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Commercial Association of REALTORS® - CARNM New Mexico

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Archives for April 2018

2018 CARNM Charity Golf Tournament

April 3, 2018 by CARNM

Grab your clubs! The Commercial Association of Realtors New Mexico invites you to participate in its 2018 Annual Charity Golf Tournament at one of the most prestigious golf groups in the Southwest, Twin Warriors Golf Club, on July 26, 2018.

 
Twin Warriors Golf Club | 1301 Tuyuna Trail, Bernalillo, NM 87004
Time to register! Golf registrations are available online here.
Care to Donate? Call CARNM at 505.503.7807
Questions? Contact Greg Leach at greg@sycamore-associates.com or 505-238-6581.

Visit the Golf Website

 

Plan to play or donate! Proceeds will benefit two New Mexico charities.

CARNM, as an association, has a goal of reaching out and making a difference in the community. In our efforts to do so, CARNM has selected 2 beneficiaries for the 2018 Charity Golf Tournament:
Big Brothers Big Sisters of New Mexico:

Big Brothers Big Sisters of New Mexico’s Mission is to provide children facing adversity with strong and enduring, professionally supported one-to-one relationships that change their lives for the better, forever. By partnering with parents/guardians, volunteers and others in the community, they are accountable for each child in our program achieving educational success, greater confidence, better relationships and higher aspirations. Learn more
 
PB&J Family Services:

Angie Vachio and Christine Ruiz-Boyd co-founded PB&J in 1972 to respond to “screaming community needs”. What began as a volunteer effort reaching out to 7 children who all had mothers with mental illness, grew into a nationally recognized non-profit serving more than 1,800 families annually. Through PB&J’s advocacy, talent, and relationship building, New Mexico policies developed that have resulted in cutting-edge practices for those who frequently have no voice at policy tables. PB&J remains the only program to provide intensive wrap-around services for children and their parents, including parenting education in the homes. Learn more
 

We hope you will take this opportunity to join us for an incredible day of networking, golf, and community outreach.

Filed Under: All News

Report: NM Could Nearly Triple Solar Jobs

April 3, 2018 by CARNM

With the right strategies, New Mexico could become a bustling hub for developing and building novel, cutting-edge solar technologies, according to a new study by the California-based American Jobs Project.
The report, released Tuesday in partnership with the University of New Mexico’s Bureau of Business and Economic Research, says the state could nearly triple its solar-related jobs from about 2,500 now to 6,800 over the next 12 years through a comprehensive, cluster-development approach that helps propel homegrown research, development and commercialization of advanced solar technology.

That means focusing on the innovative science and engineering breakthroughs already emerging from New Mexico’s national labs and universities to develop next-generation photovoltaics that could eventually turn windows, buildings and even everyday fabrics into electric generators.

The market for that type of innovation is growing exponentially, and New Mexico is well-poised to become a key player as the solar industry moves beyond traditional PV cells and panels, said American Jobs Project director Kate Ringness, who co-authored the report on New Mexico.

“Our research shows that the state can continue to capitalize on this opportunity by becoming a hub for advanced solar technologies,” Ringness said. “This report offers a practical roadmap for expanding advanced solar manufacturing in New Mexico to create good-paying manufacturing jobs in a sector that’s growing worldwide.”

Many local startups are already working to market next-generation technologies conceived in New Mexico’s labs and universities. Albuquerque-based mPower Technology Inc., for example, is using microscale solar cells created by Sandia National Laboratories to make lightweight, flexible PV sheets for use in everyday products and structures. Ubiquitous Quantum Dots is using technology from Los Alamos National Laboratory to create an electric-generating coating for windows that can channel photons from sunlight to PV cells attached to window frames.

The report offers recommendations to help transfer more technology from lab to market, including creating an advanced solar center of excellence to push innovation and support entrepreneurship; starting a technology maturation loan fund, launching collaborative efforts to seek foundation grants for programs and companies and increasing opportunities for youths to train for jobs in solar-related companies.

Perhaps most important, the report calls for a cluster development strategy based on collaboration among the labs, universities, government institutions and businesses.

BBER Director Jeffrey Mitchell called that a forward-looking strategy.

“New Mexico has missed the economic development boat in the past with outdated strategies to recruit business,” Mitchell said. “This is looking ahead at how to get in on the ground floor of something not yet developed.”

It could also help diversify the local economy and broaden the state’s manufacturing base, Mitchell said. Today, New Mexico ranks 49th in the nation in manufacturing, which accounts for 3.2 percent of total employment.

By: Kevin Robinson-Avila (ABQ Journal)
Click here to view source article.

Filed Under: All News

Medical Office Buildings Are Ripe For Change. Here Is How.

April 2, 2018 by CARNM

MOBs remain stable but there are shifts in the way that care is being delivered to patients and new tech trends that bear watching.

The medical office building is the most stable asset in the healthcare real estate space, as Collier’s new 2018 Healthcare Marketplace report attests. The national MOB vacancy fell for the sixth successive year in 2017 to an all-time low of 7.3%.

As for investment in MOBs, according to the report, that rose from $9.2 billion in 2016 to $11.3 billion in 2017, while cap rates compressed to an average of 6.4%.

“The medical office building is the most common asset that a healthcare system or provider will sell,” Mary Beth Kuzmanovich, National Director, Healthcare Services at Colliers, tells GlobeSt.com. “The healthcare tenant is pretty consistent staying in the building, renewing their lease and paying their rent.”
There are headwinds, of course, as there are in every asset class. There are the perennial issues around healthcare reimbursement including the recent weakening of the Affordable Healthcare Act, the aging baby boomer generation and that impact on increased Medicare enrollment as well as the increased use of high deductible plans by employers.
More recently, new trends have emerged that could also have an impact on medical office buildings. For example, Kuzmanovich notes that employers have been becoming more innovative in their attempts to stabilize the employer cost on healthcare.
Perhaps the most ambitious of these attempts is the decision announced earlier this year by Amazon, Warren Buffett and JPMorgan Chase to create a company to provide their employees with high-quality, affordable care. Little details have been provided and whether it will have an effect on medical office buildings is still unclear. It does seem though, based on the broad outline of the endeavor, that real estate will play some role in providing this service.
“All of these variables create an ongoing uncertainty,” Kuzmanovich says.
Other players as well are entering the health care space, intent on creating new patient care delivery models.

Realigning The Pharmacy Net Lease Sector

Last week, for instance, it was reported that Wal-Mart and insurance company Humana were having early-stage talks about strengthening their existing partnership, including a possible acquisition. There have been other proposed and completed deals that could align healthcare real estate, especially in the net least space. Cigna and Express Scripts, Optum Rx and United Healthcare, Optum’s acquisition of DaVita Medical Group last year for $4.9 billion and, of course, CVS’ acquisition of Aetna for $69 billion and Walgreen’s $4.3-billion purchase of 1,932 stores, three distribution centers and inventory from Rite Aid.
Not all of these deals have been finalized yet and there is always the specter of antitrust regulators stepping in. The American Antitrust Institute, for example, has warned the Justice Department about the CVS and Aetna merger.

The Changes That Tech Will Bring

Even so the trend is clear: disruption in the form of new healthcare models is on the horizon.
Another disruptor is technology, Kuzmanovich says. “I think technology continues to be a game changer across the industry. The advent of portable devices and wearable tech is making seeing a doctor more accessible.” It will be interesting to watch, she says, how the mainstreaming of telemedicine or the ability to Skype with a nurse or doctor or the ease of downloading medical information from a Fitbit or other device will affect the medical office building. “That technology is compounding to potentially reduce the demand for medical offices in the long run.”
On the other hand there is the example of Mercy Hospital in St. Louis, which has set up a telemedicine hub to provide primary care and other services, Kuzmanovich continues. “There will be demand in the healthcare space to support these emerging technologies, creating a new opportunity within the sector.”
By: Erika Morphy (GlobeSt)
Click here to view source article.

Filed Under: All News

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