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Our Government

White House

President Donald J. Trump signed a Proclamation imposing a temporary import duty to address fundamental international payments problems and continue the Administration’s work to rebalance our trade relationships to benefit American workers, farmers, and manufacturers.

Colorado Governor

Governor Polis ordered flags on all public buildings to fly at half-staff from sunrise on Friday, March 6, 2026 to sunset on Saturday, March 7th, to honor the life and legacy of the late Rev. Jesse Jackson. March 6th is the day of Rev. Jackson’s public celebration of life ceremony and a private memorial will be held on March 7th.

Denver Mayor

Mayor Mike Johnston joined members of City Council in announcing it intends to file a moratorium on new data centers in Denver. The process will allow the city to review and strengthen regulations around the sites.  “Data centers power the technology we depend upon and strengthen our economy,” said Mayor Mike Johnston. “But as this industry evolves, so must our policies.

The men and women’s U.S. Olympic Hockey Team will compete for gold

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Both the Men and Women’s hockey teams will compete for gold. Both have been heavily favored to medal and after Monday night both are guaranteed medals. The Women’s team will compete for gold when they face Canada this Thursday. 

The Men’s team rolled over the Germans on Sunday 5-1 and the Women’s obliterated the Swedes 5-0 pushing both teams to meet with their neighbors north, the Canadians. 

Both will be unforgettable games as the Canadians have also dominated their opponents as they did against France beating them 10-2 while the Women’s Canadian team beat the Swiss 2-1 to advance to compete for the gold against the U.S. 

This will be the third time that the U.S. and Canada will compete for Gold, the first taking place in 2002 and the second in 2010. Canada won both games so this week’s matchup will be the U.S.’s chance to redeem them, third times a charm. 

The Women’s matchup is more historic as they compete for the eighth time for gold. These historic matchups begin in 1998 and spanned over the years, 2002, 2010, 2014, 2018, 2022 and now in 2026. Currently the Canadians hold a 4-2 edge over the U.S. but this years U.S. women’s hockey team is a different breed dominating every game they’ve won. 

American bobsledder Elana Meyers Taylor, 41, won her first-ever gold medal in the women’s monobob at the 2026 Milan Cortina Winter Olympics on February 16, 2026. She became the oldest woman to win an individual gold medal in Winter Olympic history, marking her sixth career Olympic medal.

In other sports the Denver Nuggets beat the Memphis Grizzlies last week 122-116 before heading into the All-Star break. The Nuggets return to the hardwood this Thursday in L.A. to face the Clippers. The Nuggets are 6.5 games behind the conference leading Oklahoma City Thunder and 3 games behind the San Antonio Spurs. 

The Colorado Avalanche will return on Wednesday February, 25 to face the Utah Mammoth after players across the league competed for their respective nations in the 2026 Winter Olympics. 

Remembering Reverend Jesse L. Jackson, Sr. 

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The world lost Reverend Jesse L. Jackson, Sr., a beloved civil and human rights icon who championed justice, equality, diversity, inclusion, and peace. The Multicultural Media, Telecom and Internet Council (MMTC) expresses our deepest sympathies to Reverend Jackson’s family, staff, and friends.

In the early days of Reverend Jackson’s civil rights activism, he worked closely with Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. Dr. King appointed him to serve as the first director of the Southern Christian Leadership Conference’s (SCLC) Operation Breadbasket in Chicago, Illinois. After serving in this capacity and Dr. King’s death, he established Operation PUSH (People United to Save Humanity), an organization dedicated to improving the economic conditions of African American communities across the United States, in 1971.

After his first presidential campaign in 1984, Reverend Jackson launched the National Rainbow Coalition which sought equal rights for all Americans. He ran for president in 1988 and served as a as shadow senator for the District of Columbia from 1991 to 1996. He merged Operation PUSH and the Rainbow Coalition in 1996.

Over the years, MMTC had the honor of working with Reverend Jackson and his organization, Rainbow PUSH Coalition on policy issues that advocated for diversity in corporate, media, and technology ownership and hiring. In 1997, he received MMTC’s Everett C. Parker Lifetime Achievement Award, our highest honor given to a distinguished citizen who has rendered the most distinguished service, over many years, to diversity and inclusion in the media and telecom industries.

“Rev. Jackson was a front-line fighter for civil rights his entire life. He was a true leader who never lost his way and wasn’t afraid to speak the truth. His spirit will live on in all of us who continue to stand and fight for social justice and equality,” said MMTC President and CEO Robert E. Branson.

Source:  Multicultural Media, Telecom and Internet Council (MMTC)

A lesson from two border Tejanos

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David Conde, Senior Consultant for International Programs

On January 24, 2026, two Customs and Border Patrol (CBP) agents Jesus Ochoa and Raymundo Gutierrez from South Texas allegedly shot and killed American citizen Alex Pretti during a United States Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) operation in Minneapolis, Minnesota. Apparently, Pretti was sprayed, pushed to the ground and disarmed before being shot 10 times.

One might ask, what were two border Tejanos doing way up north and away from their border posts? The most-likely answer is that they were swept up in the Department of Homeland Security’s frenzied effort to increase the body-count for a set quota of immigrants to be detained, processed and deported by ICE.

Over the years, I have been to the southern border many times and have seen the gradual CBP change in ethnicity to include more Latinos. At the time, I did not think too much of the change as I assumed that the higher educational attainment of the Southern Texas community which is overwhelmingly majority Tejano can explain it.

However, I have been surprised at times by what I believe to be a Tejano instinct for following a socio-political stream who unconsciously assumes second-class citizenship. It appears that the unstated rules that governed for a century following the American conquest of the Southwest still hold in Texas.

My father was born in 1910, a pivotal year in the lives of the Mexican people as well as those living in the Rio Grande Valley of Texas and other parts of the southern border. Events that came after that year such as the Mexican Revolution, America’s entry into World War I, Prohibition, the Great Depression and especially World War II and its aftereffects, significantly changed the border culture and vision on both sides.

The people of the Rio Grande Valley, the poorest region in the country, opted for the migrant stream as a solution to their economic survival. My family included took with them to the harvest fields of the West and Midwest notions of a racial and ethnic pecking order that put Whites at the top, Tejanos in the somewhat segregated middle and Blacks who, at the time, were fully segregated from the rest. 

Border Tejanos went a step further and divided themselves away from their immigrant relations from across the river and called them “Mojados,” a term that makes some feel superior to what has come to be known as wetbacks. They also doubled their effort to be subservient to what they thought to be their English-speaking benefactors by sacrificing even their lives to that notion as heroes in war and ardent political supporters in peace.

When Ochoa and Gutierrez are said to have put multiple bullets into Alex Pretti, they appeared to be acting in the name of that subservience, the one that says, “you follow the orders of those that you feel are a step above.” The concept somehow demonstrates that the type is not only willing to die for country in foreign wars but also kill Americans at home. 

There is an irony to what seems to be a lack of independent thinking as well as legal and moral awareness in a time when the Texas landscape has changed so much that Tejanos have become the demographic majority and should be in charge. Yet they follow a leadership that continues to encourage the notion of second-class citizenship.

In this country freedom and independent thinking carries with it responsibilities to care for each other.  Tejanos need to grow to the standards of that creed.

A Week In Review

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Africa 

Kenya international hub airport flights delayed 

Flights from Kenya’s Jomo Kenyatta International Airport have been delayed because of a strike by aviation workers. The airport works as a hub for flights to places like Europe, North America and the Middle East. Officials said flights have been delayed for up to four hours. Workers are striking over pay and poor working conditions. 

Nigeria issues warning over enlisting abroad 

Nigeria’s foreign ministry warned Nigerians about the recruiting of its citizens to fight in foreign conflicts. Officials called the recruiting illegal and made the warning shortly after two Nigerians were found dead from the Ukraine/Russia conflict. Ukrainian intelligence believes more than 1,400 people from 36 African countries have been recruited to fight for Russia. 

Asia 

Kim Jong Un chooses heir 

North Korean leader Kim Jong Un has chosen his daughter Kim Ju Ae as his heir. She is believed to be 13 and was recently seen with her father during a visit to Beijing last year. Intelligence officials noted that Ju Ae has been seen at more public events recently and has even started to provide policy input.  

 Sydney police search for kidnapped man 

Police in Sydney are searching for an 85-year-old man who they believe was kidnapped by mistake. The man, Chris Baghsarian, was kidnapped last Friday by at least three attackers. Police said the attackers intended to take someone else. Reportedly, Baghsarian is severely injured in an unknown location. 

Europe 

Swiss train derails, leaves five injured 

At least five people were injured in southern Switzerland when a train derailed. The train was carrying 29 passengers, and one person was taken to a hospital. The country has experienced heavy rain and snow in recent days, and police believe an avalanche may have crossed the tracks shortly before the train passed. The regional train was traveling from Spiez to Brig. 

Leak damages painting at Louvre 

A 19th Century ceiling painting was damaged at the Louvre because of a water leak. The leak came from a heating pipe and damaged Charles Meynier’s The Apotheosis of Poussin, Le Sueur and Le Brun. In December, another leak at the Louvre destroyed 300-400 pieces at its Egyptian department. The museum was also robbed by four burglars who stole jewelry worth $102 million last October. 

Latin America 

Fire at Cuban oil refinery 

Cuban officials said a fire at an oil refinery has been brought under control. The incident occurred as Cuba faces a fuel shortage that has worsened because of the United States blocking oil shipments from Venezuela. In the past, Venezuela sent around 35,000 barrels of oil a day to the country. Human rights experts from the United Nations called restrictions on Cuba’s oil imports an “extreme form of unilateral economic coercion.” 

Hundreds of political prisoners still detained in Venezuela 

A pressure group campaigning on behalf of political prisoners in Venezuela said hundreds of people are still behind bars. So far, Venezuela has released 444 political prisoners since the United States seized Venezuelan leader Nicolas Maduro last month. Protests have taken place for those who have been jailed recently, including ones organized by students and family of the prisoners. 

North America 

Two shootings in British Columbia town 

This past week, eight people were killed in two shootings in the Canadian Rockies town of Tumbler Ridge, British Columbia. The shootings took place at a school and at a home in the town that is home to only 3,000 people. The suspect, 18-year-old Jesse Van Rootselaar, was found dead from a self-inflicted gunshot wound at the school. 

Beloved actor, Robert DuVall dies at age 95 

Movie actor/director Robert DuVall died on February 15, 2026. Robert Selden Duvall was born on Jan. 5, 1931, in San Diego to his father a Navy Rear Admiral William Duvall and actress Mildred Duvall. He attended Principia College in Illinois, receiving a bachelor’s degree in drama. Duvall has acted in a collection of award-winning hits like the Godfather, Apocalypse Now, Tender Mercies and many more. He is well known for the TV mini-series, Lonesome Dove. DuVall is survived by his wife, Luciana Pedraza.

Our Government

White House

President Donald J. Trump signed an Executive Order directing the Department of War to prioritize long-term Power Purchase Agreements with clean coal fleet to ensure military installations and critical defense facilities have uninterrupted, on-demand baseload power.  President Trump is rolling back regulations that hinder coal, oil, and natural gas production.

Colorado Governor

Governor Polis Announces Colorado’s Intent to Join World Health Organization’s Global Outbreak Network. “We want to learn from health science around the world to help make sure Coloradans can get the most advanced and effective treatments for diseases. The unfortunate United States’ withdrawal from WHO reduced the ability of states to access global public health data. Disease does not stop at the borders, and preparedness depends on timely information and partnerships. Colorado is taking positive and immediate steps to ensure doctors and hospitals are better connected to global early-warning systems and scientific expertise so we can better protect Coloradans,” said Governor Jared Polis.

Denver Mayor

Mayor Mike Johnston announced Denver has joined two amicus briefs challenging the Trump Administration’s authority to defund and punish what it describes as “sanctuary cities”.  “Denver’s historic drop in homicides and crime was accomplished by building trust in our communities, not by tearing it down like the Trump Administration has done in Minneapolis and across the country,” said Mayor Mike Johnston.

Bad Bunny rocks Super Bowl 60

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Days after the ‘big game,’ one that broke the hearts of bettors everywhere, people are still talking about ‘it.’ The ‘it,’ is not the game. It’s what occurred 48 days before the actual game. But first, a little background.

The nation’s political right, led by none other than the President, lost its mind because the NFL chose the world’s biggest musical act—Puerto Rican rapper, singer and music producer, Bad Bunny—to perform for the country’s biggestsporting event.

The President, never shy about sharing an off-color or thoughtless comment, immediately labeled the Puerto Rican-American superstar a “terrible choice,” for the big show. Other right-leaning opinions about Bad Bunny (aka Benito Antonio Martinez Ocasio) included “anti-American,” “shameful,” and worst of all, a “massive Trump hater.” 

Offering that last take was Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem who threatened to station ICE agents “all over the Super Bowl.” 

The right’s tasteless reaction to Bad Bunny, both commercially and artistically, makes little sense. The 31-year-old Puerto Rican is musical gold in America and around the world.

Along with his GRAMMY win for Album of the Year, “DeBÍ TiRAR MáS FOToS,” he also won for Best Global Music Performance and Best Musica Urbana album. He was also nominated in three other categories. His winning album is also the first Spanish-language album in Grammy history to win.

Bad Bunny’s acceptance speech—in English and Spanish—was both gracious and political, addressing the racism that has percolated since he was announced as the Super Bowl’s halftime performer.

“Thank you, mom, for giving birth to me in Puerto Rico…I want to dedicate this award to all the people who had to leave their homeland to follow their dreams.” He also referenced his island home Puerto Rico as a place “much bigger than 100 X 35 miles.”

It was not just that Bad Bunny performs in Spanish that earned him the ire of the right and caused it to offer up a barely watched, second-tier acts halftime show, it is also his politics.

He endorsed Kamala Harris, spoken in support of LGBQT rights, criticized Trump’s anti-immigration policies and has refused to perform in any U.S. venues fearing some fans could be arrested by ICE.

The tsunami of hate aimed toward Bad Bunny and his selection for America’s biggest sporting event of the year, has come from all corners of the political right. It is a reflection of the hatred spewing over the nation in the form of a president hell bent on targeting ‘other’ Americans and millions of undocumented immigrants that he simply wants out of the country. 

As America woke up last Friday morning, it was greeted by what may be President Trump’s most vile social media post ever, outdistancing his worst by a light year. 

A nation practically inured to his often craven and boorish Truth Social postings, was shocked by his depiction of former President Obama and his wife, Michelle, as cartoon monkeys. His spokesperson denied any racial intent to his racist primate trope, one nearly as old as the nation itself 

But the Truth Social post and the outcry against the Puerto Rican musical icon reflect a metastasizing cancer on the country now playing out in Minneapolis where a Trump militia targeting immigrants and those merely suspected of being immigrant has been roaming the streets for now going on two months. 

While 3,000 fully armed and outfitted ICE troops, many with only 47 days of training, carry the imprimatur of the President, they also have the endorsement of a Supreme Court Justice. 

It was last year when Justice Kavanaugh called without cause ICE stops, “common sense.” He said it was OK to detain people based on “apparent ethnicity,” or where they “gather,” a reference to Home Depot parking lots where immigrant day laborers can often be found looking for work. But ICE has taken it to a whole different level. 

These ‘shake’n’bake’ ICE troops, so called for their lack of training and law enforcement experience, have created havoc, fear and worse wherever the President has ordered them.

In Los Angeles and Chicago, both places with burgeoning Latino and immigrant Latino populations, ICE has indiscriminately carried out sweeps of day laborers, restaurants, construction sites and agriculture fields.

In Chicago, ICE carried out a commando-like mission on an apartment complex, complete with Black Hawk helicopter and agents repelling down on ropes. It has also shot people, wounding at least one U.S. citizen, a Latina Montessori teacher. But it is Minneapolis where a benchmark for darkness and depravity has been set.

While ICE was ostensibly dispatched to Minnesota to arrest Somali immigrants suspected of a huge social services fraud scheme, the target quickly moved. 

ICE began rounding up Latinos and immigrant Latinos using any means necessary. Immigrants or suspected immigrants, including American citizens, were dragged out of their cars, arrested in their workplaces, parents were taken from school pick-up lines where they waited for their kids. An unknown number of those arrested have been ‘disappeared,’ taken to prison camps scattered across the country. 

Protests have also turned deadly with two Americans, Renee Good and Alex Pretti, shot as they joined protests. Good was shot by an agent as she tried to maneuver her car away from an ICE protest. Pretti was shot ten times as he was being pummeled by as many as five agents. 

“Those killings are heartbreaking,” said Colorado Attorney General and candidate for governor, Phil Weiser. Worse, he said, was the government “lying about it and defaming good people,” calling it un-American. Weiser was referring to Noem’s “domestic terrorists” description of the pair.

Weiser said his office is already preparing in the event ICE comes to Colorado as it has other cities. “We have set up an office, a complaint system, so we’re ready to get feedback, concerns about what federal agents are doing.” “We know we have to be ready.” Colorado, he promised, will prosecute ICE agents for breaking the law.

But what has happened in Minnesota and has already happened in cities including Charlotte, Chicago, Los Angeles, Memphis and New Orleans is already happening in Colorado said, Alex Sanchez, President and CEO of Voces Unidos. 

“We have seen people pulled out of vehicles, seen everyday people shot with rubber bullets, pepper sprayed and beat down on the street,” he said. “We’re not talking about hypotheticals.” Sanchez organization speaks for Latino immigrants in fifteen mostly western slope counties. To date, Sanchez said, Voces Unidos has tracked more than 100 individual cases of ICE-related violence on immigrants in Colorado.

Now that the game is history and ICE continues to occupy, detain and deport, it seems as though it never really was about music, after all. 

And, by the way, the Seattle Seahawks are the new Superbowl Champions beating the New England Patriots 29-13.

Save Local News Advocacy Group meets in Washington

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From the Editor: 

Hispanic Tech and Telecommunications Partnerships (HTTP) along with the National Association of Hispanic Journalists (NAHJ), Telecom and Internet Council, LGTBT Tech, Asian Pacific American Advocates, Asian American Journalists Association, Hispanic Federation, LaVozColorado Publisher, Pauline Rivera, and more, convened in Washington D.C. the past few days in an effort to relay the value of community/local journalism. Same advocacy groups met with some members of Congress to speak about the current pending merger/consolidation of local stations/outlets that would allow a single corporation (Nexstar acquisition of Tegna) in a acquisition of over 265 TV stations, reaching over 80 percent of U.S. households. The current ownership cap is now at 39 percent. This merger is under review and if approved would diminish local/community journalism, reduce viewpoint diversity, will be contrary to public interest and will affect community information/reach to Latinos and all ethnic communities. As it stands, this merger would result in an overall generic reach to all audiences, excluding diversity in journalism. 

The current Latino population at 68 million in the U.S. indicates a definite need for community bilingual formats in media to reach that population growth and diversity.

It is important to address the need for community newspapers, bilingual (ENG/SP) and other ethnic publications as they know their readership/audience where a general news under ‘one roof’ would eliminate the necessary and complete news and the diverse and language-friendly information outreach to those communities.

According to Pew Research, the Latino population in the U.S. is at 68 million, a near 20 percent of the U.S. population. As the Latino population grows, so does the need for information in more than one language. It is essential that publications continue delivering and addressing the growing need for information. 

As an example, when the pandemic hit our world, the health of millions of people was affected. In just the United States there were over 103 million confirmed cases of COVID-19 and over 1 million deaths in the U.S., the most of any country reported.  Along with national information, local statistics and COVID-19 information was disbursed to guide the local population. The latest health updates were provided by media outlets to those who relied on and trusted their community publications/journalists. Information about where to get vaccinated, tested, and when to self-quarantine became a life-or-death issue for so many. This is when/where local journalism and trust is important.

The overall health of a world and our country specifically was at stake, and the local population needed this information disbursed in more than one language, from a trusting community outlet. Receiving this very valuable information from a community and local-based source was a life saver to so many.

It is essential for the existence of our local journalism and community publications/news outlets that this 39 percent ownership cap is implemented. An approval of a monopoly-type ownership is not aligned with public interest, diversity in news and is not for the good and betterment of the overall Latino community.

Seattle Seahawks defeat the New England Patriots at Super Bowl LX

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In a game where many New England Patriot fans expected their team to have success against one of the league’s nastiest defenses, the obvious truth was apparent to just about every other NFL fan across the league but them. 

That truth, they weren’t even in the same league as Seattle emphasizing a critical point that only Patriot fans couldn’t see. The only saving grace for New England was the play of their top defender Christian Gonzalez who defended several passes that would have made this Super Bowl a blowout for Seattle. 

The question lingers, were the Patriots the better team to move on from the AFC Championship? Denver would likely have lost to Seattle also without Bo Nix; however, it goes without saying that Denver’s defense might have held Seattle’s offense to much lower totals.  A Denver win?

The Patriots offense was terrible lead by the previous MVP candidate, Drake Maye who was 27 of 43 attempts for 295 yards, two touchdowns, two interceptions and was sacked 6 times ending the game with a quarterback rating of 79.1. Maye was New England’s leading rusher with 37 yards on 5 carries, mostly from being flushed out of a collapsing pocket. 

Seattle’s offense on the other hand was much more affective with running back Kenneth Walker III winning the game MVP on a performance that got him 135 yards on the ground on 27 carries with his longest being 30 yards. Seattle’s defense held the Patriots to a shutout for three quarters before the Patriots were even able to get into the end zone in the fourth quarter. 

The Seahawks relied on kicker Jason Myers who was perfect five for five on field goals with his longest at 41-yards out. Myers was responsible for 17 of Seattle’s 29 points. 

In other sports the Winter Olympics kicked off in Milano Cortina over the weekend. Norway currently is leading the pack with 6 medals, 3 gold, 1 silver and two bronze while the United States is in fifth place with two golds.

The United States first gold was won by Wyoming based skier Breezy Johnson who posted a 1:36:10 time in the Women’s Alpine Downhill. Ilia Malini won the U.S.’s second medal in the free skate performance while Japan secured the Silver and Italy took Bronze. 

The Denver Nuggets have won one of their last four with losses to the Oklahoma City Thunder, the Detroit Pistons and the New York Knicks, winning their only game against the Bulls on Saturday over the weekend. 

This week the Nuggets are at home to face the Memphis Grizzlies before heading to L.A. to play the Clippers. 

A life of teaching, family, travel and curiosity

In the tiny hamlet of Dulce, New Mexico, population 2,700, there is virtually no one who doesn’t know Jose Eugenio ‘Cheno’ Gomez, Junior. He may be the brightest thread in the fabric of this Lilliputian mountain town. 

Mr. Gomez nicknamed ‘Cheno,’ a diminutive for Eugenio, has spent the entirety of his 83-year-long life in Dulce, the hub of north central New Mexico’s Rio Arriba County. 

Dulce, Spanish for ‘sweet,’ because of the natural springs that flow across the region, is also home to the Jicarilla Apache nation. But before the Jicarilla settled there, in 1887, the Gomez family was already established and ranching, owning perhaps the largest sheep operations in the region and state.

Born in the spring of 1942, Mr. Gomez was one of eight children of his namesake, Jose Eugenio Gomez, and Lena Gomez de Duran. There were five boys and three girls.

While his family was successful in ranching, it was also cognizant of the importance of education. Though he said, not unlike many families of the time, it was a higher priority for the family’s boys who were shipped away to Santa Fe’s Saint Michael’s College for school each September and returned home in June. Three of the boys would earn college degrees.

Armed with a college sheepskin, Mr. Gomez began his career in education in Fall of 1965 in Gobernador, New Mexico. He would stay for two years before moving on to Tierra Amarilla where he would remain the school’s biology teacher for the next thirty years.

“I taught 5th, 6th, 7th and 8th grade general biology,” he said. It was a five-class per day regime. But as enrollment shrank, he was required to expand his portfolio to teach ecology, physiology, human anatomy, physics and chemistry, he said. But he loved it all. 

Over the course of his teaching career, he has seen students go on to amazing careers, including a few doctors, nurses and no surprise, teachers. He has seen students become parents and grandparents, too. But there are few, he said, who don’t stop and chat with him as he runs errands each day in the small town.

Mr. Gomez taught generations of families, including some of his own family. “I taught nieces, nephews and cousins,” all his own. He also taught entire families of brothers, sisters and, later, their children, too. “I taught them all and if a student needed help, I would do individual teaching. I was nice but also a disciplinarian.” 

“He was a very wonderful teacher, very respected and we addressed him as Mr. Gomez,” said Emily Chavez. “He was so well respected. When it was time to laugh and have fun, but when it was work, it was work.” Ms. Chavez said he was someone you “could remain friends for life.”

While Mr. Gomez, who never married, is a confirmed ‘small town’ guy, he made the most of the long summer vacations that teaching provided and hit the road with his brother, Leopoldo Luis Gomez, more formally known as Monsignor Gomez. 

His brother was ordained a priest in 1963 and in 1973 named Monsignor by Pope Paul IV. Over the course of his calling, he held numerous church titles before retiring in 2006 when he served as Pastor at Saint Mary’s in Farmington, New Mexico.

When he was alive, the Monsignor and Mr. Gomez mixed travel and adventure with missionary work in Europe, Africa and Mexico. Failing health forced the Monsignor to retire to Dulce in 2006 where he shared the same home with Mr. Gomez where they grew up. 

Monsignor Gomez died in 2024. But in the ten years prior to his passing, Mr. Gomez took care of his brother in the same home where they grew up. 

Mr. Gomez lives alone in Dulce but often receives company. When visitors drop by, they can often expect the offer of a sip of tequila—“the good stuff” —a beer, soda or water. He is a genial host. 

In his off time, Mr. Gomez spends time with an extensive collection of books, “mostly spiritual,” he said. His lifelong Catholic faith, he said, has made him “wonder” about a fate we all will meet. 

“The Creator,” he said, “made everything, knows everything, including the choices, both good and bad, we’re going to make.” The whole thing, he said, just “makes me curious.”