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F I S C A L I M P A C T R E P O R T
SPONSOR Altamirano
ORIGINAL DATE
LAST UPDATED
1/31/2006
HB
SHORT TITLE UNM Chicano Studies Tenure Track Positions
SB 501
ANALYST McOlash
APPROPRIATION (dollars in thousands)
Appropriation
Recurring
or Non-Rec
Fund
Affected
FY06
FY07
$250.0
Recurring
General Fund
(Parenthesis ( ) Indicate Expenditure Decreases)
Relates to Appropriation in the General Appropriation Act
SOURCES OF INFORMATION
LFC Files
University of New Mexico Web Site (UNM)
Responses Received From
New Mexico Higher Education Department (NMHED)
SUMMARY
Synopsis of Bill
Senate Bill 501 appropriates $250,000 from the General Fund to the Board of Regents of the
University of New Mexico for expenditure in FY 2007for Instruction and General Funding
purposes to expand the Chicano/Hispanic/Mexicano Studies Program to provide for tenure
track assistant professorships, lectures, graduate assistants, community outreach and curricu-
lum development.
FISCAL IMPLICATIONS
The appropriation of contained in this bill is a recurring expense to the General Fund. .
Any unexpended or unencumbered balance remaining at the end of FY 2007 shall revert to the
General Fund.
pg_0002
Senate Bill 501 – page
2
SIGNIFICANT ISSUES
Senate Bill 501 relates to UNM’s priority five: Program Funding for Native American Stud-
ies and Chicano et. al. studies. The NMHED analysis indicates this request was not included
in UNM's recommendation to the New Mexico Higher Education Department.
OVERVIEW
The Chicano Studies Program at UNM emerged in the 1970s during a heightened period of
student political and cultural activism. Controversies concerning the Viet Nam War and the
Land Grant movement polarized and energized the community. The traditional curriculum at
UNM was challenged and new interest in women’s and ethnic studies was met with new
courses and programs.
Although strong departments of Anthropology and Spanish have always been part of the
foundational vision of a University for New Mexico, the commitment to Regional Studies
built by leaders like President Zimmerman and Spanish Professor Joaquín Ortega before
World War II waned quickly in the post war period. An important link to the future was
forged by Professor Sabine Ulibarrí with the foundation of the nation’s first “Heritage Span-
ish” program as we now call it.
REGIONAL STUDIES
Chicano Studies built on the past, articulated with the national Chicano movement, and
helped restore and build UNM´s commitment to the region. The emergence of the Center for
Regional Studies in the 1980s has insured the vitality of this process, funding special re-
search and archival projects, film, joint appointments, graduate fellowships, and program ini-
tiatives including the establishment of the Heritage Spanish program and instructorships in
Chicano Studies. Faculty with academic backgrounds in Chicano Studies now occupy posi-
tions of leadership across campus, including five chairs in Arts & Sciences, one in Education,
and prominent colleagues in Law and Medicine.
THE UNDERGRADUATE MINOR
The Chicano Studies undergraduate program has always been small, perhaps because stu-
dents may pursue regional studies in a number of departments. In 1996, these offerings coa-
lesced into a Minor, with the addition of introduction, topics, and seminar courses. After a
period of initial growth, the program reached a stasis, with minors numbering up to 40 stu-
dents, and overall enrollments up to 185. These numbers are small when compared to the
growth in the Heritage Spanish program (450-500) and minuscule in the sea of Hispanic un-
dergraduates at UNM (5000-6000). When Chicano Studies became a part of University Col-
lege, a renewed commitment to undergraduate education and retention emerged. Director
Eduardo Hernández Chávez directed much of his energy to the establishment of a Spanish
language charter school, La Academia de Lengua y Cultura. The introduction of Chicano
Studies curriculum in high schools was also a high priority.
Enrique Lamadrid began as interim chair in the fall of 2003, after a year of controversy con-
cerning the directorship and the rejection of a candidate. The national search that followed
confirmed his leadership by the fall of 2004.
pg_0003
Senate Bill 501 - Page
3
NEW DIRECTIONS: A NAME CHANGE
Action on the inclusion initiative led to a name change of the program in November 2004,
since the term “Chicano” does not fully address the diversity within the Hispanic communi-
ties of New Mexico. It is interesting to note that sister programs across the Southwest
reached the same conclusions and made necessary title changes as early as the early 1980s at
the University of Texas Austin, the University of Arizona, and others. Don Américo Pare-
des, the Dean of Chicano Studies himself, instituted the change in Texas to “Mexican Ameri-
can Studies” in a move towards inclusion and diversity.
After lengthy discussion over almost two years, the Steering Committee recommended a
name change of “Southwest Hispanic Studies.” The following language was then submitted
to the Curriculum Committee:
“The terminology of “Chicano Studies” has ever-decreasing relevance to Hispanic stu-
dents in New Mexico, who overwhelmingly identify themselves and their families with
the ethnonyms “Hispanic” and “Mexicano,” at the top of a list which also includes
“Mexican-American,” “Latino,” and near the bottom, “Chicano.” To target a broader
range of a diverse population, only the name of the minor will change to “SW Hispanic
Studies.” Course contents and degree requirements will remain the same.”
After a dynamic community forum and debate with national repercussions, the name became
Chicano / Hispano / Mexicano Studies (CHMS).
ADMINISTRATIVE IMPLICATIONS
It is not clear how the appropriated funds will be spent. The list of possible expenditure line
items is extensive including faculty and staff salaries, community outreach, and curriculum de-
velopment
POSSIBLE QUESTIONS
Should the NMHED require a program budget and an annual evaluation.
BMC/mt