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Here are the candidates for sa国际传媒官网网页入口 Public Schools Board of Education
sa国际传媒官网网页入口 Public Schools building, pictured in June. School board elections will take place in November.
This November, voters who live in sa国际传媒官网网页入口 Public Schools boundaries will send at least two new members to seats on the governing body for the largest district in New Mexico.
Four seats 鈥 Districts 3,5,6 and 7 鈥 are up for grabs on the APS Board of Education, and following filing day with the county, nine candidates have emerged.
Historically, the local teachers union, the , and the metro鈥檚 business community power players, the and the , a commercial real estate organization, have been key organizations in the battle for power on the APS board.
Currently, each faction has three members on the seven-member board. One board member, Janelle Astorga, won her seat without endorsements from either faction and is not up for reelection this year.
The incumbents
Two business-backed candidates, District 3 Board Member Danielle Gonzales, the board鈥檚 president, and District 7 Board Member Courtney Jackson, the board鈥檚 vice president, are up for reelection.
Gonzales will face two challengers: Isaac Flores, who has spent his 鈥渁dult life working with young people in the juvenile corrections鈥 system,鈥 according to his campaign website, and Rebecca Betzen, a 鈥27-year veteran teacher鈥 who is backed by the ATF.
Gonzales was elected to her first term in 2021. She began her career in education as a 4th grade teacher and eventually worked in education policy at the national level.
Jackson will face Kristin Wood-Hegner, who is backed by the teachers union and describes herself as a 鈥渕om, public safety expert, financial watchdog and lifelong advocate for victims of violent crime.鈥
Jackson was elected in 2021. She is a graduate of the University of New Mexico law school, and an executive assistant for the Economic Forum of sa国际传媒官网网页入口.
If Jackson or Gonzales is elected, they will be the only members on the board serving a second term.
Open seats
Two current board members are vacating their seats.
In District 5, Crystal Tapia-Romero, who was supported by the business community, is vacating her seat, and in District 6, Josefina Dominguez, who was supported by ATF, is leaving her post.
Tapia-Romero announced she would not be running for reelection in May and endorsed Joshua Martinez, the New Mexico health equity and community impact director for the American Diabetes Association. Martinez also serves as the president of his homeowner and neighborhood associations. The local chamber of commerce .
Brian Laurent Jr., a former special education teacher and former director of school accountability support for APS, will challenge him.
According to its president, Ellen Bernstein, ATF has not endorsed in the race because the two candidates 鈥渄on鈥檛 necessarily鈥 hold the values the union is looking for.
鈥淥ur union鈥檚 endorsement is not easy to obtain,鈥 she said in a Friday phone call. 鈥淲e care about two things: Somebody committed to public education and the people who work in public education, and are supportive of labor.鈥
Vying for the District 6 seat are David Ams, a 鈥淧TA president and accomplished scientist,鈥 according to the Greater sa国际传媒官网网页入口 Chamber of Commerce鈥檚 endorsement page, and Warigia Bowman, a University of New Mexico law professor endorsed by the teachers union.
District 3 represents the city鈥檚 north-central corridor and stretches across the river to Corrales, bordering Rio Rancho Public Schools. District 5 represents the city鈥檚 central and far West Side, bordered on the east by District 3.
District 6 accounts for the Foothills, part of Uptown, and the Northeast Heights鈥 lower end, stretching to the East Mountains. District 7 represents the northern part of the Foothills and the north end of Northeast Heights. It is bordered on the west by Interstate 25.
Election Day is Nov. 4. Early voting begins Oct. 7 and ends Nov. 1.