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King Richardson Climbs Down - Blind Kids Can Fly

Behind The Scenes Of A Recent News Story

New Mexico Governor Bill Richardson teed off at the Albuquerque Journal Thursday, claiming that the paper ran a "false" and "untrue" story that reported statements by several levels of state transportation bureaucracy, to the effect that students at the New Mexico School for the Blind and Visually Impaired lost their ride home when the Governor got his long-sought upgrade from an elderly turboprop to a new $5.5 million CItation Bravo. Six to nine kids from all around the large southwestern state have depended on the state's transportation department for rides home on weekends from the boarding school in Alamogordo.

New Mexico is generally poorly served by airlines, as any airline pilot who has tried to deadhead to Artesia for Federal Flight Deck Officer training has discovered, and the large distances make cars and buses impractical for a weekend trip. So the report that Richardson's new jet was off-limits to the blind students was disappointing, shocking -- and politically damaging to the governor, who has a reputation as a somewhat imperial figure who's very attached to the perks of office (like, say, a jet).

Falling into line with the Governor's jeremiad, numerous Richardson underlings, including School for the Blind Superintendent Dianna Jennings, retracted earlier statements. Jennings, for instance, said, "the Journal report that General Services Department can no longer commit state aircraft for student travel was simply untrue."

One source of that report, though, was Jennings's own earlier statement on record to the Journal -- the Journal has the tape. Another source was an email from Porfirio Perez, Jr., director of the state's transportation services: "...unfortunately, ASB (Aviation Services Bureau) cannot make that commitment. It has been a great honor for ASB to serve the NMSBVI for the last 10 years. Thank you." That sure sounds like "Don't let the door hit you on the way out." But now Jennings is contradicting her own recorded statement, and Perez's boss is saying Perez didn't mean it, and if he did mean it, he didn't have the authority to say it, and anyway, he's new at his job, so he doesn't know what he's doing. Perez himself isn't saying anything.

Did somebody incur the wrath of the Governor?

Cynics say that the real reason Richardson wants the fast, long-range jet is that he intends to use it in a primary campaign for President in 2008. Richardson may not be a first-tier candidate for the office, but he might well earn a vice-presidential nomination. Either way, he'll be speaking and raising money in places far from New Mexico -- which a jet would make easier.

Richardson's supporters, on the other hand, point out that the great benefit of the Citation Bravo is that it brings everywhere in the state -- everywhere with an airport, anyway -- within 35 minutes.

Richardson has long sought a jet, though, despite resistance from the legislature. The state had an ancient Aero Commander jet (forerunner of the first Westwind) but it was crudely modified for aerial photography without an STC. For public use aircraft, the STC isn't necessary; indeed, many FAA rules don't apply, but that means the machine can no longer be used as an ordinary transport.

Purchase of the new jet is contingent on disposal of one of a fleet of three turboprops, so the net number of aircraft does not change.

Whether the Albuquerque Journal got it wrong and slandered Governor Richardson, or whether the paper had it right and the Governor reacted to the political hits he was taking, the outcome is the same either way: the kids from the school for the blind and vision-impaired still have a ride.

FMI: www.governor.state.nm.us

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