Referendum Opposed By Some Area Residents
To many residents of Dona Ana County in southeastern New
Mexico, it's a tough sell: a proposed increase to the local sales
tax, to fund a project many residents of the resolutely agrarian
region consider a spaced-out idea. But the fate of Spaceport
America rests in their hands.

Proponents of the launch facility -- including state governor
and presidential hopeful Bill Richardson -- have big plans for
Spaceport America, which boasts upstart space tourism company
Virgin Galactic as an anchor tenant. Virgin signed a 20-year lease
last year to use the facility, and representatives with the company
visited the area recently to scout locations for a future resort
for passengers.
In February 2006, the New Mexico legislature approved $110
million to fund development of the spaceport through 2009... and
plans are underway to build a 10,000-foot runway and terminal
facility next year. As Aero-News reported, the
emerging inland spaceport, located about an hour's drive southeast
of Truth or Consequences, NM, has already witnessed its first
launch: a less-than-successful effort by UP Aerospace to send a
small rocket into suborbital space.
A necessary step for future development plans lies in an April 3
referendum... which puts the idea of funding the ambitious project
before residents of Dona Ana County, one of three counties the
spaceport's land sits in. Voters will be asked to approve a small
increase to the local sales tax -- about 25 cents for every $100
spent -- to show the county's commitment to the project.

"New Mexico has an opportunity to be on the ground floor when a
major industry of the future is born," Rick Homans, the state's
economic development director, told The Washington Post. "Bill
Gates first tried to start his software company in Albuquerque, but
he couldn't find local backers. When it comes to space, that won't
happen again."
Neighboring Sierra and Otero counties are holding off their own
referendums, to see what the outcome of the first vote will be.
Besides Richardson, the referendum also has the support of most
Dona Ana commissioners, as well as several lawmakers in the county
seat of Las Cruces. The plan has its share of opponents, too.
"I'm not opposed to the
spaceport, but I think it's a terrible idea to tax poor people to
pay for something that will be used by the rich," said Oscar
Vasquez Butler, who represents an area of the county that is home
of several rural colonias with substandard water, sewage,
and roads systems. "They tell us the spaceport will bring jobs to
our people, but it all sounds very risky. The only thing we know
for sure is that people will pay more taxes."
Referendum supporter William McCamley, who heads the group
People for Aerospace, disputes the notion the spaceport is merely a
plaything for the idle rich... noting one-quarter of the proposed
tax would go towards improving math and science classes in area
schools, something that benefits all residents.
"The opponents say they want the spaceport, but they don't want
the tax," McCamley said. "We're saying that's impossible, and that
the huge benefits that would come to the county make it worth the
money and the risk."
Despite the large amount of money invested in the project, by
the state and other interests, it's anyone's guess how the April 3
vote will turn out.
Business and education interests are all for the Spaceport...
while snowbird retirees in Las Cruces are largely against the plan,
along with the aforesaid residents of poorer regions of the county.
Historical preservationists are also concerned with the site's
two-mile distance from the fabled El Camino Real de Tierra Adentro,
the 500-year-old migration and trade route from Mexico to Santa
Fe.
Disquietingly, Homans admits the state has no "Plan B" should
voters reject the proposed tax increase.