The El Rey Court (formerly known as the El Rey Inn ) is located at 1862 Cerrillos Road in Santa Fe, New Mexico , United States. This campus spans 5 acres and is located near what used to be Route 66 . The property includes traditional adobe style buildings surrounded by gardens.
17-581: El Rey , Spanish for The King, may refer to: Locations [ edit ] El Rey Inn , Santa Fe, New Mexico El Rey National Park in Argentina El Rey archaeological site , a Mayan site in Cancun, Mexico El Rey Theatre (disambiguation) Companies [ edit ] El Rey Chocolates , a Venezuelan chocolatier established in 1927 El Rey Network , an English language cable network for
34-458: A 2008 album by The Wedding Present El Rey , a 1990 album by Pete "El Conde" Rodríguez Other uses [ edit ] El Rey (film) , a 2004 Colombian film directed by Antonio Dorado See also [ edit ] All pages with titles containing El Rey Elrey Borge Jeppesen (1907–1996), American aviation pioneer Topics referred to by the same term [REDACTED] This disambiguation page lists articles associated with
51-402: A fitness room for guests of the hotel. In 2016, the current owning partners, Jeff Burns, Matt Comfort, and Jay & Alison Carroll purchased the property. They renamed it The El Rey Court, and renovated the property in 2018 by adding hot tubs, changing the breakfast area to a mezcal bar, and other improvements. El Rey Court currently has 86 rooms and suites. According to Fodor's , each room
68-503: A session). Any bill passed by the Legislature and signed by the governor takes effect 90 days after its passage unless two-thirds of each house votes to give the bill immediate effect, earlier effect (before 90 day period), or later effect (after 90 day period). New Mexico does not pay its legislators a base salary. Legislators receive per diem of $ 191 per day for work at the capitol or committee hearings and mileage reimbursement at
85-417: Is unique, and is decorated with Southwestern furniture and antiques. 35°39′51″N 105°58′25″W / 35.66417°N 105.97361°W / 35.66417; -105.97361 New Mexico State Legislature The New Mexico Legislature ( Spanish : Legislatura de Nuevo México ) is the legislative branch of the state government of New Mexico . It is a bicameral body made up of
102-778: The New Mexico House of Representatives and the New Mexico Senate . The New Mexico Legislature was established when New Mexico officially became a state and was admitted to the union in 1912. In 1922, Bertha M. Paxton became the first woman elected to the New Mexico Legislature, serving one term in the House of Representatives. The Legislature meets every year, in regular session on the third Tuesday in January. The New Mexico Constitution limits
119-471: The 1950s, El Rey began a planned expansion in which the owner added rooms and enclosed the carports to become rooms for guests. A swimming pool was constructed in the 1950s which helped El Rey compete with newer hotels that were being constructed in Santa Fe. In 1973, Terrell White purchased El Rey Inn, then 38 rooms on three dusty acres, for $ 550,000. He faced the tourism and travel challenges posed by
136-468: The 1973 oil crisis . White also renovated the hotel by replacing all of the hotel's old gas and sewer pipes. New rooms were added to the hotel in 1977, 1980 and 1983 A profit-sharing plan made investments on behalf of the inn's longtime workers. In 1993, White constructed the two-story, 10-room Spanish Colonial courtyard. This addition was influenced by the style and architecture of inns in France . In
153-577: The 1990s the hotel became known as El Rey Inn rather than El Rey Court. Another round of expansion began in 1994 when the Whites purchased a neighboring property (the Alamo Lodge). This expansion resulted in the construction of 21 new rooms. This latest addition to the hotel includes walkways flanked by gardens, a sauna , and a whirlpool with a handcrafted fireplace (add reference). During 2005, one of these courtyards became "El Agua" which functioned as
170-594: The Latino market that launched in 2013 Music [ edit ] Tito Puente (1923–2000), American musician, songwriter and record producer nicknamed "El Rey" El Rey (Tito Puente album) , a 1984 album by Tito Puente on Concord Picante El Rey (The King) , a 1968 album by Tito Puente El Rey: Bravo , a 1963 album by Tito Puente "El Rey" (song) , a Mexican song by José Alfredo Jiménez Don Omar (born 1978), Puerto Rican reggaeton singer nicknamed "El Rey" El Rey (The Wedding Present album) ,
187-458: The Legislature can call itself into an extraordinary session. There is no limit on the number of special sessions a governor can call. The New Mexico Constitution does not limit the duration of each special session; lawmakers may consider only those issues designated by the governor in the "call," or proclamation convening the special session (though other issues may be added by the Governor during
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#1732790606710204-723: The Senate represents roughly 43,300 residents. Currently the Democratic Party holds a majority in both of the chambers of New Mexico Legislature, and holds the Governor's office. In 2021, Senate Bill 304 established the Citizen Redistricting Committee. The committee is to develop three redistricting plans to recommend to the Legislature for each of the following: U.S. House of Representatives, New Mexico House of Representatives, New Mexico Senate, and any other state offices requiring redistricting. As of
221-458: The federal rate of 67 cents per mile. They can receive a per diem outside of legislative session. The state constitution requires representatives to be at least twenty-one years old and senators to be at least twenty-five, and members of both houses must live in the districts they represent. The legislature consists of 70 representatives and 42 senators. Each member of the House represents roughly 25,980 residents of New Mexico . Each member of
238-672: The original U.S. Route 66 . In 1937 the New Mexico State Legislature removed the US 66 designation from the original 1926 road through Santa Fe, sending traffic onto a bypass road (constructed in Arthur T. Hannett 's final days as state governor) which ran as a straight line from Santa Rosa to Albuquerque. This would shorten US 66 by ninety miles but removed the state capital from the route entirely. Ultimately, Interstate 40 construction would also bypass Santa Fe. During
255-487: The regular session to 60 calendar days, every other year it is 30 days. The lieutenant governor presides over the Senate, while the Speaker of the House is elected from that body in a closed-door majority-member caucus. Both have wide latitude in choosing committee membership in their respective houses and have a large impact on lawmaking in the state. While only the Governor can call the Legislature into special sessions,
272-459: The title El Rey . If an internal link led you here, you may wish to change the link to point directly to the intended article. Retrieved from " https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=El_Rey&oldid=1210976876 " Category : Disambiguation pages Hidden categories: Short description is different from Wikidata All article disambiguation pages All disambiguation pages El Rey Inn When El Rey Court
289-474: Was opened in 1936, it only had 12 rooms. The hotel was built in traditional Northern New Mexico adobe style. The hotel's developer was also responsible for constructing another hotel named El Vado which is located an hour south in Albuquerque, New Mexico . Although these two hotels were built by the same developer, they have never shared the same owner. In 1936, both of these properties were located on
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