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El Paso Matters – El Paso GOP congressional candidates file no finance reports; SISD oversight nears end

Posted on April 17, 2026

This is your weekly news roundup, which takes a quick look at some developments in government, politics, education, environment and other topics across El Paso. 

El Paso GOP Congressional Candidates Not Reporting Campaign Donations

The two Republican runoff candidates for El Paso’s 16th Congressional District seat have not reported raising any money for the election, according to campaign finance reports maintained by the Federal Election Commission.

Adam Bauman, a former Border Patrol agent, and Manuel Barraza, a former lawyer and judge who was disbarred and served a prison term after being convicted of federal crimes, have not filed any reports with the FEC since becoming candidates in late 2025. Federal law requires such reports after a candidate has raised or spent $5,000.

READ MORE: Republicans Adam Bauman, Manuel Barraza head to primary runoff in District 16 Congressional race

Candidates in competitive races for the U.S. House of Representatives usually raise and spend hundreds of thousands of dollars. The lack of fundraising by Republican candidates reflects expectations of national Republican leaders that the party stands little chance of unseating Democratic incumbent Veronica Escobar.

Escobar has raised more than $730,000 through March 31, and has more than $288,000 in her campaign bank account, according to her most recent FEC filing on April 15.

Bauman and Barraza were the top two vote getters in the Republican March primary, which drew seven candidates. The primary runoff is May 26, with early voting May 18-22.

Michael Hinojosa, one of two conservators appointed by the Texas Education Agency to Socorro ISD in 2024, during a press conference on the district’s superintendent search, June 24, 2025, . (Corrie Boudreaux/El Paso Matters)

Socorro ISD Conservators Prepare for Departure

The Texas Education Agency conservators appointed to oversee the Socorro Independent School District are expected to end their appointment in the coming months. Their planned departure comes as the district prepares to adopt a budget for the coming school year this summer.

“I’m going to bless your budget adoption process, and as long as you don’t deviate from where you’re going, you’re going to get rid of me,” TEA conservator Michael Hinojosa said Wednesday during a board meeting.

TEA conservator Andrew Kim attended his final board meeting with the district in March.

Hinojosa said he expects to leave SISD once the district completes the “exit criteria” set by the conservators and adopts its budget for the next school year.

The district needs to finish its customer service plan meant to improve its relationship with community members and more efficiently resolve their issues. Hinojosa said that should be done in May.

Once the exit criteria are completed, the conservators would need final approval from the Texas Commissioner of Education to officially end their oversight of the district.

Kim and Hinojosa were appointed to oversee SISD by the TEA in April 2024 after an investigation found the district was rife with leadership issues and had improperly graduated students in 2019. Conservators are expected to help implement improvements within two years of placement, according to the state education agency.

Free Solar Panels for El Paso Nonprofits? Here’s What to Know.

El Paso nonprofit organizations can receive a free solar panel system for the building they’re located in thanks to a grant program run by the advocacy group Solar United Neighbors. But applications close at the end of the day Friday.

The program is funded with a $522,000 federal grant that can pay for solar panels systems for 10 nonprofits located within the city limits. To be eligible, nonprofits have to either own the building they are located in or have a long-term lease and approval from the building’s owner. 

The idea behind the program is to help local nonprofits lower their electricity costs by generating electricity onsite, as well as to increase the amount of zero-carbon solar power generation in El Paso overall. The systems will vary in size from 6 kilowatts to 7 kilowatts of energy production capacity. Once the system is installed, the recipient nonprofit has to handle maintenance such as panel cleaning or inverter replacement. 

El Paso nonprofit organizations can apply online before the deadline Friday. Visit the city’s website to learn more.

El Paso City Council Approves Climate Bond Projects 

Years after El Paso voters in November 2022 approved $5.2 million for climate-related projects as part of the Community Progress Bond, the City Council this week approved a list of projects to install solar panel systems, increase lighting and reduce flooding. 

The funds will pay for a 500-kilowatt solar energy system at the city’s new public safety complex, which will be  one of the most energy-hungry city-owned facilities because it will operate day and night. The system will cost $1.25 million to install, but will result in total savings for the city of $2.7 million over 12 years by slashing electricity costs. 

The bond will also pay for 135 new solar-powered street lights at poorly-lit areas around the city, such as parks, the public safety complex and along dimly-lot street corridors. Those roads include Hondo Pass between Diana Drive and Railroad Drive and Bob Hope Drive between Pellicano Drive and Joe Battle Boulevard. The city will also install 120 new solar lights at Mission Hills Park, Washington Park and Veterans Park, among others. 

The solar lights will cost $2.38 million but will save an estimated $2.58 million over 20 years compared with the cost to build and operate traditional light fixtures over that same time period. 

The last bucket the bond proceeds will go toward is for so-called green infrastructure –  more vegetation in flood-prone areas. The idea is that putting in more plants can help absorb floodwater that otherwise would flow off the side of a road and affect homes or businesses. 

The city has budgeted $275,000 for the green infrastructure projects, but still has to decide exact locations to implement more greenery and flood-prevention features. 

Coronado High School Grad Runs for Congress in Virginia

El Paso native Olivia Troye, a former aide to Vice President Mike Pence who has become a leading critic of President Donald Trump, announced her candidacy this week for a U.S. House of Representatives seat from Virginia. 

Olivia Troye

A longtime Republican, Troye is running as a Democrat. In her announcement email, she highlighted the criticism and threats she has received from supporters of Trump’s Make America Great Again Movement.

“MAGA wants us afraid. They want us quiet. They want us to give up. I’ve already shown them that’s not going to happen. Now I need you to stand with me,” she said.

Troye, a graduate of Coronado High School, has worked extensively in the homeland security sector. She was Pence’s homeland security advisor and played a key role in the Trump administration’s COVID-19 task force until she quit in 2020 and denounced the administration’s approach.

She was a featured speaker at the Democratic National Convention in 2024. She is joining a crowded field for the Democratic nomination in Virginia’s 7th Congressional District, which includes the wife of a former governor and several state lawmakers.

The El Paso Public Health Department at 9566 Railroad Drive houses a clinic and laboratory, as well as programs for HIV prevention and surveillance, disease intervention and assistance for families living with AIDS. (Courtesy of City of El Paso)

Public Health Department Progresses Toward Accreditation

The El Paso Department of Public Health requested from City Council on Tuesday $240,000 for a one- to two-year consulting contract with Ascendient Healthcare Advisors to help it achieve accreditation. The Public Health Accreditation Board sets the standards, which provide a way for the health department to hold itself accountable to their community, improve efficiency and make itself more competitive for future grants.

There are nine accredited health departments in Texas, but El Paso is among the largest cities in Texas that has yet to achieve this status. Accreditation would help El Paso meet the same national benchmarks as other health departments and compare their operations, health director Dr. Veerinder Taneja said in an email.

READ MORE: El Paso health director Vinny Taneja tackles staffing, funding challenges

The health department began the process in fall 2024 and targets accreditation by late 2027 to early 2028, he said. The funding for an outside consultant comes from the Center for Disease Control and Prevention’s Public Health Infrastructure Grant.

The accreditation process includes conducting a community health assessment and developing a community health improvement plan on a routine basis, as well as documenting policies and setting local health ordinances.

“Accreditation ensures that these activities are not one-time efforts, but ongoing responsibilities that hold the department accountable for continuous improvement and community impact,” Taneja said.

It also strengthens how the department uses data to make decisions and prioritize community needs, he added.

The Texas Tech University System awarded one of 18 Chancellor’s Council Distinguished Teaching Award to Dr. Rebecca L. Campos, an assistant professor at Texas Tech Health El Paso Foster School of Medicine and a doctor at the Texas Tech Physicians of El Paso on the Westside. (Texas Tech Health El Paso courtesy photo)

TTHEP Faculty Physician Earns Honor from Texas Tech University System

Dr. Rebecca L. Campos, a physician teacher who practices family medicine and works to support and inspire future doctors, was one of 18 faculty members who earned a Texas Tech University System Chancellor’s Council Distinguished Teaching Award this week.

Campos, who grew up in Fabens, Texas, is an assistant professor at Texas Tech Health El Paso. She said the award, one of the system’s highest faculty honors, recognizes how teaching is an important way physicians can give back to their field.

TTU System Chancellor Brandon Creighton and TTHEP President Richard Lange presented Campos with an engraved medallion and a $5,000 stipend for her exceptional contributions to medical education. The April 13 ceremony was at the TTHEP campus.

In a TTHEP release, Creighton and Lange congratulated the awardee.

Creighton called Campos a talented and dedicated faculty member who has had a significant impact on students, and made critical contributions to TTHEP and the Paso del Norte community.

Lange said the recognition speaks to the caliber of the institution’s faculty and their commitment to advancing patient care and health care education.

Campos, a graduate of Fabens High School, earned bachelor’s degrees in chemistry and microbiology in 2004 from the University of Texas at El Paso. She then received her Doctor of Medicine degree four years later from the University of Texas Medical Branch in Galveston.

She moved to San Antonio to do her family practice residency at CHRISTUS Santa Rosa, and served as the clinic director at the CHRISTUS Family Health Center before TTHEP hired her in January 2021.

To expand patient treatment options, she completed a fellowship in integrative medicine, which involves the use of nutrition, supplements as well as herbal and botanical treatments, and a physician acupuncture course.

Campos directs the Medical Skills Course at the TTHEP Foster School of Medicine, and provides patient care at the Texas Tech Physicians of El Paso at Transmountain on the Westside.

The post El Paso GOP congressional candidates file no finance reports; SISD oversight nears end appeared first on El Paso Matters.

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