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N.M. Governor Names Director, Deputy for Broadband Office

In naming a new director and deputy director for the New Mexico Office of Broadband Access and Expansion, Gov. Michelle Lujan Grisham chose two people with federal- and state-level experience in connectivity.

The New Mexico State Capitol in Santa Fe.
The New Mexico state Capitol in Santa Fe.
David Kidd/Governing
Jeffrey Lopez was named director of New Mexico OBAE in June 2025.
Jeffrey Lopez
Credit: Daniel Rios
New Mexico Gov. Michelle Lujan Grisham on Monday named Jeffrey Lopez and Aquiles “Alex” Trujillo as the new director and deputy director, respectively, of the state Office of Broadband Access and Expansion (OBAE).

The appointments, announced by the governor’s office, come roughly a month after acting Director Drew Lovelace left the position, and Department of Information Technology (DoIT) Secretary Manny Barreras stepped in as interim director.

“I look forward to continuing the work I started in the [U.S.] Senate — to connect everyone in New Mexico to resilient, safe and affordable high-speed broadband,” Lopez wrote on LinkedIn.

The new director has more than 12 years’ federal experience and worked on the legislation that created the Broadband Equity, Access and Deployment Program, the news release said. He’ll lead an office with the express mission of connecting underserved and unserved residents to broadband infrastructure; an estimated 15 percent of the state’s population lacks broadband Internet.

“Jeffrey possesses the perfect combination of federal policy knowledge, broadband program prowess, and familiarity with New Mexico communities that our state needs to maximize the historic broadband investments underway,” the governor said in a statement.

Lopez was a senior policy adviser to U.S. Sen. Ben Ray Luján’s office for more than four years, according to the governor’s office and LinkedIn, and served U.S. Sen. Tom Udall from 2012-2021, most recently as senior policy adviser according to LinkedIn. Both senators have represented New Mexico; Udall retired in 2021 and Luján successfully ran to replace him.

Trujillo has former state experience; he served as a project manager on broadband from December 2022 to December 2024, according to LinkedIn, going on to work for more than a year as a self-employed broadband consultant before being named OBAE deputy director.

The office was stood up in 2021 by the state Broadband Access and Expansion Act, which gave it the authority to create the state’s broadband adoption model, manage broadband mapping, build broadband capacity across state and tribal communities, and administer grants. Kelly Schlegel was its first director; the office is part of DoIT.
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