One of the things that most stood out for a young Gilbert Suazo upon reading documents pertaining to the return of Blue Lake to Taos Pueblo in…
A 2,600-foot-deep test well that contractors are drilling near the Taos Valley Regional Wastewater Treatment and Reclamation Facility is just …
Mike Davis stood in front of a locked gate on the north side of U.S. 64 West, at the site of a well-drilling operation, Wednesday (Feb 24). Fa…
A protest against the installation of a water pipeline under U.S. 64 west abruptly ended Wednesday evening (Feb. 24) when heavy equipment oper…
History is never erased. It should be re-examined and the truth be told. The process of coming to understand our past and envisioning our futu…
There’s a bill doing well in the legislature that I hope gets the governor’s signature: House Bill 207, which would raise the adoption tax cre…
Once again, a reader’s letter to Dr. Ted Wiard in the Feb 27 Taos News speaks to the theme of how to live together best. The headline declares…
Imagine a million-acre wilderness: Mountain peaks. Rushing rivers. Bears and wolves. Now imagine a city-sized population of, say, Chicago. In …
If one were to make a movie about Taos — the real Taos — there’d be plenty of material from which to choose. You’d find tales filled with poli…
Weather depending, New Mexico residents could catch a glimpse of a total eclipse and blood moon next Thursday and Friday (March 13-14). While …
As any parent or guardian knows, the time when teenagers become interested in dating is full of excitement but also full of complications. Tho…
This month’s Know Your Neighbor interview was held on an unseasonably warm February day over my first ice cream of the season at Taos Cow @ An…
With tourism slowing, the threat of wildfire rising, affordable housing in short supply and a major road project still choking the downtown, r…
So you’re curious about the Abeyta Settlement. You’ve read our news articles about it, talked with your neighbors and “just heard things.” But…
A district court judge in Taos issued a preliminary injunction today (April 2) that prevents a loose association of water protestors from stag…
The Abeyta Settlement is a complex water-sharing agreement among the major water users in the Taos Valley, like the town of Taos, Taos Pueblo…
So you’re curious about the Abeyta Settlement. You’ve read our news articles about it, talked with your neighbors and “just heard things.” But…
A district court judge in Taos issued a preliminary injunction today (April 2) that prevents a loose association of water protestors from stag…
The Abeyta Settlement is a complex water-sharing agreement among the major water users in the Taos Valley, like the town of Taos, Taos Pueblo…
More than anything else, the action was meant to draw a collective focus to what they say are worrying aspects of the Abeyta Settlement -- the…
The settlement is essentially a water-sharing agreement for the Taos Valley. Here's some answers to common questions about the Abeyta Settlement.
The Acequia Madre del Rio Lucero y Arroyo Seco voted Saturday (March 16) not to pay its membership dues to the Taos Valley Acequia Association…
Buck Johnston breezed through the front door of the Taos County Adult Detention Center Monday (March 18) with a smile on his face after spendi…
Song and drumming filled the morning as a local water activist finished his four-day action atop a 60-foot-tall drilling rig. Buck Johnston cl…
So you’re curious about the Abeyta Settlement. You’ve read our news articles about it, talked with your neighbors and “just heard things.” But…
A district court judge in Taos issued a preliminary injunction today (April 2) that prevents a loose association of water protestors from stag…
The Abeyta Settlement is a complex water-sharing agreement among the major water users in the Taos Valley, like the town of Taos, Taos Pueblo…
More than anything else, the action was meant to draw a collective focus to what they say are worrying aspects of the Abeyta Settlement -- the…
The settlement is essentially a water-sharing agreement for the Taos Valley. Here's some answers to common questions about the Abeyta Settlement.
The Acequia Madre del Rio Lucero y Arroyo Seco voted Saturday (March 16) not to pay its membership dues to the Taos Valley Acequia Association…
Buck Johnston breezed through the front door of the Taos County Adult Detention Center Monday (March 18) with a smile on his face after spendi…
Song and drumming filled the morning as a local water activist finished his four-day action atop a 60-foot-tall drilling rig. Buck Johnston cl…
The water activist who on Thursday (March 14) climbed a water well drilling rig plans to come down Sunday morning. “Buck [Johnston] plans to d…
The protest at the site of a well drilling rig is in its second day Friday (March 15), which started around dawn with the arrest of one person…
A group of self-described water protectors have initiated a nonviolent prayer action at a water well site in Taos County Thursday (March 14) t…
Greetings fellow Taoseños! I would like to introduce our organization, Guardians of Taos Water, to the broader Taos community and clarify our …
The Abeyta Water Rights settlement was years in the making, but 2019 looks to be the year that some ideas written into the massive court negot…
While demonstrators inspected the well site, several indigenous women offered prayers. Among them was Taos resident Pat McCabe, who said water…