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OPINION: Blackstone's track record is why PRC should reject takeover

Vance Sterling, with Singing Resistance ABQ, leads a group of protesters in a song outside the PNM office, in sa国际传媒官网网页入口, April 30. Over 120 people were protesting against the potential acquisition of PNM by Blackstone.
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New Mexico is among the states most exposed to private equity ownership across essential sectors. Regulators should think carefully before allowing Wall Street firms even deeper control over critical infrastructure.

The New Mexico Public Regulation Commission is considering whether to approve private equity giant Blackstone鈥檚 proposed takeover of TXNM Energy, parent company of Public Service Company of New Mexico. Supporters promise investment and modernization. But as ratepayers and workers see what鈥檚 happening at private equity-owned utilities in other states, the PRC should ask: will New Mexicans be put first under new ownership of an out-of-state Wall Street firm?

As an expert who studies private equity ownership of essential services like utilities, I believe the answer is clear. To protect New Mexicans amid a worsening affordability crisis, the commission should reject the deal.

Blackstone isn鈥檛 new to the utility game. It already owns a roughly 20% stake in Northern Indiana Public Service Company, or NIPSCO, which serves more than 1.4 million electric and gas customers. PNM believes Blackstone鈥檚 investment experience in NIPSCO will 鈥渂enefit our customers,鈥 according to the utility鈥檚 application to be acquired by the investment firm. Since Blackstone鈥檚 2024 investment, NIPSCO customers have faced some of the steepest utility bill increases in Indiana, drawing public backlash and regulatory scrutiny. According to the Energy and Policy Institute, nearly 20% of NIPSCO customer bills go to profit, ranking it 12th nationally among major utilities for the share of bills going to profit.

Minnesota offers another warning. During the 2025 review of private equity firm BlackRock鈥檚 takeover of Minnesota Power, the administrative law judge warned that private-equity-style return expectations could create pressure for higher utility rates, especially given consumers鈥 inability to turn to competitors should the utility raise prices.

New Mexicans should also be concerned about Blackstone鈥檚 involvement in the massively unpopular data center buildout occurring across the country. Blackstone owns QTS, a major data center developer. In Indiana, QTS proposed major data centers in NIPSCO territory before withdrawing after public opposition, in part over conflict of interest concerns. In Georgia, residents near a QTS data center later discovered the facility had consumed nearly 30 million gallons of water through improperly tracked hookups. Should Blackstone acquire PNM, will QTS attempt to build more data centers in New Mexico?

This acquisition poses serious concerns for New Mexican workers, too. While Blackstone and supporters of the PNM deal have emphasized commitments to union jobs and local workers, Blackstone鈥檚 broader labor record deserves scrutiny. PESP鈥檚 Private Equity Labor Scorecard gave Blackstone an F, citing wage-and-hour violations, OSHA violations, layoffs and other labor concerns across its portfolio of companies. Blackstone has also faced criticism over anti-union tactics. At Blackstone-owned Great Wolf Lodge locations, the company hired anti-union consultants during organizing campaigns in 2024.

One of the most troubling examples involved Blackstone-owned Packers Sanitation. Federal investigators found more than 100 children working hazardous jobs cleaning dangerous meat-processing equipment at company facilities, resulting in a massive scandal for the company and its private equity owners.

Blackstone鈥檚 spotty labor record has extended to utilities, too. Blackstone has pointed to Indiana鈥檚 NIPSCO as evidence of its utility expertise in the PNM proceeding. If NIPSCO proves Blackstone鈥檚 utility expertise, regulators should examine what unionized workers have experienced there: NIPSCO recently locked out roughly 1,600 union workers for an entire month.

The commission鈥檚 job is not to protect Blackstone鈥檚 investment thesis. It is to protect New Mexicans who rely on PNM for affordable, reliable service and fair treatment of the workers who keep the system running.

The PRC should stand up for New Mexicans over Wall Street profits and reject Blackstone鈥檚 takeover of PNM.

Nichole Heil is a researcher with the Private Equity Stakeholder Project, a nonprofit organization headquartered in Chicago that studies the impact of private equity ownership on essential services including utilities, healthcare, housing and infrastructure.