Fearey: Statement Of Candidacy For UNM-LA Advisory Board
By BRYAN FEAREY
Candidate
UNM-Los Alamos
My name is Bryan Fearey. I am running for a position on the University of New Mexico – Los Alamos (UNM-LA) Advisory Board. I seek your vote so that together we can strengthen UNM-LA as one of our bedrock institutions. I strongly support UNM-LA’s mission of “preparation for transfer … pathways for careers … passion for lifelong learning.”
I am a long-term resident of Los Alamos County, having worked and retired from the Los Alamos National Laboratory (LANL) (>32yrs) in the national security arena (Linkedin). I completed my Chemistry BS at Wichita State Read More
Hampton: My Candidacy For UNM-LA Advisory Board
By DAVID HAMPTON
Candidate
UNM-Los Alamos Advisory Board
Dear Los Alamos County,
My name is David Hampton. After being appointed to fill a vacancy on the UNM-LA Advisory Board in 2024, I would like to continue the work I’ve done advocating for additional 4-year degrees and certifications, supporting dual credit for high school students, fundraising, and representing you at UNM-LA events such as graduation.
Beyond this, I have participated in the normal processes of budget and tuition endorsement, approving the Operating Agreement with UNM Albuquerque, chancellor and senior staff selection, Read More
Fuselier: A Simple Solution To A Complicated Problem
By ROBERT FUSELIER
Los Alamos
With all the division in our country and world, and the fear, anger, and hatred that flows from it and contributes to it, it can be easy to be pessimistic about our future. The news, whether delivered by cable, network, or internet, seems to be full of the bad with little of the good. Social media loves to keep us scrolling – and their ad revenue up – by taking advantage of the fact that bad news and divisiveness are big attention-getters. Hope seems like a lost dream. But is it?
Our community, state, nation, and world are full of dedicated organizations doing Read More
Weekly Fishing Report: Sept. 8, 2025
By GEORGE MORSE
Sports and Outdoors
Los Alamos Daily Post
The cooler temperatures and rain that New Mexico experienced this past week should help to improve fishing conditions. Bank fishermen at our lakes should benefit the most as trout will start moving into shallower water as the water temperatures cool down.
If you are a hunter, bring along your shotgun on trips into the mountains. Blue grouse season is open. These game birds are often encountered while driving dirt roads in our National Forests. They are excellent eating. The daily bag limit is three
The Pecos River is still holding up Read More
Travel: Taste The Flavors Of Madrid On A Culinary Adventure
Taberna la Concha. Photo by Debbie Stone
Crafting the Manuela cocktail. Photo by Debbie Stone
By DEBBIE STONE
Santa Fe
For the Los Alamos Daily Post
If you’re looking for a fun and delicious way to kick off your stay in Madrid, opt to join The Tour Guy’s Ultimate Drinks and Tapas Tour. Not only will you sample mouthwatering traditional Spanish dishes and sip classic Spanish cocktails, but you’ll also learn about Madrid’s culinary history and culture in the process.
After meeting your guide and fellow foodies, you’ll begin eating your way through La Latina, a vibrant neighborhood known for its tapas Read More
Robinson: Watchdog To Gov. ‘CYFD’s Failures Are On You’
By SHERRY ROBINSON
All She Wrote
© 2025 New Mexico News Services
Another cabinet secretary has departed the horror show we call the Children Youth and Families Department. Teresa Casados left the same day the Governor’s Office announced her retirement, which looks like a firing.
In 2023, when she joined CYFD, Casados was the governor’s chief operating officer. She had been a competent bureaucrat – that reliable person a governor can count on to get things done. Casados had led the state’s COVID-19 response, along with wildfire relief. But the agency reporters usually describe as “embattled” Read More
Posts From The Road: Sheep Canyon Geological Loop
Open Views: When visiting the Flaming Gorge area, traveling from south to north, one would be on Utah Highway 44 to drive the Sheep Creek Geological Area. This view was taken a short distance into the 13-mile loop that traverses through high meadows and open spaces surrounded by mountains. The views are tremendous and there are some areas along the loop road to stop and appreciate the landscape. Photo by Gary Warren/ladailypost.com
Forested Hillsides: The loop road passes through mountains and high desert terrain for the first few miles of the loop. Many views such as this forested hillside broken Read More


































