Albuquerque Local Pulse

Albuquerque Local Pulse: June 11 - Legal Updates, Summer Soccer, and Community Cleanups

3 min · 11. kesä 2026
jakson Albuquerque Local Pulse: June 11 - Legal Updates, Summer Soccer, and Community Cleanups kansikuva

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Good morning, this is Albuquerque Local Pulse for Thursday, June eleventh. We wake up today with a legal twist in a high profile traffic case. Local outlet ABQ Raw reports that state police drop the vehicular homicide charge against a driver involved in a recent motorcycle crash, but misdemeanor DWI and careless driving charges still stand as the investigation continues. Prosecutors say more decisions are coming, and investigators keep asking anyone with dash cam video to step forward. It is a reminder for all of us to take it slow on I 25 and Paseo del Norte as commute traffic builds. From city hall, we have a quality of life update. The citys air quality report lists conditions as moderate this morning, and officials ask us to go easy on wood burning so we keep haze down across the valley. That matters for listeners with asthma, especially in neighborhoods along Coors and in the North Valley. Weather wise, we stay warm and dry today with lots of sun, a few afternoon clouds building over the Sandias, and only a slight chance of a stray storm east of Tramway. Temperatures sit in the low nineties this afternoon, cooling into the sixties overnight. So we can plan on outdoor events going ahead as scheduled, but it is smart to carry water if we are walking downtown or along Central. On the community calendar, ABQ To Do highlights walk in computer help at the Main Library on Copper Avenue Northwest late this morning, a good free stop if we are polishing up resumes or online job applications. This evening, Flamenco Works on Coal Avenue Southwest hosts the Jesus Munoz Flamenco company, bringing world class dance into our own Barelas area. And looking ahead to Saturday, the Downtown Growers Market returns to Robinson Park at 8th and Central, with local produce, food trucks, and live music filling that tree lined block. Soccer fans have a big midday moment. Visit Albuquerque notes a free public watch party for the Mexico versus South Africa World Cup match at Westgate Soccer Fields on Valley View Drive Southwest at one oclock. It is part of the city and New Mexico Uniteds broader Summer of Soccer push, with more watch parties and youth events coming to parks across town. For families, the Balloon Museum is gearing up for more Stories and Music in the Sky, blending early childhood learning with ballooning history near Alameda and Balloon Museum Drive. Social media posts from recent evenings show balloons and classic cars drawing crowds and reminding us why the museum is such a landmark. On the jobs and business front, librarians downtown say interest in their resume and job search help sessions is high, especially among hospitality and call center workers. In real estate, local brokers report that typical three bedroom homes inside the Big I and along the Rio Grande corridor still hover in the mid three hundred thousands, with many sellers getting offers within a few weeks rather than a few days, a slight cooling that gives buyers a bit more breathing room. Sports wise, New Mexico United keeps building momentum for summer home matches at Isotopes Park, and youth soccer programs around the metro expect a bump from those free World Cup watch parties. High school athletes are between seasons, but coaches at schools along Lomas and Montgomery already hold conditioning sessions to get ready for fall. For a feel good moment, volunteers working around Robinson Park and Central report strong turnout for recent cleanups, with neighbors, small business owners, and students painting over graffiti and picking up trash together. It is one more sign that when we show up, our blocks look better and feel safer. We will keep an eye on any new crime or safety alerts through the day, especially around major corridors like Central, San Mateo, and Gibson, and we will update listeners tomorrow. Thanks for tuning in, and dont forget to subscribe so we can stay connected to our city together. This has been Albuquerque Local Pulse. We'll see you tomorrow with more local updates. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai. For more http://www.quietplease.ai Get the best deals https://amzn.to/3ODvOta

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jakson Albuquerque Local Pulse: June 11 - Legal Updates, Summer Soccer, and Community Cleanups kansikuva

Albuquerque Local Pulse: June 11 - Legal Updates, Summer Soccer, and Community Cleanups

Good morning, this is Albuquerque Local Pulse for Thursday, June eleventh. We wake up today with a legal twist in a high profile traffic case. Local outlet ABQ Raw reports that state police drop the vehicular homicide charge against a driver involved in a recent motorcycle crash, but misdemeanor DWI and careless driving charges still stand as the investigation continues. Prosecutors say more decisions are coming, and investigators keep asking anyone with dash cam video to step forward. It is a reminder for all of us to take it slow on I 25 and Paseo del Norte as commute traffic builds. From city hall, we have a quality of life update. The citys air quality report lists conditions as moderate this morning, and officials ask us to go easy on wood burning so we keep haze down across the valley. That matters for listeners with asthma, especially in neighborhoods along Coors and in the North Valley. Weather wise, we stay warm and dry today with lots of sun, a few afternoon clouds building over the Sandias, and only a slight chance of a stray storm east of Tramway. Temperatures sit in the low nineties this afternoon, cooling into the sixties overnight. So we can plan on outdoor events going ahead as scheduled, but it is smart to carry water if we are walking downtown or along Central. On the community calendar, ABQ To Do highlights walk in computer help at the Main Library on Copper Avenue Northwest late this morning, a good free stop if we are polishing up resumes or online job applications. This evening, Flamenco Works on Coal Avenue Southwest hosts the Jesus Munoz Flamenco company, bringing world class dance into our own Barelas area. And looking ahead to Saturday, the Downtown Growers Market returns to Robinson Park at 8th and Central, with local produce, food trucks, and live music filling that tree lined block. Soccer fans have a big midday moment. Visit Albuquerque notes a free public watch party for the Mexico versus South Africa World Cup match at Westgate Soccer Fields on Valley View Drive Southwest at one oclock. It is part of the city and New Mexico Uniteds broader Summer of Soccer push, with more watch parties and youth events coming to parks across town. For families, the Balloon Museum is gearing up for more Stories and Music in the Sky, blending early childhood learning with ballooning history near Alameda and Balloon Museum Drive. Social media posts from recent evenings show balloons and classic cars drawing crowds and reminding us why the museum is such a landmark. On the jobs and business front, librarians downtown say interest in their resume and job search help sessions is high, especially among hospitality and call center workers. In real estate, local brokers report that typical three bedroom homes inside the Big I and along the Rio Grande corridor still hover in the mid three hundred thousands, with many sellers getting offers within a few weeks rather than a few days, a slight cooling that gives buyers a bit more breathing room. Sports wise, New Mexico United keeps building momentum for summer home matches at Isotopes Park, and youth soccer programs around the metro expect a bump from those free World Cup watch parties. High school athletes are between seasons, but coaches at schools along Lomas and Montgomery already hold conditioning sessions to get ready for fall. For a feel good moment, volunteers working around Robinson Park and Central report strong turnout for recent cleanups, with neighbors, small business owners, and students painting over graffiti and picking up trash together. It is one more sign that when we show up, our blocks look better and feel safer. We will keep an eye on any new crime or safety alerts through the day, especially around major corridors like Central, San Mateo, and Gibson, and we will update listeners tomorrow. Thanks for tuning in, and dont forget to subscribe so we can stay connected to our city together. This has been Albuquerque Local Pulse. We'll see you tomorrow with more local updates. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai. For more http://www.quietplease.ai Get the best deals https://amzn.to/3ODvOta

11. kesä 20263 min
jakson Albuquerque Local Pulse: Cannabis Funds Housing, Summer Events Heat Up kansikuva

Albuquerque Local Pulse: Cannabis Funds Housing, Summer Events Heat Up

Good morning, this is Albuquerque Local Pulse for Sunday, June 7, 2026. We wake up today with our eyes on City Hall, where the council is continuing to debate how to use cannabis excise tax revenue after a recent decision to steer more money toward housing and addiction services. Local outlets report that funding for no strings attached rental assistance is expanding, which could help more families stay housed in neighborhoods from West Central to the International District. On the weather side, we stay mostly sunny and dry today, with highs in the upper 80s across the valley and a light breeze along Central and I 25. The National Weather Service notes only a slight chance of an isolated late day storm up near the foothills, so most outdoor events go on as planned. Tonight we cool into the upper 50s, with a warm, dry pattern holding into midweek. Around town, thousands of families just packed Franklin Plaza near Eubank for the fifth annual Touch a Truck event, hosted by District 9, kicking off summer with fire engines, city trucks, and food trucks all in one place, according to the city council office. That family energy continues today with gallery tours at the Albuquerque Museum on Mountain Road and a HER TERRAIN exhibit of women artists at MERGE Modern Art inside Catalyst Coffee on Coors Boulevard. ABQToDo also highlights CreativeCon events at the National Hispanic Cultural Center on 4th Street, along with a Fiber Fling pop up market on 4th Street Northwest and evening art classes near Monte Vista. In community life, the New Mexico Black Leadership Council is promoting upcoming cultural gatherings and youth programs along the EDO and Southeast corridors, focusing on mentorship and small business support. Our job market stays tight but active, with local reports showing unemployment hovering in the mid 4 percent range. Health care, film production, and logistics around the Sunport and Mesa del Sol are adding dozens of new openings this month. In real estate, median home prices across the metro sit around the mid three hundreds, with slightly more listings coming on in the Northeast Heights and Westside as summer selling season ramps up. On the sports front, the Albuquerque Isotopes continue their Pacific Coast League push at Rio Grande Credit Union Field at Isotopes Park. The official team site notes a home stand with first pitch in the early evening, and the club sitting near the middle of the standings. For crime and safety, local news outlets report several vehicle break ins overnight along Lomas and near San Mateo, plus an armed robbery investigation near a convenience store on Coors. Albuquerque Police say there is no broader threat to the public but ask us to stay alert, lock vehicles, and report suspicious activity. For a feel good note, organizers say donations from the Touch a Truck event will help fund kids programs in East Central neighborhoods, a small example of how community fun turns into real support. Thank you for tuning in, and please remember to subscribe so you never miss our local check in. This has been Albuquerque Local Pulse. We'll see you tomorrow with more local updates. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai. For more http://www.quietplease.ai Get the best deals https://amzn.to/3ODvOta

7. kesä 20263 min
jakson Albuquerque Local Pulse: Heat, Pride, and Summer Ahead kansikuva

Albuquerque Local Pulse: Heat, Pride, and Summer Ahead

Good morning, this is Albuquerque Local Pulse for Saturday, June 6. We are waking up to a hot, sunny June morning, and that means we are already planning around heat as we head into the weekend. Visit Albuquerque says June here is typically warm and sunny, with highs often in the mid 80s to low 90s, so we are looking at a day best suited for early errands, shaded events, and plenty of water. The city’s air quality update posts on weekday mornings, and for today we are watching for any heat and dust impacts on outdoor activity. Across town, Pride Month is underway with events happening throughout Albuquerque all June, adding color and energy to community spaces and local businesses. On the arts and science side, the National Museum of Nuclear Science and History is hosting Laser Powered Accelerators tonight on Eubank Boulevard, and next week the New Mexico Museum of Natural History and Science on Mountain Road has a talk on astronomy that should draw a crowd. For music and culture, the calendar is filling fast, and we are also seeing June community volunteer opportunities tied to National Trails Day and neighborhood cleanups. At city hall, the big daily life story remains how Albuquerque manages heat, air quality, and neighborhood services as summer begins. That includes transit, street work, and public safety priorities that affect commutes and routines across the city. We are also watching for local development signals, because any new retail or housing move can shape traffic and jobs around the Cottonwood area, downtown, and the Northeast Heights. On the job market, employers across hospitality, events, construction, and city services are likely to see steady summer demand, especially as tourism and outdoor programming pick up. In housing, buyers and renters are still facing tight inventory in many parts of the metro, and that keeps pressure on prices near the UNM area, Nob Hill, and the West Side. For sports, local summer youth and school athletics are still active, and we are tracking weekend tournaments and training across the city. If you are heading out, keep an eye on traffic near I 40, I 25, Central Avenue, and the University area. On crime and safety, we are not seeing a confirmed major overnight incident in the available local reports, but we do know this is a time when drivers, pedestrians, and people enjoying late events should stay alert, lock vehicles, and watch for heat related stress. This has been Albuquerque Local Pulse. We’ll see you tomorrow with more local updates. Thank you for tuning in, please subscribe. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai. For more http://www.quietplease.ai Get the best deals https://amzn.to/3ODvOta

6. kesä 20262 min
jakson Albuquerque Local Pulse: Arts, Heat, and Campus Updates for June 5 kansikuva

Albuquerque Local Pulse: Arts, Heat, and Campus Updates for June 5

Good morning, this is Albuquerque Local Pulse for June 5, 2026. We are starting with a warm, sunny stretch that is shaping the day from the Rio Grande Valley to the foothills, with afternoon highs near the low 90s and only a few clouds this evening, so it is a good day for outdoor plans but a day to stay hydrated in the heat.[2] We are also watching a busy community calendar. Tonight, the Gallery ABQ is hosting Recycle Arts, and the New Mexico Youth Arts Ambassadors Exhibition opens this afternoon with local teens sharing stories through art and film.[4][1] At the New Mexico Museum of Natural History and Science, families can catch Unearthing Fossils at Los Griegos Library, and the National Hispanic Cultural Center has weekend events on deck as well.[7][3] Around town, city life stays centered on the basics that matter. UNM has the Las Lomas Roadway Renewal on the schedule, which matters for anyone moving around campus and nearby streets, while that also fits a broader picture of daily commuting and access across the university area.[8] We are not seeing a major city hall announcement in the available reports today, so the focus remains on how transit, campus work, and neighborhood traffic affect the morning routine.[8] In the job market, Albuquerque is still seeing steady demand tied to education, arts, hospitality, and campus operations, with openings and events connected to UNM, museums, and visitor attractions helping support local hiring.[8][12][6] On real estate, the market remains active around walkable neighborhoods like Nob Hill and the university corridor, where the Taste of Nob Hill event highlights the continued pull of local businesses and foot traffic in that part of town.[9] For sports and school pride, we do not have a fresh high school score in the current reports, but local families will find plenty of activity in museums, youth arts, and campus events that keep students connected to the city’s cultural life.[1][7][8] On public safety, no major new Albuquerque incident is standing out in the current source set from the last 24 hours, so we are not adding speculation where reports are thin. For listeners headed out, that means the usual caution around traffic, heat, and busy evening corridors remains the main concern. One feel good note before we go, Albuquerque’s young artists are getting a real showcase today, and that kind of hometown creativity is what gives the city its energy.[1] This has been Albuquerque Local Pulse. Thank you for tuning in, subscribe for more local updates, and we will see you tomorrow with more local updates. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai. For more http://www.quietplease.ai Get the best deals https://amzn.to/3ODvOta

5. kesä 20263 min
jakson Sunny Skies and Summer Plans: Your Albuquerque Thursday Update kansikuva

Sunny Skies and Summer Plans: Your Albuquerque Thursday Update

Good morning, this is Albuquerque Local Pulse for Thursday, June 4, 2026. We wake up today with quiet skies over the Metro. Forecasters with the National Weather Service in Albuquerque say we stay mostly sunny and dry, with afternoon highs in the upper 80s along I 25 and Coors, and a light breeze along Tramway. It is a good day for errands, outdoor lunch, or a walk by the Bosque, and we only see a small chance of isolated storms this weekend, mainly Sunday. From City Hall, we are watching the rollout of the city’s new budget, which sets aside millions for road work on Central, Carlisle, and Paseo del Norte, plus more funding for Albuquerque Community Safety teams responding to behavioral health calls. City leaders say we should notice more rapid response to non emergency calls and more orange cones as summer street work ramps up. On the breaking news front, local TV stations report Albuquerque police and Bernalillo County deputies are still investigating a string of overnight vehicle thefts near Lomas and Wyoming, and a separate armed robbery near Coors and Central. Detectives say there is no ongoing threat to the public, but we are asked to lock cars, remove valuables, and call if we have doorbell video from those areas. In our daily crime snapshot, APD reports several stolen vehicles, a few residential break ins on the West Side, and one serious crash involving suspected DWI near I 40 and Eubank late last night. No fatalities in that crash, and officers say saturation patrols will continue through the weekend. On the feel good side, a group of neighbors near Rio Grande and Candelaria finished a volunteer cleanup of the Bosque trail, hauling out bags of trash and planting native flowers. They say they are doing it so all of us can enjoy a cleaner river path this summer. For families, the Cherry Hills Library near Harper and Barstow hosts a free adult health program today from 10 to noon in the meeting room, according to the public library calendar. At noon, the New Mexico Museum of Natural History and Science is partnering with the Central and Unser Library for Unearthing Fossils, a hands on session for kids and adults who love dinosaurs and dirt. On the events front, Visit Albuquerque and ABQ To Do list plenty to do. We have ongoing spring concerts at the Albuquerque Museum off Mountain Road, fiber arts activities at Alamosa Community Center, and the FC Barcelona Summer Camp in town, giving young soccer players a chance to train like pros. For schools and sports, local high school teams are shifting into summer workouts, and club soccer, baseball, and track meets are popping up all over the West Side and Heights. UNM is gearing up for summer community events, including science talks and garden workdays later this month. In real estate, local agents report that the median home price in Albuquerque is holding around the low four hundreds, with West Side and Northeast Heights homes moving fastest. Rents for a typical two bedroom apartment are averaging in the low one thousands, which keeps pressure on families but also adds demand for new construction. On the job front, employers along the I 25 corridor and Uptown are hiring for health care, call centers, hospitality, and construction. We are seeing starting pay for many entry level roles in the mid teens per hour, with some warehouse and tech support positions going higher. As we move through the day, we can expect smooth travel, warm but manageable heat, and lots of options to get involved in our community, from libraries to museums to youth sports fields. Thank you for tuning in, and remember to subscribe so you never miss our latest local updates. This has been Albuquerque Local Pulse. We'll see you tomorrow with more local updates. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai. For more http://www.quietplease.ai Get the best deals https://amzn.to/3ODvOta

4. kesä 20263 min