State Land Office Approves Land Sale To County For Hatch Valley Flood Control Project

Commissioner Stephanie Garcia Richard

From the New Mexico State Land Office:

SANTA FE — New Mexico Commissioner of Public Lands Stephanie Garcia Richard announced that the Doña Ana County Flood Commission has won a bid to buy 121.04 acres of land from the State Land Office for the construction and maintenance of a flood control project just south of the Village of Hatch.

The parcel sold for $326,000 at a public auction Nov. 1. Revenue earned from the project will benefit New Mexico schools.

The Doña Ana County Flood Commission proposed building the structure on state land due to the history of severe flooding in the Hatch Valley. In August of 2006, the Placitas Arroyo overflowed from excessive rainfall and flooded the streets of Hatch, displacing approximately 500 residents – or approximately one-third of the village’s population at the time – and damaging hundreds of properties and structures. Since many residents of Hatch did not have flood insurance, the results were economically devastating.

“Today’s land sale will help the residents of Hatch and the surrounding area feel more at ease knowing there is a plan in place to reduce the risks of massive floods in their community,” Commissioner Garcia Richard said. “In an ever-changing climate, these kinds of extreme weather events are becoming more common. As our state’s Land Commissioner, I’m always looking for ways to help communities across New Mexico address their needs.”

In addition to the 2006 event, the region has a long history of disruptive floods that displace residents, damage crops and submerge structures, including as recently as 2017 when another 40 residents were displaced. As an agricultural community, the Hatch Valley consists of multiple arroyos that can carry large amounts of debris when it rains heavily. Also, the site sits in a Federal Emergency Management Agency-designated flood zone, making the region susceptible to other major floods in the future without proper infrastructure in place.

“The people of Hatch Valley have endured enough from these floods over the years. It’s our hope that selling this land to Doña Ana County for the construction of the dam can be at least one solution to the problem,” Garcia Richard said.

In accordance with state law, the State Land Office published a notice of the land sale in the Santa Fe New MexicanLas Cruces Sun-News and NFB Newsline.

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