we can begin to generate key, sustainable resources that are not ruled by the boom-or-bust cycle of the oil and gas industries. This reform should begin by restoring fairness to the personal income tax, a stable source of revenue that is underutilized in New Mexico due to tax cuts enacted in 2003.

Jan 21 2019

Renewable Energy Could Replace Economic Loss from Closure of San Juan Generating Station

2022-04-05T16:15:43-06:00Press Releases|

The impending closure of the San Juan coal-fired power plant and mine does not have to signal economic doom for the small town of Waterflow, NM, where the plant is located. The site is an excellent candidate to be redeveloped for green energy production. That’s one of the conclusions from a new report by economist Kelly O’Donnell, Ph.D.

Jan 21 2019

Tax and Jobs Analysis of San Juan Generating Station Closure

2021-08-25T15:41:19-06:00Local Data, Publications, Tax and Budget Publications|

Report The San Juan Generating Station in Waterflow, New Mexico, is slated for closure in 2022. Closure of both the mine and plant will eliminate approximately 450 jobs and result in the loss of tax revenue for San Juan County, San Juan Community College, and the local school district. This analysis shows that the complex is a good candidate for redevelopment as a solar photovoltaic plant, saving jobs and tax revenue. (State-level estimates of the fiscal and economic impacts of closing the San Juan Generating Station.)

Jan 19 2019

A tax rebate that’s long-overdue for an expansion

2021-08-26T15:25:20-06:00Economic Security Publications, Publications, Tax and Budget Publications|

Fact Sheet The Low Income Comprehensive Tax Rebate (LICTR) was enacted to make our tax system fairer but because it hasn’t been updated in 20 years, it no longer does the job. LICTR was last amended in 1998. Over the last two decades, the rebate has lost much of its value, because a dollar is worth much less today that it was back in 1998. Over the same time period, our tax system has only gotten more regressive – falling even harder on those with the lowest incomes.

Jan 19 2019

Helping NM families get ahead by fixing the child care cliff effect

2021-08-27T12:27:55-06:00Economic Security Publications, Education Publications, Local Data, Publications|

Fact Sheet A companion to the report The Cliff Effect: One Step Forward, Two Steps Back, this sums up the report's basic message about how the sudden loss of benefits like child care assistance - called the cliff effect - can act as a disincentive for hard-working families trying to lift themselves out of poverty. Also includes policy recommendations for mitigating the cliff effect. (State-level data on the child care assistance program)

Jan 16 2019

How can New Mexico lawmakers make a difference for our state’s children? Let’s discuss

2024-04-04T15:22:01-06:00Education News Coverage, News Coverage, Tax and Budget News Coverage|

Searchlight NM and Las Cruces Sun-News--It will take a concerted, multifaceted effort to significantly improve child well-being because it is dependent on so many factors. But one policy with a proven, positive rate of return is high-quality early childhood care and learning. The first five years of life are critical for laying the foundation for future success, so the investments that we make in those years pay off dividends for children and society for many years — and future generations — down the road.

Jan 15 2019

NM Legislators to Hear Need to Improve Kids’ Well-Being

2024-04-04T15:22:39-06:00Kids Count News Coverage, News Coverage|

Public News Services--As part of opening day at the 2019 New Mexico Legislature, the state's Voices for Children group will highlight its annual New Mexico KIDS COUNT Data Book. Deputy Director Amber Wallin said there have been improvements in teen birth rates, increased rates of kids covered by insurance, higher preschool enrollment and reduced child poverty. But the state's dead-last ranking for child well-being reported last summer means lawmakers have more work to do.

Jan 15 2019

Advocates hopeful legislators will act on grim N.M. child well-being report

2024-04-04T15:23:08-06:00Kids Count News Coverage, News Coverage|

Santa Fe New Mexican--A new report on child welfare offers a deeper look at some grim statistics for New Mexico, which fell to last in the nation last year on a key state-by-state assessment of the well-being of children and families. “This is the time to go bold or go home,” says the 2018 New Mexico Kids Count Data Book, scheduled for release Tuesday.

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