The Truth or Consequences City Commission passed a resolution expressing support for a Spaceport visitors’ center located north, near Interstate 25, but the New Mexico Spaceport Authority—which would pay for it—says it currently has no plans to put one there.
City Commissioner Paul Baca spearheaded the resolution, which states the visitors’ center should be “adjacent to Interstate 25 in northern Truth or Consequences.”
His fellow commissioners approved the resolution unanimously, voicing support for the location at the Oct. 14 meeting.
Newly chosen by her board members as mayor pro tem, Amanda Forrister said, “I’ve always wondered why we didn’t have a visitors’ center off I-25. I think it’s a good idea.”
Baca said, “I heartily agree.”
City Commissioner Randall Aragon asked what would happen to the Lee Belle Johnson Center, converted to serve as the city’s Spaceport Visitors’ Center in 2013, displacing its use as a community center. City Manager Morris Madrid said, “I think we should keep both,” as visitors’ centers.
Madrid assured the city commission the resolution “doesn’t involve funding,” inferring the New Mexico Spaceport Authority would fund the new visitors’ center.
The resolution’s stated location—northern T or C and off I-25—can only refer to the six acres owned by T or C businessman Randy Ashbaugh, adjacent to Walmart, which is convenient to exit 79.
In 2012, the New Mexico Spaceport Authority chose Ashbaugh’s land as the visitors’ center site, a decision that followed legal action initiated by landowners contending for this award.
Six landowners responded to the Spaceport Authority’s 2012 request for proposals for visitor center sites in T or C, according to articles written by this reporter for the now-shuttered Herald newspaper.
The city offered 6.25 acres next to the solid waste collection center on South Broadway for $151,000, a price below market value. The Spaceport Authority accepted the city’s offer.
Four of the competing offerors protested the award. The city violated the anti-donation clause by offering the land below market value, they argued. In addition, the site was patented federal land, its use limited to recreational purposes and the city did not have clear title. They also opined the city violated RFP guidelines by not divulging zoning, title and lien restrictions.
Acting as judge in the dispute was state Economic Development Department General Counsel Wade Jackson. He ruled in the four protesting offerors’ favor. Jackson wrote in his decision that a fraud case could have been brought against the city if money had exchanged hands.
The New Mexico Spaceport Authority then awarded the RFP to Randy Ashbaugh, whose six acres were priced at $1,045,000.
But the award was never turned into a solid deal.
In July 2013, New Mexico Spaceport Authority’s then-Executive Director Christine Anderson garnered approval from her board and the Department of Finance and Administration to borrow $20.8-million, according to my contemporaneous reporting for the Herald.
Part of the money was to be used to build a 6,000 square-foot visitors’ center on Ashbaugh’s site and the rest to build a 25,000 square-foot visitors’ center at Spaceport America, 35 miles southwest of T or C.
The IDEAS Team was hired to design both visitors’ centers, the July 2013 Herald article stated.
Interviewed by the Sun on Oct. 13, Randy Ashbaugh said the IDEAS Team’s designs for the two visitors’ centers “cost $8 million.”
“It’s totally designed,” Ashbaugh said. “It could go to bid tomorrow.”
Before either of the visitors’ centers could be built however, “The spaceport ran out of money,” Ashbaugh said. The money was instead directed to correct a Spaceport design flaw; the runway was too short and had to be extended.
But that was then and this is now. “The spaceport is taking off,” Ashbaugh said. “There’s going to be a visitors’ center, either here or Doña Ana County. We better get behind a visitors’ center or we are going to lose it,” pointing out how integral it is to capturing gross-receipts-tax revenue from tourists and visitors.
Baca’s resolution also cites increased commercial activity as a rationale for city support. “The facility has become home to space industry tenants such as Virgin Galactic, HAPSMobile/AeroVironment, UP Aerospace, and SpinLaunch,” the resolution states.
However, the Sun was unable to verify the accuracy of another rationale in the resolution, which states: “A new larger Spaceport Visitors Center has been designed and accepted by the NMSA.”
The Sun contacted the New Mexico Spaceport Authority to confirm whether a new design for a T or C visitors’ center exists, whether the authority had any plans or money to build one and whether the Ashbaugh site would be the location, if a center were to be built.
NMSA Public Relations Coordinator Alice Carruth answered in an Oct. 13 email, “While the New Mexico Spaceport Authority supports an improved visitor’s center and experience for Spaceport America in Sierra County, there are no specific plans to design or build a facility at this time.”