FROM HER GRANDMA’S TABLE | How Citizen Potawatomi Community Development Corporation Helped Kelly Price Transform a Family Recipe into a Thriving Business

FROM HER GRANDMA’S TABLE | How Citizen Potawatomi Community Development Corporation Helped Kelly Price Transform a Family Recipe into a Thriving Business

Author: Hosts: Pete Upton, Brian Edwards, Elyse Wild | Producers: Native CDFI Network, Tribal Business News January 16, 2025 Duration: 26:08
For Kelly Price, her grandmother's fry bread recipe was everything she loved about home. Six years ago, she made a batch to support a needy family in her community, an act of kindness that led her to quit her corporate job and launch Red Bone Indian Tacos. Today, she travels throughout Oklahoma, selling fry bread tacos from a food truck as she prepares to soon open the business's very first brick-and-mortar location. Difference Makers explores how Native community development financial in...

In a landscape often defined by barriers, a different kind of financial story is being written from within Native communities. Difference Makers, hosted by Pete Upton, Brian Edwards, and Elyse Wild, goes inside the work of Native Community Development Financial Institutions. This isn't a typical business podcast about market trends or startup scaling; it's a ground-level view of economic sovereignty in action. Each episode focuses on the tangible mechanics of change-how a loan can build more than a building, how a partnership can weave traditional values into modern enterprise, and how a single idea can redirect the flow of opportunity for generations. Produced by the Native CDFI Network and Tribal Business News, the conversations here are pragmatic and hopeful, featuring the voices of lenders, entrepreneurs, and community leaders who are doing the foundational work. Listeners will hear specific challenges, innovative solutions, and the quiet persistence required to build resilient tribal economies. The podcast moves beyond theory to the on-the-ground realities of creating capital access and fostering self-determined growth. It’s about the architects of a different financial future, revealing how community-centered finance operates as a powerful tool for cultural and economic revitalization. Tune in for stories where finance meets community, and where every investment is measured in more than dollars.
Author: Language: en-us Episodes: 25

Difference Makers
Podcast Episodes
The Flour Mill [not-audio_url] [/not-audio_url]

Duration: 34:52
Large-scale economic development deals in Indian Country are typically financed through complex capital stacks — combining banks, tax credits and outside investors — with Native CDFIs often left out. That may be starting…
Philanthropy’s Blind Spot [not-audio_url] [/not-audio_url]

Duration: 31:51
Native communities receive less than one-half of 1% of philanthropic funding in the United States — roughly four or five dollars for every thousand dollars foundations give away. In Episode 3 of Difference Makers 3.0, Br…
From Policy to Practice [not-audio_url] [/not-audio_url]

Duration: 31:20
How Native CDFIs grew from federal study into a sovereign finance movement In 2001, the U.S. Treasury Department released the Native American Lending Study, identifying 17 structural barriers to capital access in Indian…
Before the Banks [not-audio_url] [/not-audio_url]

Duration: 35:52
The legal foundations of tribal economies Long before federal banking systems or modern economic policy, Native nations were building trade networks, governing territory and sustaining complex economies. In Episode 1 of…
Difference Makers 3.0 Trailer [not-audio_url] [/not-audio_url]

Duration: 1:02
Difference Makers 3.0 is a yearlong podcast series from the Native CDFI Network and Tribal Business News that explores how Native community development financial institutions (CDFIs) are reshaping the future of tribal ec…
FUTURE OF NATIVE CDFI FUNDING: A Conversation with Pete Upton [not-audio_url] [/not-audio_url]

Duration: 32:10
Pete Upton, CEO of Native CDFI Network, warns of an "existential threat" to the NACA program—the only federal funding stream specifically for Native CDFIs. With 86% of this year's funding at risk and potential complete e…