The ideas, energy, and commitment already exist. What’s missing is aligned capital, capacity, and time.
Participants described projects that could transform neighborhoods — child-care centers in renovated schools, main-street buildings converted into job hubs, community land trusts preserving affordability — but they face structural barriers.
Financing cycles move too slowly, permitting takes too long, and smaller organizations are left without the staff, legal, or financial expertise to compete.
NDC and CDN (Community Development Network) partnered with Maryland Community Investment Corporation (MCIC) to engage communities in NMTC (new market tax credits)-eligible census tracts, surface local investment priorities.
The goal was to deliver survey findings and regional roundtables as direct inputs into MCIC’s strategic plan, while supporting long-term infrastructure and predevelopment funding readiness for community development projects across the state.
Each session centered on visioning exercises, project storytelling, financial barriers, and technical assistance needs. Residents, small developers, nonprofits, and local leaders to speak plainly about what their communities need and what’s getting in the way.
Alongside the roundtables, NDC co-designed the launch of a public-facing survey, a paid digital campaign, and a partner communications toolkit that meets communities where they are and opens multiple on-ramps to MCIC’s mission.
From Baltimore rowhouses to Western Maryland valleys, from Cambridge’s waterfront to the growing corridors of Prince George’s County, the message was strikingly consistent.
capital
capacity
and alignment
People weren’t dreaming of skyscrapers; they were talking about grocery stores, family resource centers, fabrication labs, and theaters where young people can see themselves reflected.
They envisioned places that bring people together: childcare centers that double as workforce training sites; libraries that host small business incubators; churches turned into food hubs; schools transformed into community anchors.
That means tools for community land trusts, cooperatives, and local entrepreneurs to hold space before it’s lost to speculative development.
event summaries
a statewide synthesis memo with six strategic recommendations
a network map of statewide partners
a contact database
a partner communications toolkit
and campaign performance data
The recommendations call on MCIC to become more than a funder.
connector
educator
and systems-bridger
Communities don’t want another layer of bureaucracy; they want a partner who can make capital and capacity work together, combining flexible financing with practical technical assistance and advocacy for system change.
MCIC is now positioned to align its financing programs with its community-building mission, creating a pipeline in which financing readiness and organizational growth occur hand in hand. That means developing products and programs that deploy capital while helping communities become long-term stewards of it.