|
About Me
Jump direction to:
Sen. Dede Feldman, New Mexico Senate District 13
Dede Feldman has had a varied career as a journalist, high school and university teacher, and the owner of a small public relations business. As a State Senator from District 13 in Albuquerque's North Valley since 1997, Dede Feldman has already had a big impact on the lives of women, children and people struggling to make ends meet. She is the sponsor of several successful initiatives including the “Graduated Drivers License” system for teens, a mastectomy bill that mandates insurance companies cover a minimum 48 hr. hospital stay, as well as the creation of a Brain Injury Services Fund that provides much needed services to people with head injuries. She also sponsored the “Do Not Call” bill in 2003 prohibiting unwanted telephone solicitations, an ATV safety bill in 2005 and the state's Senior Prescription Drug Discount program (2002).
She currently serves as the Chair of the Senate Public Affairs Committee and the Co- Chair of the Interim Health and Human Services Committee where she is focusing on improving access to quality health care for New Mexicans without insurance and reducing the high cost of prescription drugs. A longtime environmentalist, Feldman has sponsored many bills to preserve the bosque and conserve water, including the statewide water plan, and a landmark groundwater protection bill passed in 1999.
Dede has introduced legislation to reform campaign financing every year she has been in the legislature, finally winning approval for a public financing pilot program for the Public Regulation Commission, which takes effect in 2006.
Committee Assignments
Senate Public Affairs Committee—Chair
Senate Rules Committee
Interim Health and Human Services—Co-Chair
Interim Water and Natural Resources Committee
Tobacco Settlement Committee
Election Reform Task Force
Awards
- From 2003-2005 Feldman was awarded the Albuquerque Chamber of Commerce's Leader Award for both her health care and water legislation
- In 2004 she received the Carl Souder Water Protection Award from the NM Environmental Law Center for her defense of water resources.
- In 2004 she received the Pillar Award from First Choice Community Health Clinics for her work to expand access to health care and reduce the cost of prescription drugs
- In 2004 the NM Section of the American Planning Association named her Citizen Planner of the Year
- In 2000 Feldman, the owner of a public relations company as well as a citizen legislator, won a Silver Anvil Award of Excellence from the Public Relations Society of America for her work on the Graduated Drivers License campaign
- In 1999 Feldman was selected by the DC-based Center for Policy Alternatives as a Flemming Fellow, one of 38 progressive state legislators chosen nationwide for their ability to build bridges across party lines and advance a values-based agenda.
- Feldman was the New Mexico Pediatric Society's Child Advocate of the Year in 2000 and the Lutheran Office of Governmental Ministries Legislator of the Year in 1998.
- Feldman was presented with the New Mexico Psychological Association's Public Service Award in the spring of 2001 and the New Mexico Primary Care Association's Appreciation Award in 1998.
- As a journalist Feldman has won over 80 state and national awards from the Press Women's Association, the Fund for Investigative Journalism and the NM Press Association
Education and Personal
Feldman holds both a BA and an MA in Political Science from the University of Pennsylvania. In one of her first efforts at grassroots community development, when Dede was a teacher, she and her husband led a group of students on a trip to Uganda in East Africa where they worked with Africans to repair and build additions to local schools. She moved to New Mexico in 1975 and lives in a solar home in the North Valley with her daughter and husband of 35 years.
Community Organizations
- Commissioner, Western Interstate Compact on Higher Education (WICHE)
- Member, North Valley Neighborhood Coalition
- Councilor, Insure New Mexico Advisory Council
- Member, Governor's Commission on Oral Health
- Member, New Mexico Foundation for Open Government
- Former Chairwoman of the Albuquerque Citizens Advisory Group, which supervised the allocation of $3.2 million in federal community development funds (1986-88)
Return Campaigns to Voters
By Senator Dede Feldman and Fred Harris
From the Albuquerque Journal, Saturday June 18, 2005
The rapid rise in the cost of running a political campaign, at all levels of government, has eroded the power of the average voter. Now more than ever, campaigning successfully for public office is so much more about the amount of money a candidate can amass in his or her campaign coffers than the dedication and ideas they can bring to public service. The 2004 presidential and congressional campaigns were the most expensive in
U.S. It is now more important that a candidate pay attention to the will of campaign contributors than the will of voters. This is a real and growing threat to democracy.
And the threat is not just at the federal and state levels. We have a real opportunity to curb the rising cost of city campaigns here in Albuquerque. By the end of this month, the City Council will make a final decision about whether or not to refer the proposed Open and Ethical Elections Code to a vote by the people in October—to allow for a system of voluntary public financing in Albuquerque municipal elections.
The system is straightforward. Candidates for City Council or mayor would have to collect a required number of low-dollar qualifying contributions to demonstrate significant grassroots support. Candidates thus qualifying would voluntarily agree to limit their campaign spending to the public financing funds, with no private campaign contributions allowed.
Whatever they personally think about public financing, members of the City Council should allow this issue to go to the voters. For city councilors, it's not a question of supporting or not supporting public financing; it's a question of whether Albuquerque voters will have a chance to determine the matter for themselves. It's that simple.
Albuquerque voters have shown a disdain for the role big money plays in politics. Our now defunct spending limits, thrown out by the courts, were highly popular with Albuquerque residents; a 2001 poll showed that 74 percent of likely voters supported those mandatory limits on campaign spending. The thought of Albuquerque mayoral candidates combining to raise $1million this summer for the fall election is most disturbing.
For future city elections, we can replace the old system of mandatory spending limits with a combination of voluntary spending limits and low-cost public financing. We believe in such a system because it works well in other states.
Arizona, Maine and North Carolina appellate court elections are covered by successful systems of publicly financed elections. Portland, Oregon will have its first publicly financed election this fall, and the New Mexico Public Regulation Commission will have its first publicly financed election in 2006. Limiting big spending on campaigns in other parts of the country is an idea that draws bipartisan support. Democratic Arizona Governor and Albuquerque native Janet Napolitano was elected under the Arizona public financing system. Republican Arizona Corporations Commissioner and former Arizona Senate Majority Leader Marc Spitzer has been elected more than once as a publicly financed candidate. Governor Napolitano and Chairman Spitzer are vocal proponents of public financing.
Public financing of campaigns returns election ownership to voters, allows candidates to spend more time discussing issues, and prevents the fundraising arms race that always ensues during campaign season. If the Open and Ethical Elections Code is referred by the Albuquerque City Council for a public vote, we will, of course, advocate for its passage. But the City Council must first do the right thing and give Albuquerque voters the chance to make a democratic decision about public financing for themselves.
Senator Dede Feldman , D-Albuquerque, represents Senate District 13 . Fred Harris , a former US Senator, teaches political science at UNM and is on the national governing board of Common Cause.
Albuquerque Journal Article August, 2001
What do you remember about your summer vacation? That was the classic
homework assignment on the first day of school and, this summer, a call
for articles from the Trends editor of the Albuquerque Journal. Heres
what I wrote in reply
The Wests Lure Doesn't Disappoint
by Senator Dede Feldman
Sometimes life makes a full circle that can be detected only through
memories of childhood. Thats my profound conclusion after discovering
some old photos from a long ago summer vacation.
It was a summer-long road trip, 1955 style, powering down Rt. 66 from
Chicago south and west to arrive, ironically, in Albuquerques North
Valley, where I moved twenty years later, and which I now represent in
the New Mexico Senate.
My father and mother had been talking about "The West" forever,
and now that we had our brand new, two-tone 1955 Plymouth station wagon,
we were ready to set off, AAA Triptik firmly in hand, from the colonial
suburbs or Philadelphia for the Purple Mountains Majesty. We were determined
to camp in the national parks out of the back of our stylish new wagon,
and my mother brought her Bisquick and Better Homes and Gardens cookbook
so we could make biscuits over the open fire.
And we did it all, traveling from Lake Michigan, where we stayed on a
sailboat owned by an Air Force buddy of my fathers, to Zion, Bryce
and the north rim of the Grand Canyon. Me staring endlessly at the green
and white woven ceiling inside the Plymouth, looking for the next Stuckeys,
and my father, a newspaper editor and a history buff, going on endlessly
about Lewis and Clark, Teddy Roosevelt and the WPA.
I was constantly nagging my parents to hurry up and get to California,
and barring that, to stop at every available swimming pool along the route.
The best one we found was at the Casa Grande Motel near Old Town in Albuquerque.
It was a Rt. 66 motor court with people so friendly that we stayed a few
extra days, exploring the petroglyphs, eating this funny green stuff they
called chile, and making side trips to Santa Fe and Camel Rock. I was
constantly on the look out for rattlesnakes, rainbows, and other kids.
We ate at the Hacienda Restaurant and my mother bought me a fringed buckskin
jacket in Old Town that I wore almost every day, regardless of the weather,
for almost two years afterward. Looking back now, I realize it was one
of the happiest times of my childhood. And "the West" did not
disappoint. The sense of exploration, adventure, the outdoors and the
blue, blue sky were stuck in the back of my mind.
The Casa Grande Motel was still here when I landed unexpectedly in Albuquerque
in 1975. My husband and I ate dinner in it almost every night for a whole
summer while we rebuilt and solarized a small adobe house we bought only
blocks away. The pool was closed and there was a drive-up window that
I hadn't remembered from years before. You could tell that the Casa Grande
was not so grand anymore.
In 1996, the old motel was torn down. It was the same year I was elected
to represent the Old Town area in the state Senate. I will always treasure
the twist of fate that brought me here, back to Route 66 and the scene
of my 1955 childhood vacation. And I will always wonder whether something
enchanted connected me with a community that has been my home for 26 years.
|