DOT worker breaks law, given ultimatum

MORIARTY, N.M. (KRQE) - Veteran Department of Transportation employee and Torrance County Commissioner Lonnie Freyburger is stuck between a rock and a hard place.

Freyburger, who has been a DOT manager for nearly 25 years, has also served on the Torrance County Commission for the last 16 months, which he recently found out was against state law.

"(My supervisor) left a message that said, 'I need to talk with you. It's urgent,'" said Freyburger, who received the message earlier this month. "He told me I had to by the end of the day either resign from the highway department or resign from the commission."

According to State Personnel Director Gene Moser, classified state workers, including most DOT employees, can't hold partisan elected office.

"If they are elected, then by law, they must resign their position from state government," said Moser. "That was the concern to remove politics from the classified act."

Freyburger said he had no idea it was against the law. He told News 13, he got permission from a supervisor last year giving him the okay to sit on the county commission.

State officials said that's not an excuse. Freyburger was placed on paid suspension and given an ultimatum.

"The law is the law," said Adjutant DOT Secretary Mike McEntee. "We have to follow it. We are the government."

McEntee and Moser both said they don't know how Freyburger flew under the radar for more than a year.

McEntee said the department has launched an investigation to find out who allowed Freyburger to hold elected office.

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DOT worker breaks law, given ultimatum

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