uranium impact accessment program

impact of uranium mining on the Navajo Nation

In the late 1970s, Navajo uranium miners and their families asked for help to show that their lung diseases had been caused by their work in underground uranium mines in

May 17: Local Food Festival and Field Day - Eat, Learn, Enjoy

Celebrating Local Foods from the Ground Up
The festival is on May 17th from 11:00 am to 3:00 pm at the Historic Guitierrez-Hubbell House and Demonstration Farm in Albuquerque’s South Valley (6029 Isleta Blvd SW, 3 miles south of Rio Bravo).  The festival is a free family event that is open to the public.  For more information contact Ann Simon at 724-3617 or KT LaBadie and Jen Silverman at 724-3619. 

It Comes Down to Words

by Marita Prandoni
My local public radio station recently aired a call-in show to discuss Houston-based Tecton Energy’s plan to explore in the Galisteo Basin, on about 65,000 acres where they have purchased mineral ri

Welcome to Dreaming New Mexico

“Without a vision, the people will perish.”Black Elk

Bioneers excels at building community, and this project focuses on our home state. Dreaming New Mexico offers workshops, lectures and networking opportunities that can inform and advance policy change for an ecologically sound and socially just economy. In collaboration with local organizations, Dreaming New Mexico addresses alternative energy, water concerns, racial and environmental issues, food security, urban growth, transportation and more.

Dreaming New Mexico invites us to ask ourselves: What is the positive future we collectively envision for the Land of Enchantment and New Mexicans? How do we get there from here? In fact, New Mexico is a hotbed of innovative solutions for restoring the land and our communities with ecological practices and social justice for all peoples. How do we best cultivate this movement?