Publications2024-03-04T13:56:29-07:00

Publications

Jul 142015

By the Numbers: Hunger and Unemployment

Infographic With the highest long-term unemployment rate in the nation, New Mexico is in no position to require parents to find a job in order to receive food benefits. Unfortunately, some state officials are pushing for just that. (State-level data on hunger, SNAP recipiency, and economic security)

Jul 142015

Fight hunger by making work pay

Infographic Focusing on the economic realities that food-insecure families face, this was created as a handout for the National Commission on Hunger, which asked NM Voices to join their discussion on food insecurity. (State-level data on hunger, SNAP recipiency, and economic security)

Apr 282015

Educating Tomorrow’s Workforce … Hispanic Children

Presentation Created for the 2015 MAFO national conference, this looks at how Hispanic children in New Mexico and the nation are faring, provides a brief overview of the state's Hispanic Education Act, and offers some policy solutions for better preparing this future workforce. (State-level data on educational outcomes by race and ethnicity)

Mar 122015

Making College More Affordable for Working Families: A Critical Investment in New Mexico

Report It’s not a coincidence that New Mexico’s lower rate of college-educated adults correlates with its higher rate of low-wage jobs - education and money are inexorably linked. Without supports, attaining a college education is out-of-reach for most low-income students. By creating a higher-paid workforce, making college more affordable for working families would benefit the state as a whole. (State- and regional-level data on adult education levels, and some state-level funding data)

Mar 112015

Investments in Early Childhood Care and Education

County Data Sheets How much is the state spending on the early childhood care and education services that will improve outcomes for children and how does the sending breakdown by county? These KIDS COUNT fact sheets look at state investments in home visiting, child care assistance, NM Pre-K, and K-3 Plus, and more. (State- and county-level data on early childhood programs and some population demographics)

Feb 252015

Expanding New Mexico’s Working Families Tax Credit Would Generate Economic Activity and Help Hard-Working Families

Report New Mexico’s Working Families Tax Credit not only lifts tens of thousands of low-income families out of poverty each year, it also generates economic activity because the money is spent quickly and locally. Increasing the value of the credit would help with New Mexico’s sluggish recovery and cost the state much less than recently enacted tax cuts to profitable corporations. (State-level data on tax credit recipients; full report includes legislative-district-level data on recipiency)

Feb 252015

2015 KIDS COUNT county profiles

County Data Sheets Find out the percentage of children in each New Mexico county who live in poverty or in single-parent families, who lack health insurance, and how they fare on the 13 other indicators of child well-bring in these KIDS COUNT profiles. (State- and county-level data on indicators of child well-being)

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