Serving the High Plains

NM Supreme Court justice to retire

New Mexico Supreme Court Justice Barbara J. Vigil, the longest-serving member of the court, announced last week she plans to retire at the end of June.

Vigil joined the state's highest court in December 2012 and was chief justice from 2014 to 2016.

She was a district court judge in the 1st Judicial District of Santa Fe, Rio Arriba and Los Alamos counties from 2000 until her election to the high court. She became chief judge of the district in 2011. For 10 years while on the district court, she presided over Children's Court cases, which include juvenile delinquency and child abuse and neglect matters.

"It has been a tremendous honor to serve as a judge and justice over the past 21 years. The time has come for me to step down from the Supreme Court so that I may devote my time and energy to serving vulnerable communities in a more direct manner," Vigil said in a news release. "I have enjoyed fulfilling the critical legal work of the court, but perhaps equally rewarding has been the opportunity to work with countless professionals and volunteers to bring forth initiatives designed to improve our system of justice.

"I am hopeful that my service to the people of New Mexico over the past two decades in this honorable role will endure long after my tenure on the Court comes to an end. I thank everyone who has helped my service be so fulfilling."

The process for filling Vigil’s court vacancy calls for a bipartisan Judicial Nominating Commission to interview applicants and recommend nominees to Gov. Michelle Lujan Grisham for possible appointment.

During her judicial career, Vigil helped establish a continuum-of-care model for improving juvenile justice that brings together community leaders to identify needs and allocates grant funding for services for vulnerable youth, The justice also has played a role in the Juvenile Detention Alternatives Initiative that is a collaborative effort of the judicial branch of government, the Children, Youth and Families Department, the New Mexico Association of Counties, the Public Education Department and tribal communities.

During this year's legislative session, Vigil advocated for approval of a court-backed measure to improve legal representation for children and parents in abuse and neglect cases. While serving on the district court, she instituted and presided over two juvenile drug court programs to provide effective drug treatment for youth charged with drug offenses in Santa Fe and Rio Arriba counties.

As a member of the state Supreme Court, Vigil oversaw the reorganization of the Judicial Education Center, based at the University of New Mexico Law School, that provides training for judges. She has helped to strengthen relationships between tribal courts and state courts through her participation and leadership on the New Mexico Tribal State Judicial Consortium.

Justice Vigil was born and raised in New Mexico. She received a juris doctorate from the UNM Law School in 1985 and earned a bachelor's degree in accounting from New Mexico State University. She was valedictorian of her high school graduating class at St. Catherine's Indian School in Santa Fe.

 
 
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