New York Attorney General Andrew Cuomo has proposed changing the way the that state’s $120 billion pension fund is managed and regulated. That pension fund has emerged as an epicenter of corruption with a big New Mexico angle: Saul Meyer, the founder of New Mexico’s former investor adviser, recently pleaded guilty in New York to a felony. Allegations against Meyer included that he helped the son of New York’s then-comptroller, who controlled the pension fund, earn fees on an investment here in New Mexico, to win some of New York’s pension fund business.

The most recent casualty of the scandal was New Mexico’s top-paid staff person, State Investment Officer Gary Bland, who resigned in late October. State Land Commissioner Pat Lyons, a member of the State Investment Council, said a private law firm hired by the State Investment Council (SIC) found that Bland had “pressured investment firms doing business with the state to hire certain third-party marketing or placement agents,” The Associated Press reported.

Elsewhere in the U.S., Massachusetts has proposed a law to streamline the process used to appeal wind energy projects in hopes of speeding up approval, the Boston Globe reports. Apparently a third of all wind-energy projects in the Bay State are stalled because of lawsuits or permit appeals. But the proposal isn’t without its critics, meaning there will be a battle getting it codified.

Today is election day in many parts of the country. In addition to the high-profile gubernatorial races in New Jersey and Virginia, Maine voters go to the polls to decide whether to uphold a gay marriage law signed in May. As the Christian Science Monitor reports, if supporters prevail, Maine will become the first state in which voters have backed gay marriage.

Texas educators forcibly pinned down students with disabilities more than 18,000 times in the last school year, sometimes injuring them in the process, according to a review of state data by the Texas Tribune, a  much-anticipated non-profit news outlet that debuted today.

Moving along to water issues, the California state Senate approved three measures early Tuesday that are part of a broad attempt at water reform in the nation’s most populous state, reports the Los Angeles Times. The measures included a $10-billion bond measure that would pay for new infrastructure, ecosystem restoration in the San Joaquin- Sacramento Delta and water supply improvements and watershed protections around the state. It also passed a conservation target requiring a statewide reduction in per capita urban water use, as well as a bill creating a new state council to oversee the delta, the heart of the state waterworks.

But as the Times notes, “the legislation’s success is far from assured.” Not only must that state’s other chamber, the State Assembly, vote on the Senate measures, but the Senate itself still must vote on two other measures that are part of this broad water reform effort. “The policy parts are linked. If the two remaining measures dealing with water rights enforcement and groundwater monitoring fail, it will take down the entire package,” the Times reports.

In the media world, the Chicago Tribune and other Tribune Co. newspapers will do without the majority of Associated Press content it usually receives next week. “The goal,” writes Chicago Tribune columnist Phil Rosenthal, “as the papers review costs and needs, is to see whether severing ties with the news cooperative next fall is a viable option, the Chicago-based media company confirmed Monday.” This is potentially huge because the Associated Press, for more than a century, has been the backstop for many newspapers across the nation. If a paper didn’t have the staff or the time to report a story at the state Capitol, it usually could count on the Associated Press to do it.

On the techno beat, call it the battle of the maps. MapQuest, once the unchallenged ruler of online directions, has been dethroned by GoogleMaps and continues to lose market share, report the geeks over at ReadWriteWeb. MapQuest is putting up a fight, coming out with recent improvements. But is it too late, RWW asks. For anyone who has found themselves frustrated by unclear, or downright inaccurate, directions on MapQuest, this is a comeuppance.