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New Mexico Population, Income, Education, Employment, and Federal Funds

New Mexico Population
  Total
Year
1980 1,303,302
1990 1,515,069
2000 1,819,046
2009 (latest estimates) 2,009,671

New Mexico Income
  Total
New Mexico Per-capita income (2008 dollars)
2007 32,093
2008 33,389
Percent change 0.2
 
New Mexico Earnings per job (2008 dollars)
2007 43,150
2008 42,513
Percent change -1.5
 
New Mexico Poverty rate (percent)
1979 17.6
1989 20.6
1999 18.4
2008 (latest model-based estimates) 17.0

New Mexico Education (Persons 25 and older)
  Total
New Mexico Percent not completing high school
1980 31.1
1990 24.9
2000 21.1
 
New Mexico Percent completing high school only
1980 34.1
1990 28.7
2000 26.6
 
New Mexico Percent completing some college
1980 17.1
1990 25.9
2000 28.8
 
New Mexico Percent completing college
1980 17.6
1990 20.4
2000 23.5

New Mexico Employment
  Total
New Mexico Total number of jobs
2007 1,100,456
2008 1,117,433
 
New Mexico Percent employment change
2006-2007 1.8
2007-2008 1.0
2008-2009 -3.3
 
New Mexico Unemployment rate (percent)
2008 4.5
2009 7.2

New Mexico Federal Funds, FY 2008
  Total
New Mexico Federal funding, dollars per person
New Mexico All Federal funds 11,479
 
New Mexico Federal funding by purpose
New Mexico Agriculture and natural resources 95
New Mexico Community resources 1,180
New Mexico Defense and space 866
New Mexico Human resources 287
New Mexico Income security 5,287
New Mexico National functions 3,763
 
New Mexico Federal funding by type of payments
New Mexico Grants 2,000
New Mexico Direct loans 14
New Mexico Guaranteed/insured loans 924
New Mexico Retirement/disability payments 2,972
New Mexico Other direct payments to
individuals
1,106
New Mexico Direct payments, not to
individuals
106
New Mexico Procurement contracts 3,480
New Mexico Salaries and wages 876

New Mexico Organic Agriculture

  2008
Number of certified operations 197
New Mexico Crops (acres) 44,602
New Mexico Pasture & rangeland (acres) 314,708
New Mexico Total acres 359,310


Farm Characteristics

New Mexico 2007 Census of Agriculture
 
  2007
New Mexico Approximate total land area (acres) 77,629,852
New Mexico Total farmland (acres) 43,238,049
Percent of total land area 55.7
 
New Mexico Cropland (acres) 2,334,018
Percent of total farmland 5.4
Percent in pasture 27.4
Percent irrigated 27.8
 
New Mexico Harvested Cropland (acres) 1,009,683
 
New Mexico Woodland (acres) 2,868,929
Percent of total farmland 6.6
Percent in pasture 70.8
 
New Mexico Pastureland (acres) 37,597,641
Percent of total farmland 87.0
 
New Mexico Land in house lots, ponds,
roads, wasteland, etc. (acres)
437,461
Percent of total farmland 1.0
 
New Mexico Conservation practices
New Mexico Farmland in conservation or
wetlands reserve programs
(acres)
592,766
 
New Mexico Average farm size (acres) 2,066
 
New Mexico Farms by size (percent)
1 to 99 acres 58.7
100 to 499 acres 18.2
500 to 999 acres 6.1
1000 to 1,999 acres 5.2
2,000 or more acres 11.8
 
New Mexico Farms by sales (percent)
Less than $9,999 72.9
$10,000 to $49,999 14.9
$50,000 to $99,999 4.0
$100,000 to $499,999 5.4
More than $500,000 2.6
 
New Mexico Tenure of farmers
New Mexico Full owner (farms) 15,850
Percent of total 75.7
 
New Mexico Part owner (farms) 4,007
Percent of total 19.1
 
Tenant owner (farms) 1,073
Percent of total 5.1
 
New Mexico Farm organization
New Mexico Individuals/family, sole
proprietorship (farms)
18,185
Percent of total 86.9
 
New Mexico Family-held corporations
(farms)
780
Percent of total 3.7
 
New Mexico Partnerships (farms) 1,456
Percent of total 7.0
 
New Mexico Non-family corporations (farms) 59
Percent of total 0.3
 
New Mexico Others - cooperative, estate or
trust, institutional, etc. (farms)
450
Percent of total 2.2
 
New Mexico Characteristics of principal farm operators
Average operator age (years) 59.6
Percent with farming as their
primary occupation
48.0
Men 16,284
Women 4,646
 


New Mexico Farm Financial Indicators

Farm income and value added data
  2008
 
New Mexico Number of farms 20,600
 
  Thousands $
 Final crop output 698,451
+   Final animal output 2,420,628
+   Services and forestry 269,555
=   Final agricultural sector output 3,388,634
 
- Intermediate consumption outlays 2,016,084
+   Net government transactions 24,482
=   Gross value added 1,397,032
 
- Capital consumption 161,246
 
=   Net value added 1,235,786
 
- Factor payments 405,951
 Employee compensation (total hired labor) 254,210
 Net rent received by nonoperator landlords 34,605
 Real estate and nonreal estate interest 117,136
 
=   Net farm income 829,835
 

New Mexico Top Commodities, Exports, and Counties

NM. Top 5 agriculture commodities, 2009
  Value of receipts
thousand $
1. Cattle and calves 1,007,546
2. Dairy products 950,213
3. Hay 174,706
4. Pecans 119,680
5. Greenhouse/nursery 62,050
 
All commodities 2,698,524
 

NM. Top 5 agriculture exports, estimates, FY 2009
  Value
million $
1. Dairy products 103.1
2. Tree nuts 42.4
3. Vegetables and preparations 23.2
4. Wheat and products 22.7
5. Cotton and linters 22.6
 
Overall rank 257.3
 

NM. Top 5 counties in agricultural sales 2007
  Thousands $
1. Dona Ana County 388,787
2. Curry County 347,323
3. Chaves County 339,088
4. Roosevelt County 253,950
5. Union County 136,971
 
State total 2,175,080
 

State Offices


New Mexico Drug Policy, Enforcement and Government Agencies
Governor's Office
Office of the Governor
State Capitol, Fourth Floor
Santa Fe, NM 87503
(505) 827-3000

State Legislative Contact
Legislative Council Service
State Capitol, Room 311
Santa Fe, NM 87503
(505) 984-9600

State Drug Program Coordinator
Office of Special Projects
Department of Public Safety
P.O. Box 1628
Santa Fe, NM 87504-1628
(505) 827-3427

Attorney General's Office
Office of the Attorney General
Bataan Memorial Building,Room 260
Santa Fe, NM 87504-1508
(505) 827-6000

Crime Prevention Office
New Mexico Crime Prevention Association
400 Roma NW
Albuquerque, NM 87102
(505) 764-1090

Statistical Analysis Center
Institute for Social Research
University of New Mexico
2808 Central Avenue SE
Albuquerque, NM 87106
(505) 277-4257

BJA Strategy Preparation Agency
Office of Special Projects
Grants Administration
Department of Public Safety
P.O. Box 1628
Santa Fe, NM 87504-1628
(505) 877-3338

Judicial Agency
Administrative Office of the Courts
Supreme Court Building, Room 25
237 Don Gaspar Avenue
Santa Fe, NM 87503
(505) 827-4800

Corrections Agency
Correction Department
Peralta Compound
1422 Paseo de Peralta
Santa Fe, NM 87503
(505) 827-8709

RADAR Network Agency
Department of Health
Division of Substance Abuse
Harold Runnels Building
1190 St. Francis Drive
Santa Fe, NM 87501
(505) 827-2601

HIV-Prevention Program
Health and Environment
AIDS Prevention Program
P.O. Box 968
Santa Fe, NM 87504
(505) 827-0086

Drug and Alcohol Agency
Department of Health
Division of Substance Abuse
Harold Runnels Building
1190 St. Francis Drive
Santa Fe, NM 87505
(505) 827-2601

State Coordinator for Drug-Free Schools
State Department of Education
300 Don Gaspar Avenue
Santa Fe, NM 87501
(505) 827-6648

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New Mexico improves in alcohol-related deaths report

NEW MEXICO - New Mexico improved from worst to third worst in the nation for per-capita alcohol-related deaths last year, new federal figures show.

New Mexico's 10 alcohol-related deaths per 100,000 in 1997 dipped below the 11.79 recorded in 1996. The overall number of New Mexico drunken-driving deaths last year was 173 compared with 202 in 1996.

But the improvement may not last because early numbers show more drunken-driving deaths so far this year than at this point last year, the private non-profit DWI Resource Center warned Monday in Albuquerque, New Mexico.

New Mexico's figures are still about double the national rate of 4.75 per 100,000.

Montana was the worst state in 1997 with 11.38 deaths per 100,000 people. Missippi was No. 2 with 10.47.

In the Four Corners area, Arizona had 7.62 deaths per 100,000, Colorado 4.47 and Utah, which also ranked secondbest in the nation, had 2.43.

Elsewhere, Texas had 7.04. And the lowest rate occurred in New York, with 1.84 per 100,000 last year.

New Mexico habitually has been among the worst DWI death states.

Does an improvement to No. 3 mean anything?

"It does if we can hold it," said Linda Atkinson, director of the DWI Resource Center.

The key is to make sure there's a steady drop in the death count, she said.

In 1995, New Mexico was second worst in the nation for alcohol related deaths. But it was the worst again in 1996, Atkinson said.

Early 1998 numbers indicate the state may again be on a downturn. Between January and July, 116 of 255 traffic deaths were alcohol-related, Atkinson said.

Last year at this time, 111 of 271 traffic deaths were alcohol-related. The figures are from monthly New Mexico Traffic Safety Bureau reports.

"We're up from where we were last year," Atkinson said.

The 1997 drop might be related to increased anti-alcohol programs at the state level that created more awareness, said James W. Davis, director of government research at the University of New Mexico.

The latest statistics, including New Mexico's drop from No. 1, were computed with help from former state Traffic Safety Bureau chief Steve Flint from census data, the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration and state traffic reports.

"It's good to lose that top title again," said Flint, now vice president of New Mexico Mothers Against Drunk Drivers (MADD).

Atkinson said the downward trend is good, but more must be done.

"I think New Mexico needs to aim for the national average or better. That would make me feel that we are making significant progress," she said.

More checkpoints and increased state participation in the battle against driving while intoxicated are what she wants.

Atkinson's DWI Resource Center is funded by private and corporate donations and by a grant from the city of Albuquerque.

New Mexico's step up occurred before the state closed down drive-up liquor windows in early August.

"I don't believe that (drive-up) windows are the cause of all the DWI problems in the state," said Christina Harrison of the New Mexico Hospitality Retailers Association.

Harrison said many DWI deaths begin with behavior, not necessarily from the window where the liquor is purchased. She said underage drinkers and problem drinkers also play a role.

But Atkinson said the idea is that alcohol is easy to get.

"Drive-up windows make alcohol very available," she said.




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New Mexico improves in alcoholrelated deaths report

NEW MEXICO - New Mexico improved from worst to third worst in the nation for per-capita alcohol-related deaths last year, new federal figures show.

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Quick Drug Facts

As for young adults aged 18 to 24, the percentage of young binge drinkers appears to be systematically greater for men than for women.
Most vegetable, and virtually all fruit juices, contain alcohol.
Alcohol is a factor in about one-half of all fatal traffic collisions in the United States.
Nearly four out of every five students (77%) have consumed alcohol by the end of high school.
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