When the Bus Isn’t Enough
A Roswell organization is meeting people where they are — and Eddy County has more to offer than you might think.
The Sunday Low Down is the home of delving deeper into the micro-news from our Wednesday Midweek Matters broadcast. Pull up a chair.
Introduction
A couple of weeks ago, I shared the radio version of freelance journalist Jonny Coker’s article on a new approach to homelessness in Roswell as a featured segment on Mid-Week Matters [Listen]. I was excited to share this recording, the first I have received from him, but then I looked more closely at the article that came with it, and I felt it was important enough to share here, because the part that was missing from the recording was the human element. The experiences and hopes of the people he spoke with, humans in crisis or helping others through it. If you have ever found yourself down and out or struggling through something all on your own, you know how important it is to find a helping hand or an understanding ear. The article struck a chord in me as one who has known what it is like to be in that place long ago. I hope you will take a few minutes to read it.
But this was in Chaves County, so we searched for what resources are available to those in crisis in Eddy County. After the article, you will find the resources we found listed as available in our community. Whether you need help or want to help others, you will find information below. We cannot say the information will remain current, but please do try them and comment below if we need to update anything.
This edition covers:
The Bus: Roswell Community Disaster Relief Services and the mobile outreach model
The Guide: What exists in Eddy County right now for someone who needs help
Local Organization Offers Warmth and Relief for the Unhoused in Roswell
Reported by Johnny Coker for the Southern New Mexico Journalism Collaborative.
ROSWELL – As the cold-snaps of southeastern New Mexico’s winter roll on, Enrique Moreno patrols the streets of Roswell with his repurposed bus, looking for individuals in need of food and warmth. In the back, Trey Allen Hendrich, a community volunteer, keeps busy serving a variety of goods, including soaps, hot pockets, coffee and hot chocolate.



The bus belongs to Moreno’s Roswell Community Disaster Relief Services, an organization that uses a mobile outreach unit designed to meet people experiencing homelessness where they are at camps, in vehicles, along riverbeds and city sidewalks.
The effort comes amid high homelessness rates across the country. According to the latest numbers from the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development’s 2024 Annual Homeless Assessment Report, more than 770,000 people experienced homelessness on a single night in January 2024 — the highest number ever recorded in the annual count.
In New Mexico, the same report counted 4,631 people experiencing homelessness on a single night in 2024, a roughly 21% increase from 2023.
Carson Wells and Amanda Robinson are patrons as well as regular volunteers for the bus. As they live out of their car, they say that the service is essential for helping those unhoused in the community get some sense of comfort and support.
“There’s some things where you won’t be able to get, such as just basic toiletry items because they’re so damn expensive,” Wells said.
“Also, since we are homeless, we know a lot more of the nooks and crannies of the homeless population here,” Robinson said. “So we can help Enrique better serve those people as well. Because most of the time, you don’t see them just laying out there in the open, they’re going to be tucked in somewhere where they’re warm, you know, like us.”
For Enrique Moreno, those point-in-time statistics represent his neighbors. Roswell, like many mid-sized communities in New Mexico, has limited shelters and behavioral health resources. Moreno says much of the support network comes from nonprofits rather than government agencies.
“Nobody chooses to be homeless. There’s veterans, there’s seniors. They have behavioral health issues, which is the biggest problem in my mind,” he said. “You can tell there’s a lack of state or local [and city] services, because after 5:00 and on weekends, you can’t call anybody with the city.”
To purchase the bus, Moreno staged a four-and-a-half-day sit-in during winter in the parking lot of a local pizza restaurant, sleeping in his pickup truck until he raised $8,500 over the course of four days. People experiencing homelessness visited him during that time, offering practical advice on how to survive out of a vehicle.
“If you ever have the opportunity to do it, you’re going to see homelessness in a different light,” Moreno said of the experience.
When a recent cold front brought subzero temperatures to Roswell, Moreno said the Salvation Army was the only other organization with an active warming center available.
“So we determined, you know what, let’s set our buses up at the plaza,” he said. “Let people sleep in it. It wouldn’t be comfortable, but it would be better than being outside.”
On average, he estimates 13 to 20 people per night seek supplies, rides or warmth from the organization’s buses during extreme weather patrols.
The organization’s main function is as a mobile pantry and supply depot. Volunteers distribute blankets, coats, food, hygiene kits and water. During summer heat, they patrol with water and electrolyte packets. In winter, they coordinate rides to brick-and-mortar shelters when available.
The organization has also worked with the local police department in the past, responding to homeless encampments before trespassing citations are issued, offering assistance and relocation options.
“I’ve had officers call me and tell me, ‘Hey, we’re called out to this property (to trespass) a homeless person. Could you go ahead of us and offer them some help before we get there?’” Moreno said.
The bus provides immediate, flexible relief. But the model has limits. The warming buses aren’t designed to be slept in, they are simply not full-service shelters, and funding is sparse. The organization relies on small donations, Amazon wish lists and business sponsors to cover fuel, insurance and supplies, sometimes leading to a gap in services.
Moreno has advocated for a more coordinated system, a centralized hub where multiple nonprofits could operate under one roof, similar to the Community of Hope in Las Cruces, although such a concept has yet to gain much traction. He also supports the creation of a local crisis response team focused on behavioral health, as opposed to criminalizing homelessness through ordinances banning encampments and expansion of homeless shelters.
“The answer isn’t just ‘jail somebody’ because they’re talking to themselves in public,” Moreno said. “These people need other kinds of help.”
Jason, who asked to use only his first name, was one of the individuals who has been a frequent patron of the mobile shelter. Him and his wife were displaced after a fire took their home, and the mobile unit was one of the few places that offered relief.
“We were living in our car for a couple months,” Jason said. “It was pretty nice seeing humans being humans for once.”
Jason and his wife, who is disabled, slept outside a gas station for around six months. He now has a job, and the couple has moved into an RV, and he credited the mobile shelter as the service that helped him get back on his feet.
“Everything’s starting to finally fall, but these guys helped a lot,” Jason said. “I’m much happier when you’re able to get up, make a cup of coffee, take an actual shower after you slept in a bed all night. Ain’t nothing like it.”
That grassroots funding model allows flexibility but leaves little room for expansion or long-term planning. Moreno says the organization is stable for now but depends on continued volunteer support and civic engagement.
“If I have to ask for anything from the community, it’d be for their continued support,” he said.
As homelessness climbs nationally and in New Mexico, Roswell Community Disaster Relief Services offers a hyperlocal, mobile response. The bus cannot solve housing shortages or systemic gaps in mental health care, but it can offer warmth and essential supplies. For those on the streets of Roswell on a freezing night, the warming buses serve as a beacon of hope when the alternative means facing the bitter cold alone.
— Jonathan Coker, Souther New Mexico Journalism Collective
“It was pretty nice seeing humans being humans for once.” — Jason, RCDR Services patron, Roswell
“The answer isn’t just ‘jail somebody’ because they’re talking to themselves in public. These people need other kinds of help.” — Enrique Moreno, founder, Roswell Community Disaster Relief Services
From Roswell to Home
I was struck by Moreno’s comment about resources not being available “after 5:00”. The question became for us: who shows up here?
“If I had to ask for anything from the community, it would be for their continued support — but more importantly, to volunteer, and to think of us when they go to the voting polls.” — Enrique Moreno, KCCC Midweek Matters broadcast of Coker’s recording
What Exists in Eddy County Right Now
This is a living reference. If you are in crisis, scroll to the top of this section. If you want to help, scroll to the bottom. If you know of a resource that should be here, contact KCCC 930 AM at kccc930am.com or leave a comment below.
If You Need Help Right Now
Dial 211 — 24/7. Connects you to local social services and emergency housing referrals across Eddy County.
Call or text 988 — Suicide and Crisis Lifeline, 24/7. Veterans press 1.
NM Crisis and Access Line — (855) 662-7474 — 24/7 behavioral health emergencies.
NM Peer to Peer Warm Line — (855) 466-7100 — mental health recovery support, peer-to-peer.
Artesia
Shelter — Emergency
Grammy’s House — 24/7 811 W. Texas Ave. | (575) 748-1198 | grammyshouse.org 24-hour crisis line: (575) 365-5144 Emergency shelter, legal advocacy, and counseling for victims of domestic violence and their children and pets.
Shelter — Transitional
Haven of Hope 2100 W. Richey Ave. | (575) 231-7334 | havenofhopenm.com | admin@havenofhopenm.com Transitional community housing for motivated single mothers and their children. Residents stay 18–24 months and receive life skills mentoring, financial counseling, resume building, and counseling — all at no cost. Funded in part by United Way of Eddy County and ConocoPhillips. Mon–Fri 8am–5pm, Fri 8am–noon.
Food
Artesia Emergency Relief 103 N. 6th St. | (575) 746-9475 Mon–Fri 9am–1pm Emergency food, utility, and rent assistance for persons in distress, temporarily relieving poverty until governmental assistance is obtained.
St. Vincent de Paul Food Bank — Artesia 603 S. Roselawn Ave. | (575) 748-8824 First three weeks of the month, Tuesdays and Thursdays 9–11am. Each client receives 30 lbs. of food — meat, bread, and eggs provided by Road Runner Food Bank always. Produce from local farmers in summer. Clients assigned a day by last name.
Trinity Assembly of God Food Pantry 1507 W. Hermosa Dr. | (575) 748-3389 First and third Tuesday of each month, 9:30–10:30am.
Children — Free Meals
All Artesia Public Schools students receive free meals during the school year on all their campuses and they have an adult rate listed on their site ranging between $2.50 (breakfast) and $4 (lunch). Their summer meal begins Tuesday May 26. Please contact Artesia Public Schools directly: (575) 746-3585 for more information on the summer offering.
Recovery
Alcoholics Anonymous — Artesia 505 W. Richey Ave. | (575) 870-0119 In-person meetings. Building wheelchair accessible except one curb — honk and volunteers will assist.
Celebrate Recovery — Artesia Tuesdays 6pm at Hermosa Church of Christ 2512 W. Bush | (575) 748-3301
Victory Life 1716 N. Pine St. | (575) 746-4446 Faith-based men’s drug and alcohol rehabilitation shelter. Always in need of food and monetary donations. Call ahead to confirm availability.
Financial Assistance / Basic Needs
Artesia Emergency Relief (see Food above — also provides utility and rent assistance)
Written in Red Foundation 505 W. Main St. | (575) 736-2711 | writteninredfoundation.com Private grantmaking foundation funding education, healthcare access, crisis assistance, vision and dental services for youth, and the Poured Into Artesia program — monthly donations matched up to $5,000 for local families in need in partnership with Kith & Kin Roasting Co. Funds other local nonprofits; contact for referral or partnership.
NM HSD Income Support Division — Artesia 108 N. 16th St. | (800) 283-4465 Mon–Fri 8am–noon TANF, SNAP, Medicaid, LIHEAP, and other HSD programs.
Southeast New Mexico Community Action Corporation (SNMCAC) snmcac.com/programs-services/services-by-county/eddy-county
United Way of Eddy County — Utility Assistance and Resource Referral Dial 211 | (575) 887-3504 | uweddyco.org
Health
VA Clinic — Artesia 2410 W. Main St. | (575) 746-3531 Primary care, mental health, specialty care, and social programs for veterans and families.
WIC — Women, Infants, and Children 1001 W. Memorial Dr. | (575) 746-9819
Artesia General Hospital 702 N. 13th St. | (575) 725-5562 | artesiageneral.com
Lending Hands 108 S. 14th St. | (575) 746-9642 In-home services for disabled or elderly individuals supporting independent living.
Legal
NM Legal Aid — Roswell (nearest office serving Eddy County) 200 E. Fourth St., Suite 200, Roswell | (575) 623-9669 | newmexicolegalaid.org By appointment. Civil legal advocacy for low-income individuals — food, shelter, security, and more.
Education
Artesia Literacy Council 1507 W. Hermosa Dr. | artesialiteracycouncil.org English as a second language and adult basic education.
Carlsbad
Shelter — Emergency
Carlsbad Battered Families Shelter — 24/7 24-hour crisis line: (575) 885-4615 | carlsbadshelter.com
Cavern City Child Advocacy Center 1313 W. Mermod St. | (575) 200-3929 24-hour crisis line: (575) 303-7070 (call or text) | senmcac.com
Shelter — Short-Term / Transitional
Carlsbad Community of Hope Center 1314 S. Canal St. | (575) 200-1377 | hopenm.org Faith-based emergency shelter for men, women, and children. Up to 90 days. Case management, ID and Medicaid assistance, behavioral health counseling, veterans services, showers, laundry, clothing, phone, and internet. Mon–Thu 8am–4pm, Fri 8am–noon.
Carlsbad Transitional Housing 502 S. Halagueno St. | (575) 200-3095 Families typically stay 8–12 months while building financial stability. Temporary housing assistance available when funding allows.
Food
Carlsbad Community Kitchen 402 S. Alameda St. | (575) 885-4174 Free hot meals Mon–Fri 11am–noon. Serves 100+ meals per day.
Calvary Assembly Church 2107 W. Church St. | (575) 885-9152 Free hot meals every Monday 6–7pm. Food distribution 3rd Saturday of each month.
Faith, Hope & Love Foundation 933 N. Canal St. | (575) 941-2022 | fhlcarlsbad.org Ready-made meals and pantry staples. Mon, Tue, Thu, Fri 9am–1pm. Call before visiting.
Jonah’s House Food Pantry 512 W. Stevens St. | (575) 887-5904 Mon–Fri 9–11am.
Abundant Harvest Food Pantry (Oasis Christian Fellowship) 802 S. Main St. | (575) 887-1212 Tuesdays 9–11am.
Fox & Lake Church of Christ Food Pantry 708 W. Fox | (575) 885-6629
Children — Free Meals
Carlsbad Municipal School District operates free summer meal sites for children 18 and under at multiple locations. No registration or ID required. Visit summerfoodnm.org for current sites and hours.
Clothing
Carlsbad Outreach Center — Clothing Bank 1318 W. Mermod | (575) 887-2121 Donated clothing to individuals in need. Applications accepted every 30 days, up to six times per year. Mon, Tue, Thu 9am–noon.
Assistance League of Carlsbad 1100 N. Canal St. | (575) 885-3333 | alc.cbad@yahoo.com School clothing and supplies for children in need, and clothing for families who have lost their homes to disaster.
Eyeglasses, Ramps, and Adaptive Equipment
Carlsbad Downtown Lions Club P.O. Box 642 | carlsbadnmlions.org Funds eye examinations and glasses for children in need, referred by their school nurse. Reimburses up to $175 for the exam and glasses.
Carlsbad Heights Lions Club (575) 361-6683 | heightslions@gmail.com Provides eyeglasses and wheelchair ramps for individuals with financial need. Meets Fridays at noon at Stevens Inn.
Financial Assistance / Basic Needs
Faith, Hope & Love Foundation 933 N. Canal St. | (575) 941-2022 | fhlcarlsbad.org Rent/mortgage assistance, utility help, life skills coaching, financial counseling, and mentoring. Serves the homeless, elderly, veterans, children, and families in crisis. Mon–Thu 9am–noon.
NM HSD Income Support Division — Eddy County / Carlsbad 3604 San Jose Blvd. | (800) 283-4465 TANF, SNAP, General Assistance, and other state programs. Mon–Tue 8am–4:30pm, Wed 8–10:30am, Thu 8am–noon.
Southeast New Mexico Community Action Corporation (SNMCAC) snmcac.com/programs-services/services-by-county/eddy-county
United Way of Eddy County — Utility Assistance and Resource Referral 116 S. Canyon St. | (575) 887-3504 | uweddyco.org Dial 211 for immediate referrals. Limited water and gas utility bill assistance.
Carlsbad Community Foundation 114 S. Canyon St. | (575) 887-1131 | carlsbadfoundation.org
Veterans Services
NM Department of Veteran Services — Carlsbad Office 101 N. Halagueno St. | (575) 885-4939 | nmdvs.org
American Legion Post #7 2311 Legion | (575) 885-2493
Southeast NM Veterans Transportation Network 2114 W. 2nd St., Roswell | (575) 622-0729 | senmvt.com | magilduran@msn.com Free transportation for veterans to and from medical appointments in Roswell, Carlsbad, Hobbs, Artesia, Albuquerque, Clovis, and surrounding areas including West Texas. Three days notice required. Mon–Thu 9am–2pm.
Recovery / Reentry
Carlsbad LifeHouse 1900 Westridge Dr. | (575) 725-5552 carlsbadlifehouse@gmail.com | lifehousecarlsbad.com Full continuum of care: detox, residential treatment, outpatient, sober living, and services for individuals transitioning from incarceration. Accepts Medicaid, commercial insurance, and state funding for the uninsured. Mon–Fri 9am–5pm.
Carlsbad Community of Hope Center — Sober Living (see Shelter above) Also serves individuals transitioning from incarceration.
Celebrate Recovery — Carlsbad Mondays 5:30pm at Carlsbad First Assembly 1502 W. Mermod St. | (575) 885-4389
Behavioral Health
Turquoise Health and Wellness 914 N. Canal | (575) 885-4836 Crisis intervention, counseling, therapy, substance intervention, and children’s behavioral health services.
Permian Basin Counseling & Guidance 102 S. Main St., Suite C | (575) 249-2561 | permianbasincounseling.org Serves Carlsbad, Artesia, Hobbs, and Jal. Face-to-face and telehealth counseling. Mon–Fri 8am–5pm.
Health
Carlsbad Family Health Center (Presbyterian Medical Services) 2013 San Jose Blvd. | (575) 887-2455
Carlsbad Public Health Office 1306 W. Stevens | (575) 885-4191 Free services: birth control, pregnancy services, cancer screenings, HIV and STD testing, and vaccines.
WIC — Women, Infants, and Children Located at Carlsbad Public Health Office 1306 W. Stevens | (575) 885-3008
Carlsbad Medical Center 2430 W. Pierce St. | (575) 887-4100
Education
Carlsbad Literacy Center carlsbadliteracyprogram.com
Legal
NM Legal Aid — Roswell (nearest office serving Eddy County) 200 E. Fourth St., Suite 200, Roswell | (575) 623-9669 | newmexicolegalaid.org By appointment. Civil legal advocacy for low-income individuals — food, shelter, housing, security, and more.
Eddy County CASA 118 W. Mermod | (575) 887-5966 | eddycountycasa.org Court Appointed Special Advocates for abused or neglected children.
SENMC Campus — For Students
SENMC Food Pantry and Clothing Closet Contact: Judith Cox-Tindol | (575) 234-9335 | jcoxtindol@senmc.edu Food assistance for SENMC students. Clothing closet established April 2026 — professional clothing, shoes, and accessories available for interviews, presentations, and daily wear. Donations of gently used or new professional clothing are welcome.
Eddy County — County-Wide
United Way of Eddy County — Monthly Food Distributions 116 S. Canyon St., Carlsbad | (575) 628-0056 or dial 211 | uweddyco.org
Monthly food distributions on a rolling Friday schedule. Times may vary based on food truck arrival.
Artesia: Second Friday of the month, 7:00 AM West Main Baptist Church, 1701 W. Main St., Artesia
Carlsbad: Second Friday of the month, 9:00 AM Epworth Methodist Fellowship, 1406 W. Blodgett St., Carlsbad
Loving: Third Thursday of the month, 9:00 AM Loving Community Center, 602 S. 4th St., Loving
Also provides limited water and gas utility bill assistance. Connects residents to the full local resource network through the 211 line.
Eddy County Health Council 910 W. Pierce St., Box 203, Carlsbad | (575) 305-3105 coordinator@eddycountyhc.org | eddycountyhc.org Meets every third Wednesday at 4pm at the United Way office (116 S. Canyon St., Carlsbad) and on Zoom.
Current programs include food distributions in partnership with Road Runner Food Bank and SENMC Workforce Development — 108 and 110 families served across two distributions so far; a community garden on the SENMC campus (actively growing, grant funding pending for expansion); women’s health screenings; and harm reduction, including naloxone and gun lock distribution.
The ECHC is actively seeking restaurant and grocery store partners with not-yet-expired produce that can be diverted to those in need. If that is your business, contact coordinator@eddycountyhc.org.
“SOS — if you have one of those types of businesses, please reach out to us because we would love to partner with you and give you the spotlight you deserve, whilst helping our community at the same time.” — Sarah Bowman, ECHC / SENMC Foundation Board, KCCC Community Forum [Listen]
New Mexico Statewide — Accessible from Eddy County
NM Coalition to End Homelessness — Coordinated Entry (505) 219-1834 | coordinatedentry@nmceh.org Mon–Fri 8am–5pm. Connects individuals experiencing homelessness to housing programs statewide using Housing First and Harm Reduction approaches.
Alianza of New Mexico (575) 623-1995 | alianzaofnewmexico.org Rapid rehousing and Emergency Solutions Grant funding for southern NM including Eddy County.
Emergency Homeless Assistance Program (EHAP) housingnm.org/service-providers/ehap Managed by the NM Mortgage Finance Authority. Funds emergency shelter operations and essential services statewide.
Move In Assistance and Eviction Prevention (MIAEP) yes.nm.gov Rent, deposits, utilities, and other approved housing costs for income-qualified households.
Temporary Assistance for Needy Families (TANF) hca.nm.gov Cash assistance, housing support, and job training for low-income families with children.
General Assistance (GA) Cash assistance for disabled adults without dependent children not eligible for other programs. hsd.state.nm.us
Solutions Summary
The guide above is the answer to Moreno’s “after 5:00” problem — at least in part. Eddy County has resources. Some of them are 24/7. Some of them are open six days a week. Some of them show up on the second Friday of every month in three different towns.
What the guide also shows is that almost every entry on it is powered by volunteers, donations, faith communities, and people who decided to show up. That is not a critique. That is the community in action. And it is also an invitation.
Here is what you can do right now
Volunteer with the Carlsbad Community of Hope Center, Carlsbad LifeHouse, or Faith, Hope & Love Foundation. All three serve people in acute crisis and run on community involvement.
Donate professional clothing to the new SENMC Clothing Closet. Contact Judith Cox-Tindol at jcoxtindol@senmc.edu.
If you own or manage a restaurant or grocery store with not-yet-expired produce, contact the Eddy County Health Council at coordinator@eddycountyhc.org. This is an open opportunity to feed your neighbors and be recognized for it.
Dial 211 and learn what is available in your ZIP code. It takes three minutes, and you will know more than most people about what exists in this county.
And then there is Moreno’s ask — the one that did not make it into the newspaper but came through clearly on the radio: when you vote, vote for the kind of community that invests in this work. A behavioral health crisis team. A coordinated nonprofit hub. Services that exist after 5:00 PM and on weekends.
“If I had to ask for anything from the community, it would be for their continued support — but more importantly, to volunteer, and to think of us when they go to the voting polls.” — Enrique Moreno, KCCC Midweek Matters broadcast of the Coker recording
“I’m much happier when you’re able to get up, make a cup of coffee, take an actual shower after you slept in a bed all night. Ain’t nothing like it.” — Jason, RCDR Services patron, Roswell
That is not a complicated ask. It is a human one.
This guide will be updated as new resources are confirmed. If you know of a resource that should be listed, contact KCCC 930 AM at kccc930am.com or comment below.
Appendix: Related Content
Primary Broadcast Source
“Local Organization Offers Warmth and Relief for the Unhoused in Roswell” — reported by Johnny Coker for the Southern New Mexico Journalism Collaborative. Aired on KCCC 930 AM Midweek Matters.
Photo Assets on File
Carson Wells and Amanda Robinson.jpg — Carson Wells and Amanda Robinson have been living out of their vehicle and volunteering with RCDR Services since the winter of 2024, acting as liaisons between the unhoused community and the organization.
Enrique Moreno.jpg — Enrique Moreno founded the Roswell Community Disaster Relief Services in 2017, inspired by his experience as a firefighter working in disaster response.
RCDR Services Mobile Unit.jpg — The RCDR Services Mobile Unit is a repurposed bus purchased in 2017. All modifications were done by Moreno, and the equipment was donated by the community.
Supporting Data
U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development, 2024 Annual Homeless Assessment Report. National count: 770,000+ on a single night in January 2024. New Mexico count: 4,631 (21% increase from 2023).
Community Forum Interviews Referenced
Mayor Rick Lopez — Housing Initiatives, February 10, 2026. File: MayorLopez_Housing Initiatives - February 10, 2026.aup3.
County Manager Mike Gallagher and Commissioner Bo Bowen — Community Forum, February 2026.
Sarah Bowman, ECHC / SENMC Foundation Board — Community Forum, May 7, 2026.
Resource Guide Sources
SENMC Campus and Community Resources Directory — senmc.libguides.com/directory. Last updated May 6, 2026.
United Way of Eddy County food distribution schedule confirmed via Events of Interest – Eddy County Google Calendar, entries created by Endymion, KCCC 930 AM.
Comparable Model Referenced
Community of Hope, Las Cruces, NM — cited by Enrique Moreno as a coordinated nonprofit hub model worth building toward in southeastern New Mexico.
Archive
This edition is tagged Community Corner. Find all community resource guides at the Community Corner tag on the KCCC 930 AM Substack.
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