SANTA FE, N.M. — Democrats in the state legislative majority on Thursday resisted calls by New Mexico's governor for immediate action to address the ''dangerous intersection'' of crime and homelessness, shunning her proposals to enhance criminal penalties, restrict panhandling and expand involuntary detention and treatment for mental health problems.
Instead, the Legislature sent the governor a solitary bill that expands pilot programs for voluntary treatment of people with severe mental illness and addiction problems, along with an emergency aid package in response to devastating wildfires that burned through a village in southern New Mexico in June.
''We absolutely have a responsibility to do something about those people who are on the merry-go-round through our court system,'' Democratic state Sen. Gerald Ortiz y Pino, of Albuquerque, said as the Legislature convened. ''But the answer isn't to say we should start putting them in jail. The answer is to say we should start providing services.''
The bill won final legislative approval on a 30-0 vote of the Senate, which adjourned the special session over the objections of Republican lawmakers who found common cause with Gov. Michelle Lujan Grisham, a two-term Democrat.
The governor accused Democratic legislators of having ''no interest in making New Mexico safer.''
''Not one public safety measure was considered,'' Lujan Grisham said in a statement. ''Not one, despite the bills having the backing of police chiefs, public safety unions, mayors, prosecutors.''
It fell to Republicans in the legislative minority to introduce initiatives from the governor that would provide longer minimum sentences for gun-toting felons, combat fentanyl trafficking, restrict loitering on narrow roadway medians and take aim at organized crime by amending racketeering statutes. Those bills from state senators were referred to committees that never met.
''We embarked on this special session for one reason ... it was crime, front and center,'' said Republican state Sen. Greg Baca of Belen. ''We had an opportunity here, and I want to thank the governor. ... Why would we not take an opportunity to take a step?''