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U.S. DEPARTMENT OF THE TREASURY
READOUT: Treasury Department’s Office of Tribal and Native
Affairs Hosts Interagency Delegation to Tribal Lands in New
Mexico
August 11, 2023

ALBUQUERQUE – This week, the U.S. Department of the Treasury’s Office of Tribal and Native
Affairs hosted an interagency delegation trip to two Pueblos in New Mexico to discuss economic
development priorities and challenges in Indian Country. The delegation included representatives
from the Treasury Department’s Office of Community and Economic Development, Office of Tax
Policy, and Community Development Financial Institutions Fund (CDFI Fund) along with Rohit
Chopra, Director of the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB), and representatives from
the Department of Interior.
“Tribal economic development is a force multiplier for local economies – improving the lives and
livelihoods of Tribal citizens while lifting up our nation at large,” said Chief Lynn Malerba, Treasurer
of the United States. “This week’s interagency visits to New Mexico Pueblos are among the
numerous efforts the Treasury Department has taken to significantly increase its engagement with
Tribes and work across the Biden-Harris Administration to augment the impact of investments in
Indian Country.”
During the visits to the Pueblos of Laguna and Acoma, Administration officials met with Tribal
leaders and discussed some of the economic development priorities and challenges facing each
Tribes, including the deployment of New Market Tax Credits and Low-Income Housing Tax Credits,
and how Tribes are deploying federal economic recovery funds.
The Treasury Department has worked across the Biden-Harris Administration to deploy historic
support to Indian Country, including through leading the implementation of key American Rescue
Plan funding for Tribal communities. This funding includes $20 billion in State and Local Fiscal
Recovery Funds (SLFRF) allocated to over 579 Tribal governments, which represents the largestever single infusion of federal funding into Indian Country. In addition, the Treasury Department
has made the two largest infusions of federal capital to Native-serving CDFIs in the history of the
Department’s CDFI Fund: $55 million provided through the CDFI Rapid Response Program to
deliver immediate assistance in Native communities impacted by the COVID-19 pandemic, and $46
million awarded to 30 Native CDFIs through the Equitable Recovery Program.

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