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November 30, 2021

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Nuclear-weapons-oriented "innovation triangle" developments, tax changes, pitched to NM legislature

  1. Background
  2. Rizzo's latest plan
  3. Concluding harsh comments

Dear friends --

We have said that the proposed expansion of Los Alamos National Laboratory (LANL), including but not limited to $18 billion (B) in plutonium warhead core ("pit") production expenses planned for this decade, would badly damage Los Alamos, Santa Fe, and the region, and do so in a comprehensive way.

The social, political, economic, and environmental impacts of deeper nuclear colonization involve a sea-change in identity and culture. A sea-change is also in store for LANL.

Industrial pit production is a nearly impossible mission at LANL for many reasons. Some of the difficulties lie in LANL's location, others in the limited regional workforce and training available. Still others lie in LANL itself. To solve some of its external problems, LANL hopes to leverage private efforts, State funds, and various forms of local governmental and tribal support to enhance its worker "pipeline" and to provide housing and targeted education for its workers.

This letter provides background and talking points that may be helpful to citizens, activists, and journalists regarding LANL's informal partnership with one active developer, John Rizzo, who in turn is an active sales agent to an elite network of movers and shakers, to local governments, and to the legislature -- without bringing LANL and its controversial, dangerous missions into the discussion.

Buzzwords and euphemisms are used instead -- especially, "innovation."

Rizzo's company is called "New Mexico Innovation Triangle," a name originally provided by LANL's Deputy Director Kelly Beierschmitt prior to July 20, 2019 (email of that date from John Rizzo to Rich Brown, City of Santa Fe Economic Development Director, and several others).

As always, those who want to special favors from government in New Mexico always tell their elected audiences they will create "jobs." In this case, this developer believes his projects will add a total of about 165,000 new jobs (25,000 direct and the balance indirect; see the legislative presentation below). If, that is, he is properly subsidized. It sounds laughable, but for Santa Fe and Los Alamos it is very serious.

What's somewhat unusual about this effort is its boldness, which includes changing the tax code to favor investors like him as well as those who will rent from his company.

Where would these renters work? For now and the foreseeable future, they will work mostly at LANL. LANL is the "anchor tenant" in his virtual "mall" and the only one of any size. What will these workers do? What LANL workers mostly do, and will always mostly do: work on nuclear weapons.

At the moment and for the foreseeable future, these developments are mostly housing for LANL's pit factory, not to put too fine a point on it.

Background

On Sunday morning, May 5, 2019, serial entrepreneur John Rizzo met with his invited guests over brunch to discuss the future of New Mexico -- specifically, technology "triangles and villages."

From an email* Rizzo sent to them, these guests included:

  • Alan Webber (Mayor of Santa Fe)
  • Lilian Montoya (CEO of CHRISTUS St. Vincent)
  • Mark Johnson (CEO Descartes Labs)
  • Vince Kadlubek (CEO Meow Wolf)
  • Alicia Keys (Cabinet Secretary of Economic Development at State of New Mexico)
  • Provost Rich Wood, UNM
  • Kelly Beierschmitt (Deputy Laboratory Director LANL)
  • Patrick Woehrle (Director of Government Affairs & Protocol LANL)
  • David Douglass (Deputy Laboratory Director Sandia National Laboratories)
  • John Mahoney (Developer)
  • Zane Fischer (Founder of Extraordinary Structures and Make Santa Fe)
  • Kim Shanahan (sustainable housing and development consultant)
  • Annie Mansfield (my spouse and SVP at Wells Fargo Advisors)

*(We obtained Mayor Webber's copy of this email via the New Mexico Inspection of Public Records Act, IPRA.)

Other meetings followed with other guests that included Rich Brown at the City of Santa Fe, State Senator Michael Padilla, Paul Laur of Pebble Labs, Daniel Hernandez (program manager for the City's Midtown project), and others.

Rizzo and his wife hosted their guests in a brand-new, award-winning multi-million-dollar "Grand Hacienda," half a mile from the Las Campanas clubhouse. The fact that Rizzo's development ideas were developed and discussed in secret, with some of the most influential people in northern New Mexico, tells us a great deal about the nature, quality, and purposes of those plans. As does the venue for his sales pitch, which I for one hesitate to call a "home."

According to the well-informed Santa Fe New Mexican (SFNM), the couple had not yet actually moved to New Mexico at that point ("20 who will make news in 2020," 12/31/2019).

Despite living here only on weekends, he's already broken bread with many in Santa Fe’s mover-and-shaker crowd. 

Rizzo continues his day job in San Francisco [as CEO of Deem, a corporate travel software company], but on the side, he is leading a master developer team proposing a Santa Fe Innovation Village for the city-owned midtown campus. He said he wants to develop more innovation villages in Santa Fe and other parts of New Mexico.

He sees himself as a catalyst to transform the state with these innovation villages, which would combine innovation and tech jobs, housing, education, office space, restaurants, services and access to investment capital for entrepreneurship.

During 2020, Rizzo and his team will continue “to support the city and its plans for an innovation village at midtown,” create an investment syndicate to finance the several innovation villages he hopes to create, work with city and state governments on infrastructure and collaborate with public and private entities on education programs to support the concept.

Rizzo also wants to have community engagement session to help refine his plans. And within 18 months, Rizzo expects to be living full time in Santa Fe.

Rizzo reportedly had been "evaluating Santa Fe as a potential innovation center" since 2015, "noting the housing shortage, lack of modern office space, no major university and limited venture capital" ("Silicon Valley executive enters midtown campus derby," Teya Vitu, SFNM, 12/10/2019).

The time was not right for him back then.

“Things had changed substantially,” Rizzo said of the past year [2019]. “There is a convergence here of a new mayor, new governor, Netflix.”

Rizzo said he has had meetings with all sorts of officials, including Santa Fe Mayor Alan Webber, New Mexico Economic Development Secretary Alicia J. Keyes, the Los Alamos National Laboratory spinoff company Pebble Labs, affordable housing leaders, film industry people and Meow Wolf’s Vince Kadlubek.

“I started having convenings at my house,” Rizzo said.

... Rizzo’s vision for Santa Fe Innovation Village at the midtown campus involves about 1,000 residential units and “hundreds of thousands of square feet of office space” for tech companies and education elements that could train tech workers.

“In a state of 2 million people with a budget surplus, with the Permian Basin, the Spaceport America, Los Alamos National Laboratory, there seemed to be a way to do something interesting for the state, to do all this without wrecking the state,” Rizzo said. “The way to do this is with innovative and tech jobs. The midtown campus seems like a very interesting opportunity with a high density of offices, restaurants and bars, things that are open until midnight, extending a Rail Runner stop at midtown. We have a lot more we are thinking about that I am not comfortable sharing right now.”

I would like to insert some comments here.

Of the four factors Rizzo said prevented Santa Fe from being an "innovation center" (a housing "shortage," lack of "modern office space," limited venture capital, and no major university), only the last (no major university) is in our view real. The theory that the City can build its way out of a shortage of affordable housing has never panned out, over half a century. Venture capital is limiting only because there are few reasons for it to grow here. Venture capital also requires very high rates of return, implies distant ownership stakes and attendant loss of sovereignty and democracy, and because of its high-interest "impatience" leads toward disruption and inequality, all of which is more or less the definition of carpetbagging. As for office space, that is easy enough to build if there is a viable economic purpose and need for it. But the lack of a major university and the talent pool associated with it is not something that can be magically grown in a few years. That takes decades of continuous public investment along with other supporting factors.

Three of the four New Mexico positive factors Rizzo mentions (Permian Basin, Spaceport, LANL) are geographically disparate. Two are irrelevant: how the Permian Basin and the Spaceport relate to the creation of an "innovation" village in Santa Fe eludes this reader. The fourth factor -- a "budget surplus" -- isn't real. The State has profound needs, more than fit in its present budget. He just doesn't see those needs as real, or perhaps important. He would like to have some of that "surplus."

By late January 2020, Rizzo's company was out of the running for the "master developer" role in the City's Midtown project ("Midtown campus list may be down to 3," Teya Vitu, SFNM, Jan. 24, 2020).

John F. Rizzo, who heads the Santa Fe Innovation Village team and was thought to be a serious contender, said he’s in discussions to potentially collaborate with three other master developers that may make the short list.

“Our philosophy was to help the state with innovation villages,” said Rizzo, a part-time Santa Fe resident and CEO of Deem Inc., a San Francisco-based corporate travel software company. “The midtown campus is one. I’ve got a lot of other things in play in New Mexico.” (emphasis added)

One of those "things in play" became apparent in March of this year, when Rizzo announced plans to develop a 140-acre site in southwest Santa Fe ("Innovation Village aims to combine tech sector, housing in Santa Fe," Teya Vitu, SFNM, March 29, 2021).

To make his plan work, Rizzo sought "to apply Midtown LINC (Local Innovation Corridor overlay district) components to his project, such as a streamlined development process, more modernized architecture and increased density that would allow for a 75-foot height limit."

The city’s economic development director, Rich Brown, is a believer. He would be, having discussed it privately the year before at Rizzo's house, as did the Mayor. He sees "Rizzo’s project [as] adding to the patchwork of innovation centers sprouting around the city" [?].

Rizzo’s project, he added, would fit nicely in an innovation hub with Los Alamos and Albuquerque.
“We think of the three cities as part of an innovation triangle just like you have in North Carolina,” Brown said. “It’s innovation place-making of the future. It’s building a corridor in Santa Fe that helps us recruit companies and create jobs.”
... “Why don’t we build a tech economy so I have something to do?” Rizzo said. “Could we build an innovation economy in Santa Fe?”

Over the past year, he pitched the notion to dozens of local and state leaders at Sunday brunches at his home.

New Mexico Innovation Triangle “was formed as a result of these meetings,” Rizzo said. “We want to create 25,000 jobs in 10 years in Northern New Mexico.”
...Rizzo has partnered with heavy hitters for his innovation triangle with the San Francisco-based global architecture firm Gensler and the Chicago-based global real estate and investment management firm JLL.
... JLL buys, builds, occupies and invests in industrial, commercial, retail, residential and hotel real estate.
“They are raising the capital,” Rizzo said. “It’s going to be hundreds of millions of dollars over 10 years.”

Meanwhile Rizzo's company, New Mexico Innovation Triangle (NMIT), LLC, which incorporated in May of 2019, had been active in Los Alamos, negotiating with Kroger to buy the Mari Mac Village Shopping Center in the center of town. According to Los Alamos County Council Chair Sara Scott, that shopping center would be demolished and redeveloped by NMIT ("Scott: Mari Mac Village Shopping Center Under Contract," Los Alamos Reporter (LAR), June 3, 2020). Eight business tenants would be evicted. Another business had mysteriously been prevented from opening in a vacant space on this site by the County, a matter which is still being litigated.

Persuasive opposition developed immediately, which raised questions not just about the development but also about the nature, propriety, and legality of the County's involvement in this and related deals ("At What Cost Are We Building Our Bigger, Better Future?", Jessie Conrad, LAR, June 9, 2020).

Kroger backed out. Rizzo's NMIT had meanwhile purchased the adjacent 2-acre Hilltop House property, announced by Sara Scott in June, 2020, again for demolition and redevelopment.

NMIT's plans stalled, and nothing was done to secure the abandoned Hilltop House, which at that point was a serious fire danger. The Los Alamos County Fire Marshal finally contacted NMIT in July of 2021, requiring that NMIT secure the property ("Los Alamos County Fire Marshal Tells Owners Of Former Hilltop House To Secure The Building," LAR, July 15, 2021).

A month later Maire O'Neill -- the Los Alamos Reporter -- interviewed Rizzo about the Hilltop House property (plans were "90%" complete) and NMIT plans generally. LAR observed that NMIT's overall plan was presented by LANL in the fall of 2019 as the foundation of its own planning ("New Mexico Innovation Triangle’s Plans For Former Hilltop House Property At 90 Percent," LAR, August 18, 2021). As noted above, "NMIT" was a LANL idea.

To see intimate relationship between Rizzo's concept and LANL's, look at the first portion of this silent video presentation by Triad, the management and operations (M&O) contractor running LANL, to potential LANL contractors on August 8, 2019, attended by the Los Alamos Study Group (LASG) and later obtained under the Freedom of Information Act (FOIA).

LASG wrote and presented extensively about these plans, which are larger by far than the Manhattan Project in New Mexico, for example here and here. For more background and press engagement, see entries on this page in the fall of 2019.

Triad made a similar presentation to the Los Alamos County Council that fall. See this video starting at 14:15, especially at about 20:00, and the LAR article that followed it ("LANL Deputy Director Of Operations Discusses Infrastructure Plans And Challenges At Council Work Session," LAR, October 18, 2019.

A key aspect of the "innovation triangle" concept is transportation, including at the time a possible new bridge over the Rio Grande and connecting highways to Santa Fe and I-25. This proposed new bridge and highway was a feature of every public presentation of LANL's plans that fall, and had been discussed internally at LANL for months ("Better Connections To Santa Fe And Albuquerque Discussed In Recent LANL All-Hands Meetings," LAR, July 9, 2019). Reactions in Los Alamos were decidedly mixed, as LAR notes.

In fact the proposed new bridge and highway had been proposed by Triad, LLC immediately after Triad assumed full management of LANL in November 2018 if not before. Already by January of 2019 a "Los Alamos Bypass" ("Construction of 15-16 miles of additional roadway and an additional crossing over the Rio Grande") was proposed by the Legislative Finance Committee (LFC) (slide 12), no doubt on the basis of Triad prompting. The estimated cost was $67 million (nowhere near enough).

We (LASG) fought these highway plans in Washington, DC, as well as locally. The Office of Management and Budget (OMB) nixed them. "Not one dime" of taxpayer money was going to any such bridge and highway, OMB decided, as we were told by a colleague present.

Returning to the Hilltop House, now apparently an orphaned part of what had been a much larger plan, the County Fire Marshal found that the property, still unsecured in late September after the Fire Marshal's June letter, to be a "clear and inimical threat to human life, safety" and issued an order requiring NMIT to finally secure the property and prepare for its demolition by no later than March 30, 2022 ("Fire Marshal Takes Action On Former Hilltop House Hotel Property," LAR, October 20, 2021).

With no response from Rizzo or NMIT, Los Alamos County held a special session "to discuss a resolution declaring the former Hilltop House a menace to the public comfort, health, peace, and  safety and ordering the removal of the building along with associated ruins, rubbish, wreckage and debris from the County" ("County Council To Vote On Hilltop House Resolution During Special Virtual Meeting Friday Afternoon," October 27, 2021). LAR was able to reach Rizzo, who stated that "he is traveling and was unaware of the proposed resolution."

The resolution passed. NMIT objected without providing why or further details, and so a special hearing by the Los Alamos County Council is planned for December 3 ("County Schedules Hearing On NMIT’s Objection To Resolution On Former Hilltop House Property Requiring Removal Of Building," LAR, November 16, 2021). Should NMIT fail in its appeal and fail to demolish the buildings and remove the debris, the County could obtain a court order to do so itself, placing a lien on the property for reasonable costs and if necessary foreclosing on the property as provided in statute.

It is unclear why NMIT and Rizzo would maintain such a hazard and fail to respond to County warnings. Presumably there will be some answers at the hearing this Friday, December 3.

Back in Santa Fe, NMIT's plans required overcoming Santa Fe's height restrictions, as noted above. In the summer of 2021, City Councilors Roman “Tiger” Abeyta and Signe Lindell were persuaded to introduce a bill that would excuse “qualifying innovation projects” and “qualifying innovation village projects” from the height restrictions in the City's land development code ("Growing like weeds? Many Santa Feans worry taller buildings will proliferate," Sean Thomas, SFNM, July 25, 2021). As the author noted, "building heights have long been a sensitive topic in Santa Fe, and if history is any guide, agreement on the proposal is far from assured." The two sponsors held back the measure "for further discussion, clarification and outreach." 

By late November of this year, “Tiger” Abeyta was a lame duck councilor and Signe Lindell, who was reelected, had withdrawn her sponsorship for the targeted exemption bill. On the morning of November 18, the day of the Planning Commission meeting at which the proposed bill was the only item on the agenda, Abeyta withdrew his bill, which would have allowed “qualifying innovation projects” and “qualifying innovation village projects” to build up to 75 ft in height ("Proposal withdrawn to relax limits on building heights in parts of Santa Fe," Sean Thomas, SFNM, November 18, 2021). It appears likely the proposal was withdrawn to avoid on-the-record defeat.

Rizzo's latest plan

The alert Los Alamos Reporter noticed that Rizzo had presented the latest iteration of his "innovation triangle" plans to the Legislature’s Revenue Stabilization & Tax Policy Committee on November 22, 2021 ("Rizzo Indicates Two ‘Innovation Villages’ Planned For Los Alamos In Presentation To Legislators," LAR, November 26, 2021)

There are now two "innovation villages" planned for Los Alamos, a 7-story behemoth located on about 10 acres in the eastern heart of downtown Los Alamos (slide 19), "Los Alamos Innovation Village -- East," and a mysterious "Los Alamos Innovation Village -- West" (slide 18) of unknown size. Apart from the former Hilltop House, NMIT does not own any of this property.

Rizzo's plan for Los Alamos

Rizzo's "preliminary master plan" for his Santa Fe development (slide 21, zoom for details) is presented in more detail than previously:

Rizzo's plan for Santa Fe

A fourth "innovation village" is supposedly to be located in the Mesa del Sol development in Albuquerque (slide 23). There is no precise indication of precisely where it would be, or what it would entail.

Satellite "innovation hubs" would or could, in Rizzo's vision, be located in Springer, Vaughn, Taos, Tierra Amarillo, Cuba, Farmington, Gallup, Grants, and Belen (slide 24). Really.

No minutes or video are available from Rizzo's testimony at this time. According to the vigilant LAR, Rizzo told the legislature that his "strategy is to build these three innovation villages which are highly dense work/play environments to essentially create new capital formation initiatives to bring new start-ups to the state and to encourage people in the state who are bright and have a lot of energy to start their own companies which are great job creators, to transform and help the education system, create more graduates that could work in these companies and also most importantly, to prevent the young people that grew up in New Mexico and have been here for centuries from feeling they have to leave the state because they can’t get a good job or can’t find a place to live.”

The real meat of Rizzo's legislative pitch lies in a package of proposed tax exemptions, credits, and subsidies (slide 31) as well as infrastructure investments, specifically:

  • Surgically targeted tax reform measures for specific sectors with tight guardrails
  • Higher education investments per sector
  • Dedicated venture capital funds per sector
  • Funds to drive the expansion of the idea and implementation [meaning, what?]
  • Support RailRunner enhancements to build a transit corridor between Mesa del Sol & SAF [presumably, Santa Fe, including a new RailRunner stop at the Innovation Village]
  • Encourage a regional approach rather than a silo’d city approach

He would like an "integrated program" of state subsidies with "a narrow focus on job, education, tax incentives" that focuses on six industrial sectors (slide 39) that is "completely integrated and aligned across education and industry," including LANL (slide 40). These six sectors are:

  • Quantum Computing/storage
  • Immersive Entertainment
  • Space Sciences
  • Bio Sciences
  • Sustainable energy/hydrogen
  • Software and AI

Five of these six are of interest to LANL. Not mentioned: plutonium pit production, LANL's fastest-growing program. Rizzo never uses words like "nuclear" or "plutonium" even though these missions comprise more than 80% of LANL's work and are the major driver of LANL's needs for new housing in the region.

The bottom line (slide 45) is that Rizzo would like to see, in his six named technology areas,

  • Student debt relief, or conversion to a lower rate
  • No capital gains on stock options
  • Gross receipts tax (GRT) credits for office space leases
  • GRT credits for investment in curriculum, paid internships, and mentoring
  • Accelerated GRT credits for training of targeted under-represented groups
  • Targeted venture funds from the State
  • Broader application and scope of the New Mexico Job Training Incentive Program (JTIP)

Concluding harsh comments

There is nothing altruistic here. Basically, it seems that Rizzo believes he can make a huge, narcissistic splash here in this state because we are all greedy rubes, or so he thinks. We are seen as a colony in other words, with no independent destiny or sovereignty; a region peripheral to centers, especially financial centers, elsewhere.

His huge developments would sit at the entrances to two cities, proclaiming to all who enter that he is the greatest mover and shaker of them all, a kind of king.

It's a con. His diagnosis of New Mexico's problems is wrong as noted above, and tailored to the specific subsidies and rule exemptions he wants. His answer to the problems he names is basically a variation of "if you build it they will come." Why would they come? They won't. Well, they might come to work at LANL. For a while.

And why would our northern New Mexico towns want all that growth -- his 165,000 or so jobs -- assuming that ever happened? Where would the water come from? This plan is based on resource-crisis denial and climate-change denial -- as is LANL's.

But above all it's based on ignoring the poor and any comprehensive social contract and policy. It's very targeted, as he says -- on his vision and what it needs to succeed.

These "villages" [sic] are not just buildings. They comprise, as LANL's Beierschmitt said in 2019, a plan for the whole region -- and not just a development plan but with the tax changes and targeted subsidies, a very specific economic plan and therefore also a social plan, that would complement LANL in five out of six foci, with the unstated nuclear component the largest of all. With Rizzo doing it, LANL's fingerprints are kept away.

It's also a plan to further shift power to wealthy elites by changing the tax code to favor developers like himself and his technology-workforce renters, while decreasing public participation in zoning and building height decisions. It's carpetbagging.

The infrastructure needed to serve his developments (e.g. a RailRunner link between "innovation villages") is going to expensive. We need more mass transit, but transit investments need to be made more democratically. These subsidized tech ghettos would not rank highest on the list of needs. Talk about throwing the poor "under the bus."

By the way, the Brookings study he cites (slide 10) says innovation clusters cannot easily be started in places in Santa Fe. In other words, the study says the opposite of what his slides and proposals imply. Public investments to create innovation clusters in adverse locations would be wasted, though profitable to those who could get out in time.

Like many others before him, Rizzo misunderstands or misrepresents the nature of LANL, thinking it is a sort of generic "high tech" institution. It is, fundamentally, a top-secret nuclear military enclave, that also does other national security missions. The small remainder is largely window-dressing.

It is possible that the Los Alamos component (for which NMIT aka Rizzo does not actually own the land) is unnecessary and could even be a feint, or at a minimum less certain. The same goes for the (remote, isolated) Mesa del Sol. Santa Fe is a different story.

To us, the Santa Fe tech "village" pretty much implies a new highway to LANL, down the line. He wants a new Railrunner stop immediately, of course.

Meanwhile Rizzo is maintaining a clear public hazard in Los Alamos (Hilltop House), and appealing the County's order to tear that fire-trap down.

If student debt is forgiven or converted to a lower interest rate there will be conditions on the length of service required. It is very reasonable to do this for much-needed public service jobs, but why should society put its thumb on the labor market scale to favor LANL and its nuclear weapons jobs in this way, or for that matter the entertainment industry? There will be a length-of-service requirement, which will conveniently create a class of semi-indentured servants -- servants of The Bomb, in most cases.

And then what? Will they stay? Will these developments provide roots for them, or the family-oriented, single-family dwellings many of them will soon want?

Will these be local people? Perhaps a few. But five words we did not hear in 5 hours of LANL presentations on their infrastructure plans in August 2019 were "Espanola," "Chimayo," and "Rio Arriba County."

Who will own these innovation villages? Rizzo says JLL will raise "hundreds of millions" for his Santa Fe project. How could Santa Fe or Los Alamos governments ever control these developments? We see secret dealing already.

We think this would more or less destroy the cities of Santa Fe and Los Alamos. 

We hope you will use the information provided here to decisively defeat these proposals.

Greg and Trish


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