Serving the High Plains

Year in review: Pandemic impacts still more

Though state-mandated COVID-19 restrictions had affected all corners Quay County the first month of the year, the virus itself made a big impact in 2020's second half.

A total of 140 cases were reported in the county in November, with over 80 more in December. Two-thirds of Quay County's cases occurred in less than a two-month period, along with five deaths. Dozens of businesses and entities saw confirmed cases among employees.

Tucumcari experienced two significant outbreaks during the year, including in November and December when the state and nation saw the biggest upswing of the virus since the pandemic began.

A COVID-19 outbreak in Logan in August led to a two-week closing of Ute Lake State Park and a delay of the start of the academic year at Logan Municipal Schools.

The county fair also was delayed by an outbreak in his fair board.

All four of Quay County's public schools went to all-virtual instruction late in the year because of state mandates or outbreaks in their areas.

Even sparsely populated areas such as House, Nara Visa, San Jon, McAlister and Bard saw small outbreaks.

A ray of hope emerged just before Christmas when the Pfizer version of the COVID-19 vaccine arrived at Trigg Memorial Hospital in Tucumcari. The Moderna vaccine arrived shortly after that in a rollout for healthcare and frontline essential workers.

The top stories of the second half of 2020 are listed by the newspaper edition's date.

July 1

City to convert positions to part-time

The city of Tucumcari will not cut positions in fiscal year 2021 but will convert 10 positions to part-time and allow two employees to transfer into new positions in other departments. The city's finance director said cutbacks result more from state-mandated increases in the minimum wage than from reductions in revenue due to COVID-19.

July 1

Logan holds drive-up graduation

It wasn't easy, but Logan High School held a graduation. The school district announced venue changes twice in barely 12 hours, settling on a drive-up ceremony at the high-school gym's parking lot. First, the state Department of Health threatened to fine the district up to $1.75 million if it allowed an estimated 350 people to attend the ceremony at Logan's football field. Second, the superintendent said he was told a Texas county judge ordered the First Baptist Church in Dalhart, Texas, to not let Logan use it as an alternate graduation site.

July 8

In-person dining halted

Citing continued upward trends in COVID-19 cases, Gov. Michelle Lujan Grisham temporarily banned indoor restaurant dining and tightened restrictions on face coverings in public places, and noted fall contact sports at schools would be on hold.

July 8

Logan parade flouts cancellation

The Logan-Ute Lake Chamber of Commerce announced the cancellation of the village's annual Fourth of July parade, citing Gov. Lujan Grisham's health order that bars public gatherings. Dozens of Logan residents defied the order and held the parade anyway, with about 30 entries. Few spectators or parade participants wore masks.

July 15

Blue Swallow Motel changes hands

The operators of Tucumcari's historic Blue Swallow Motel announced the Route 66 landmark's new owners are Rob and Dawn Federico of Crystal Lake, Illinois. The previous owners, Kevin and Nancy Mueller, had owned the property for nine years.

July 15

Hot time at San Jon graduation

Graduation for San Jon High School's three seniors was moved outdoors as a drive-up ceremony due to coronavirus restrictions, but the immediate risk was sunstroke and heat exhaustion. The thermometer read 104 degrees less than a half-hour before the ceremony at the San Jon Community Center's parking lot.

July 15

County fair canceled

The Quay County Fair in Tucumcari was canceled because of the pandemic and will be replaced with a stripped-down, livestock-only Quay County Expo for FFA and 4-H members in mid-August.

July 22

Fired Mesalands president files suit

John Groesbeck, the former president of Mesalands Community College, filed a lawsuit against the college after his firing in April, alleging whistleblower violations and retaliation.

July 29

Mesalands trustee dies

Craig Currell, a member of the Mesalands Community College board of trustees and a former operator of Currell Lumber Co. that constructed numerous buildings in Tucumcari, died after an extended illness. He was 76.

July 29

In-person teaching delayed

The governor announced the delay of in-person classes at public schools through Labor Day because of a sharp rise in coronavirus cases.

Aug. 5

San Jon board delays first day of school

The San Jon school board voted during a special meeting to delay the first day of school to Sept. 8. San Jon's new school starting date is the same day a new order by Gov. Lujan Grisham that allows in-person teaching of elementary students goes into effect.

Aug. 12

Quay County Expo

postponed

The Quay County 4-H/FFA Expo was postponed after a fair board member tested positive for COVID-19. About 15 members of the board were possibly exposed during a meeting at the Quay County Fairgrounds.

Aug. 12

Tucumcari schools posts reopening plan

Tucumcari Public Schools posted its reopening plan for when the school year begins Aug. 17. Classes would begin remotely because of the state's coronavirus restrictions.

Aug. 12

State Supreme Court upholds governor's fines

The New Mexico Supreme Court ruled the governor is authorized to impose stiff fines for violations of the state's public health order during the coronavirus pandemic.

Aug. 12

Ute Lake State Park closes due to COVID

Ute Lake State Park in Logan closed after several employees displayed coronavirus-like symptoms and later tested positive for the disease.

Aug. 12

COVID-19 delays school start at Logan

The scheduled start of classes at Logan Municipal Schools was delayed after a staff member tested positive for COVID-19 and two other staff members showed symptoms.

Aug. 19

Local K of C goes inactive

The Knights of Columbus-St. Anne's Council 6937 in Tucumcari officially went inactive and its downtown hall sold partly because of financial difficulties caused by the COVID-19 pandemic. One of the council's officers and a district deputy expressed optimism the organization would resurface after a reorganization.

Aug. 19

DNA links man to 2012 vet clinic fire

A Tucumcari man, presented with DNA evidence, confessed to setting a fire in 2012 that killed more than 70 animals at a local veterinarian clinic. The man was not charged because the statute of limitations expired on the case more than two years ago.

Aug. 26

Fire, explosions rock asphalt plant

A fire with explosions that rocked an asphalt plant at Versatile Construction Co. on Tucumcari's north side caused alarm but no injuries. The fire billowed thick, black smoke high into the air that could be seen for miles.

Aug. 26

Rancher tapped for MCC board

Tom Sidwell, co-owner of the JX Ranch south of Tucumcari, was tapped to serve on the Mesalands Community College board of directors. Sidwell takes over for Craig Currell, who died after an extended illness.

Aug. 26

High court nixes challenge on indoor-dining ban

The New Mexico Supreme Court rejected a temporary restraining order from an Eddy County judge that sought to stop enforcement of the state's indoor-dining ban for restaurants during the COVID-19 pandemic. The court primarily ruled on similar grounds from another recent coronavirus-related case - that the New Mexico Legislature gave the Department of Health and other officials statutory authority to ban indoor dining at restaurants during public emergencies.

Aug. 26

County livestock show carries on

Save for exhibitors and volunteers wearing masks, the annual Junior Livestock Show at the Quay County Fairgrounds appeared normal compared to previous editions - much to the relief of organizers. The annual livestock shows at the fair were scaled down, then postponed, because COVID-19 affected a board member a day before the previously scheduled event.

Sept. 2

Ute Lake reopens

Ute Lake State Park reopened on a limited basis for day-use recreation after being closed for two weeks when several employees showed signs of coronavirus and later tested positive for the disease.

Sept. 2

Dinosaur Museum reopens

Forty-five people visited the Mesalands Dinosaur Museum in Tucumcari - the first day tourists had been able to tour its exhibits in more than five months. All museums in the state had been closed because of the pandemic.

Sept. 2

County fails to meet reopenings criteria

Additional elementary students in Quay County won't begin classes after Labor Day as anticipated because it didn't meet the coronavirus-based state criteria for school reopenings.

Sept. 2

Man jailed on murder charge

A Tucumcari man was charged with first-degree murder after being accused of fatally shooting another resident in the head. Dead was Bryan Youman, 19, of Tucumcari. Charged was Joshua Braziel, 30, of Tucumcari on counts of first-degree murder and possession of a controlled substance (methamphetamine). Braziel said the discharge of his gun was an accident, and he previously had pointed a firearm at the victim.

Sept. 9

County to receive $520K in relief funds

Quay County is receiving more than $520,000 and the city of Tucumcari more than $40,000 in federal coronavirus relief money "to cover the cost of necessary expenditures incurred due to the public health emergency."

Sept. 16

Music TV series proposed to tax board

The Tucumcari Lodgers Tax Advisory Board expressed enthusiasm to a marketing manager's formal proposal of music television series, "Bands of Enchantment," based primarily in Tucumcari that would be broadcast nationally.

Sept. 16

Interim city manager's position made permanent

After serving as Tucumcari's interim city manager twice in three years, Mark Martinez became city manager without the "interim." The Tucumcari City Commission voted to hire Martinez as the city manager and approved a two-year contract that includes an annual salary of $80,000.

Sept. 30

County approves drought resolution

The Quay County Commission approved a resolution that declared a state of emergency due to drought conditions and urged other counties, municipalities and state government to do the same.

Oct. 7

Logan school district joins lawsuit

The Logan Municipal Schools board voted during a special meeting to join as a plaintiff in a lawsuit against New Mexico Education Secretary Ryan Stewart and the state's Public Education Department. The superintendent and board members had chafed over what they perceived as onerous or arbitrary state regulations for districts regarding the pandemic.

Oct. 7

State police shut down Harvest Fest

Threatening to write a citation for "inciting an event" during the coronavirus pandemic, New Mexico State Police shut down the Tabletop Cooperative Harvest Fest at Tucumcari's Wailes Park.

Oct. 7

Fall prep sports delayed until 2021

Citing a sharp rise in COVID-19 cases statewide, the governor said she wouldn't update the state's public health order regarding high-school sports, thus delaying all fall games until 2021.

Oct. 14

Promotion proposals get funding

Two proposals to promote Tucumcari via entertainment received funding authorization from the Tucumcari City Commission. "Bands of Enchantment," a music television series, received up to $60,000 in city lodgers' tax proceeds to produce four of eight episodes planned for the series. The commission also awarded $3,000 to Fast TV Network to defray the cost of its production of short videos that feature Tucumcari.

Oct. 14

Deputy helps local woman give birth

A Quay County sheriff's deputy helped a local woman give birth by the side of Highway 209 east of Ragland after she and her husband couldn't make it to a Clovis hospital on time.

Oct. 21

Logan raises remote learning concerns

The superintendent of Logan Municipal Schools said a substantial percentage of students during the pandemic are failing at least one class, illustrating the challenges of online learning.

Oct. 28

County sets early voting record

Quay County set a record for early voting numbers. By the Friday before Election Day, the Quay County Clerk's Office had recorded 1,737 early votes, surpassing the previous record of 1,720 during the 2016 general election.

Nov. 4

Snowstorm buries region

An unusually potent storm in late October, nearly two months before the official start of winter, dumped at least 10 inches of snow in Tucumcari and more in the region north of town.

Nov. 4

Fire damages Loretta's Burrito Hut

Loretta's Burrito Hut will be closed indefinitely after the Tucumcari restaurant sustained major damage from an early morning fire. The owner vowed to rebuild.

Nov. 4

COVID-19 case closes House schools

House Municipal Schools will be closed until Nov. 30 after a student or employee there tested positive for the coronavirus. Also, a Tucumcari Elementary School staff member or student tested positive for the disease.

Nov. 11

Judge Mitchell retains seat

Area voters retained 10th Judicial District Judge Albert Mitchell Jr. to his post, according to unofficial election results from Quay, De Baca and Harding counties. Results in conservative-leaning Quay County contrasted with the strong finish by Democrats in New Mexico overall, including the presidential race and a locally contested state senate seat. Quay County fell just short of a record with 64% turnout at the polls.

Nov. 11

Governor orders two-week 'shelter in place'

New Mexico was scheduled to begin a two-week "shelter in place" status and take a county-based approach for reopening against worsening COVID-19 infection rates.

Nov. 11

City logo prototype

presented

Officials from New Mexico MainStreet and a graphic designer made a presentation of a late-stage prototype of the city's new tourism logo to the Tucumcari Lodgers Tax Board.

Nov. 25

MCC considers course recommendations

A consultant recommended Mesalands Community College rejigger future course offerings for in-demand trades that include building construction, early childhood education, automobile repair and truck driving.

Nov. 25

Fifth COVID-19 death, 17 cases reported

The New Mexico Department of Health reported the fifth death from COVID-19 in Quay County, along with a record-high 17 confirmed cases. It was the third death in the county in November.

Dec. 2

Legislature approves relief bill

The New Mexico Legislature easily approved a coronavirus relief bill during a special session, but two Republican lawmakers whose districts encompass all or most of Quay County were among those who voted against it.

Dec. 2

COVID-19 case prompts Logan to go to online learning

Logan Municipal Schools became the fourth school district in Quay County to have in-person classes disrupted by the coronavirus pandemic. The district stated Logan schools will go entirely to online classes through Dec. 18 "due to a COVID case on campus."

Dec. 9

Chamber director to resign

The executive director for the Tucumcari/Quay County Chamber of Commerce is resigning her post in mid-January after a little less than three years there. Carmen Runyan said her last day would be Jan. 15.

Dec. 9

City approves TV agreement

The Tucumcari City commission approved an agreement with organizers of the proposed "Bands of Enchantment" television series through which the city will support production of the series' first four episodes in three payments totaling $60,000 in Lodgers Tax funds.

Dec. 16

Outgoing county officials recognized

December's meeting of the Quay County Commission proved to be the finale for commissioners Sue Dowell and Mike Cherry, who had served in their posts since 2012 and were term-limited.

Dec. 16

Official launches suicide prevention campaign

A Quay County government official launched her own "Make the Call" suicide-prevention campaign after learning of a spike of deaths by suicide in the area and recalling her own memories of contemplating suicide years ago.

Dec. 23

Vaccine arrives at Trigg

A long-awaited COVID-19 vaccine arrived in Quay County when about two dozen health workers at Trigg Memorial Hospital in Tucumcari were injected with the Pfizer version of it.

Dec. 23

Tucumcari Mountain's big 'T' relit

Residents and travelers in Tucumcari were treated to a surprise sight - lights glowed brightly on on the big "T" of Tucumcari Mountain for the first time in many months.

Dec. 30

Family Dollar to expand

The Family Dollar in Tucumcari will begin extensive renovations in mid-January that will close the store for two months but would add more than 2,500 square feet to its footprint.

 
 
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