Domestic Violence Awareness Day

Option, Inc invites you to join us in supporting Healthy Relationships.  Many local service agencies will be in attendance.  Drawing for various gifts.  $12 per ticket.  Purchase per ticket gets you a green chile burger that will be homecooked by the Lea County Sheriff's Department, chips, drink, and a dessert and several opportunities to win any of our donated raffle items.  All proceeds go to benefit Option Inc.  Need not be present to win.  Free to attend to the public.

Family Fun Day – Indigenous Peoples Day

Please help us honor America’s first inhabitants and Tribal Nations as we celebrate and recognize Indigenous Peoples Day. We will learn about the Tribal Nations that make up New Mexico and make some memorable projects to take home.

Southwest Stone Carving Workshop

Hosted by David Sadler, Sadler & Son Monument Works, Hobbs, NM.  Cost $300.  Class Limit 15.  Register by September 16, 2022 at swstoncarving.com.  Instructors:  Candyce Garrett and Cody Vance. Phone:  575-390-3205.

Family Fun Day

Help us honor America’s first inhabitants and Tribal Nations as we celebrateand recognize Indigenous Peoples Day with several different events that are FREE: Family Fun Day: 10:00 am – 2:00 pm We will learn about the Tribal Nations that make up New Mexico and make some memorable art projects to take home. Plaited Basket Weaving Workshop: 10:00 am -1:00 pm Come learn about traditional basket weaving techniques and make your own plaited basket to take home! This class is designed for attendees 16 years of age and older. The class will break at 11:00 am to watch the flute and hoop dancing performance. This workshop is free, but space is limited to 20 participants, please reserve your space below. Native American Flute and Hoop dancing performance with Nino Reyes: 11:00 am Join Nino Reyes and his Native American performers as they provide

Southwest Stone Carving Workshop

Hosted by David Sadler, Sadler & Son Monument Works, Hobbs, NM.  Cost $300.  Class Limit 15.  Register by September 16, 2022 at swstoncarving.com.  Instructors:  Candyce Garrett and Cody Vance. Phone:  575-390-3205.

CORE – No Carve Pumpkin Decorating Contest

NO CARVE PUMPKIN DECORATING CONTEST starts on 10/11/2022!!! Bring your Pumpkins to the CORE front desk. (No submissions will be accepted after 3PM on Monday, Oct. 31st.)   -Voting will take place during Spooktacular (Oct. 31st) from 3:00 PM - 4:30 PM. WINNERS WILL BE ANNOUNCED AT 5PM DURING SPOOKTACULAR ON OCTOBER 31ST. (presense not required. Winners will be contacted via phone.)   -Please note: Your pumpkin will be displayed at the CORE and could possibly be damaged. In the event that your pumpkin starts to rot/decay, you will be notified via phone number to retrieve your pumpkin. Failure to do so will result in your pumpkin being discarded.   -Pumpkins not picked up after 5PM on Oct. 31st will be used in the pumpkin drop at 5:30 PM.

Not Vacant Shindig

Join us as we host new business opportunities and see the potential Lovington has!

United Way Day of Caring

Register a Service Project Here! https://forms.gle/Nxzd4b3FDzCdnc8z9 Day of Caring is a powerful way for United Way of Lea County to join forces with companies and individuals to create action across our county. It is a day that underscores how essential volunteers are to making a difference in our community. Our volunteers complete projects that agencies may not have the ability to complete on their own. Day of Caring kicks off Saturday, October 15th at 8am. Deadline to register a service project will be September 15th.   Join us as we ignite the spirit of community collaboration, giving, and civic engagement to improve the lives of those in Lea County. If you are interested in registrering to volunteer or registering a team, please contact Marcus Sparenberg at campaign@uwolc.org or 575-964-3040

Tours Through Time

Celebrate and learn what has built our Lea County Community!

Evening Lecture

David Caffey and Chasing the Santa Fe Ring: Power and Privilege in Territorial New Mexico Join us for an evening of discussion with author David Caffey about the "rings" of men who collaborated to use the powers of wealth and government for their own enrichment in NM in the late 1800s. Chasing the Santa Fe Ring During the Gilded Age, from about 1870 to 1900, great enterprises were built, fortunes were made, and opulent lives were lived. One of the features of the day was the appearance of “rings”�"combinations of men who collaborated to use the powers of wealth and government for their own satisfaction and enrichment. The Tweed Ring in New York was the first to attain fame for its corruption, but the term was soon applied to cliques across the country. In the West, no alliance was more enduring or broad in its ambitions than the Santa Fe Ring in New Mexico. David L. Caffey set out to examine the who, what, why, and how of the Santa Fe Ring, producing a book, Chasing the Santa Fe Ring: Power and Privilege in Territorial New Mexico, which he will discuss through this illustrated lecture. David Caffey David L. Caffey grew up in Abilene, Texas, and became enthralled with New Mexico’s history in twelve summers on staff at the Philmont Scout Ranch in Colfax County. He later lived in New Mexico for thirty-three years, serving as Director of the Harwood Museum in Taos, and later in administration at San Juan College and Clovis Community College. His forthcoming book, When Cimarron Meant Wild: The Maxwell Land Grant Conflict in Colorado and New Mexico, will be published by the University of Oklahoma Press in spring, 2023. He and his wife now live in Lubbock, where they are watching a little girl grow up.

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