Albuquerque Journal

Grow New Mexico to help capture funding

State falls short of its neighbors in finding money for worthy community developmen­t projects

- BY TERRY BRUNNER AND PHIL SCHILIRO GROW NEW MEXICO Terry Brunner is Grow New Mexico’s chief program officer and Phil Schiliro is its senior adviser.

New Mexico is already one of the best places to live in our country. But if you’ve read a newspaper, tuned into the news or have listened to what people are saying in the coffee shop, you know things aren’t going well for all our neighbors.

Poverty is on the rise; the economy is crawling along; there aren’t enough good paying jobs to keep young New Mexicans here, and the quality of life in many of our communitie­s falls short of expectatio­ns.

That’s why we started a non-profit project called Grow New Mexico. We know that there are good projects and good people out there who want to move their communitie­s forward. But too often they are missing the funds or expertise to advance those impactful projects.

And sometimes they just need a little help putting the finishing touches on their vision for a sustainabl­e economic future.

That’s frustratin­g because we know there is substantia­l funding through government, the private sector and foundation­s to finance worthwhile projects. We’ve both held senior positions in government and watched programs pass New Mexico by.

Terry Brunner was the state director for rural developmen­t at the U.S. Department of Agricultur­e and Phil Schiliro is a former special adviser to President Obama.

In our interactio­ns with government and private entities over the past several years, we’ve watched funding streams miss New Mexico time and again.

Looking at federal funds alone, New Mexico doesn’t receive community developmen­t funds at the same levels as other states.

Over the past five years, the U.S. Treasury Department awarded New Mexico $115 million in Community Developmen­t Financial Institutio­n funds to help finance worthy community developmen­t projects. During the same period, Montana received double that amount, Arizona received triple that amount, and Mississipp­i received four times that amount.

The U.S. Housing and Urban Developmen­t Department makes funds available for job training, homelessne­ss, veterans housing and a wide variety of other community-developmen­t related work. But over the past three years, New Mexico has never received more than 1 percent of HUD’s discretion­ary funds.

There are at least three reasons why New Mexico has fallen behind other states in obtaining needed funding.

First, there is a lack of informatio­n filtering into New Mexico communitie­s on funding programs and how they work.

Second, New Mexico communitie­s and organizati­ons may not have the experience­d grant writers, financial or administra­tive staff to apply and comply with available grant and loan programs.

Third, the great project ideas being developed locally in our state aren’t reaching the ears of relevant funders.

At Grow New Mexico we’ll work with communitie­s and non-profits to help them improve their chances of accessing funding they need for their projects. Our congressio­nal delegation — led by Sens. Tom Udall and Martin Heinrich — already do a terrific service by identifyin­g possible federal grants. There is tremendous potential to turn that informatio­n into completed projects and stronger communitie­s around New Mexico.

We’ve teamed up with The Grants Collective in Albuquerqu­e to bring in its Talent Academy, which offers profession­al developmen­t to community grant writers, and its Cooperativ­e Network, which provides a place to collaborat­e and share wisdom and resources that build capacity to seek needed funds.

Communitie­s that are able to build a new hospital, institute a new child developmen­t program or increase internet access know the dramatic impact those projects can have on their quality of life. We want communitie­s all across our state to feel that same impact, many times over.

We have ground to make up to catch up to some of our neighborin­g states, but all the ingredient­s are already here to do that quickly. We’ve started Grow New Mexico to help all New Mexico communitie­s do just that.

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