Common Questions
Straight answers to the questions Taoseños and newcomers actually ask.
Straight answers to the questions people actually ask here — checked against the agencies' own pages on June 12, 2026.
How do I get around without a car?
The Blue Bus (NCRTD) fixed routes are fare-free. The 340 Chile Line runs through town Monday–Friday (excluding holidays), serving Ranchos de Taos, the town, and the Taos Pueblo entrance area; the 305 Taos Express runs weekends to Española and Santa Fe; a seasonal winter route (341) serves El Prado, Arroyo Seco, Valdez and Taos Ski Valley roughly December–March.
MyBlue, the on-demand van service within 2 miles of the Chile Line route, costs $1.00 per trip and must be booked at least 24 hours ahead — use the MyBlue North Central RTD app or call 866-206-0754 ext. 1. It runs Monday–Friday, 6 a.m.–6 p.m.
Uber and Lyft have "limited availability" here — the town's own words — so don't plan an evening around catching one. Locals use the bus, their own wheels, or the private shuttles that come and go; ask around for what's currently running.
Which government handles my question — town, county, Pueblo, or Ski Valley?
Four governments share this valley, and the boundary lines are invisible.
The Town of Taos (575-751-2000, taosnm.gov) handles things inside town limits: town streets, town water and sewer, residential trash pickup, parking.
Taos County (575-737-6300, taoscounty.org) handles the unincorporated communities — Ranchos de Taos, El Prado, the mesa — plus county roads, the transfer stations, the sheriff, and county short-term-rental permits.
Taos Pueblo is a sovereign tribal nation with its own government, police and courts; it is not under town or county jurisdiction.
The Village of Taos Ski Valley (575-776-8220, vtsv.org) is its own incorporated municipality, 19 road miles up NM 150.
When in doubt, call the town or the county and ask — they sort these calls out all day.
What are the short-term rental rules?
It depends which side of the town line the property sits on. Inside town limits, the Town of Taos permits short-term rentals under its own ordinance — start at taosnm.gov. In unincorporated Taos County (Ranchos, El Prado, the mesa and beyond), the county's ordinance applies, with a cap on the number of permits; applications go through the county (575-737-6440, str.application@taoscountynm.gov) and complaints to 575-741-2713 or the county's online portal.
Are fire restrictions in effect right now?
As of June 12, 2026 — yes. The Carson National Forest has been under Stage 1 restrictions since April 24, 2026: campfires only inside Forest Service-provided fire structures at developed recreation sites, and smoking only in enclosed vehicles or buildings, developed sites, or a cleared three-foot circle. Stages can rise mid-season, so check the Carson NF alerts page before lighting anything, and sign up for Taos County's emergency alerts at taoscounty.org. The Is Something Burning? page on this site shows what's actually burning near town.
Why is it called Red Willow Park now?
The park in the middle of town — formerly named for Kit Carson — was renamed Red Willow Park in December 2025 at Taos Pueblo's initiative, with the town agreeing to the Pueblo's written stipulations, including an acknowledgement that the land is unceded Tiwa territory. Red Willow Park is the official name; older maps, and even some town webpages, still show the old one.
What's an acequia, and why is everyone cleaning ditches in the spring?
Acequias are the centuries-old, community-governed irrigation ditches that water the valley — 55 of them are active around Taos, each run by an elected mayordomo and commission. Every spring, before the water runs, the people whose land a ditch serves clean it together; if you buy property with acequia rights, that workday comes with the deed. The Taos Valley Acequia Association is the umbrella organization. It's both water infrastructure and one of the oldest working forms of local democracy in the country — locals call it ditch democracy.
Where do people get local news between Thursdays?
The Taos News publishes weekly, on Thursdays — there is no daily paper. Between editions, news travels by radio and word of mouth: KTAOS 101.9 (Solar Radio) reads community announcements on air, KNCE 93.5 (True Taos Radio) is the freeform community station, and LiveTaos lists events. For the things that can't wait — school delays, road conditions, emergencies — go straight to the source: nmroads.com for highways, the school district's own notices, and Taos County's emergency alert sign-up at taoscounty.org.
I'm worried about myself or someone else — who can I call right now?
Call or text 988, any hour. New Mexico's 988 line is free, confidential and answered 24/7, for mental health, substance use, or any kind of emotional distress — yours or someone else's. There's also an online chat at 988lifeline.org/chat.
If someone is in immediate danger, call 911. Holy Cross Medical Center (1397 Weimer Rd, 575-758-8883) has the county's only emergency department.
These lines take calls that are "just" a hard night. Calling early is the normal thing to do here, not the dramatic thing.