A new economy for a connected Taos

Here’s how we’re reweaving value, connection, and care in Taos.

A new economy for a connected Taos

Here’s how we’re reweaving value, connection, and care in Taos.

Our mission

Taos TimeBank seeks to be a welcoming and vibrant platform encouraging time exchanges among Taos County residents: mutual exchanges of skills and services that improve the quality of individual lives, deepen relational trust, increase positive intercultural interactions across the lines that can divide us, and boost volunteer projects that foster community-wide health and well-being of the whole watershed.

Values: words to guide us as we grow

  • Everyone has an important role to play in our community; Everyone has gifts within them they can contribute to the common good.
  • We are richer and more resilient together than we are alone. Everyone belongs.
  • We want to move at the speed of trust. We want to grow naturally, based upon real relationships, over seasons, learning and maturing and revising as we go..
  • A deep well of community wealth & resources will be discovered as we build a local sharing economy that is relational, respectful, and reciprocal.
  • A safe and supportive environment is crucial for community members to share with each other and trust each other.
  • Everyone's culture, beliefs and perspectives are welcome, as long as they are shared in a spirit of respect and reciprocity, and honor the vibrant diversity within our community.
  • Within our sharing economy we will seek to cultivate generosity of spirit, hearts of service, care for the vulnerable, and a revival of “the commonwealth,” a stance that re-members we are all in this together.
  • Meet the team behind the Taos TimeBank

    We’re a group of neighbors, organizers, and community members working together to keep the Taos TimeBank rooted, responsive, and growing.

    Caroline Dechert

    I am primarily a weaver and fiber artist, but I can’t quite keep my hands out of the earth, whether it’s in my dye garden or out digging clay. Chance, change, and serendipity play around my ceramic work. My woven tapestries start from a memory or feeling, like a longed-for rainfall, a fire on a winter day, or the joy that makes you jump up and dance. Love of Northern New Mexico—the light, the cultures, the land and its spirits, the chile (sometimes red, sometimes green, never Christmas)—lies at the heart of everything. I hate writing these little bios, but would love to get to know you for real.

    Javier Aceves

    Javier is a former UNM-HSC professor dedicated to community health and advocacy for children, youth, and adults with diverse abilities. He has served on local, state, and national boards and continues to volunteer with community-based organizations that foster leadership and inclusion.

    Keith Reed
    Board Member

    Calling Taos home since 2018, after four years of travel to find it. I love anything that offers a viable alternative to the current paradigm; add in an aspect of building community, and I'm all in! I'm a massage therapist by trade, and my interests include backpacking, snowshoeing, cross-country skiing, and whitewater kayaking. I also regularly attend a local sweat lodge. I'm often preceded by my Chiweenie sidekick, Starlight.

    Kim LeBlanc

    After earning a BA and leading a successful career as an Executive Director at Polo Ralph Lauren, Kimberly felt a profound inner calling to explore deeper dimensions of well-being—individual, communal, and collective. As an entrepreneur actively engaged in several meaningful local initiatives, she has been honored to support the powerful mission of the Taos TimeBank since its inception and now serves as a dedicated board member.

    Krista Woolhiser

    Krista is a designer, systems thinker, and aspiring community builder who leads communications and digital strategy for the Taos Time Bank. With a background in web design, marketing, and operations, she blends creativity and structure to help the Time Bank grow in alignment with its vision for a more resilient and connected Taos.

    Kyoko Hummel, BS, NM LMT

    After earning a Bachelor’s in Marketing from the University of Oregon, Kyoko enjoyed a corporate career. In 1991, Kyoko moved to New Mexico and transitioned to massage therapy. In 2000, she founded Essential Massage in Taos. For over three decades, she has delighted in serving community through her healing practice and through volunteer work in local schools and youth ice hockey. She is committed to helping others and caring for both people and the environment.

    Michael Wojcik

    I'm a newcomer to Taos County, having first visited in 2006 and moved full-time from Michigan to Des Montes in 2020, but I love participating in this community, whether that's the Time Bank or acequia cleaning or just visiting and working with my neighbors. I'm a professional software developer, working from home, with an academic background in computer science, literature, and rhetoric. I met Todd through HIVE in the spring of 2025 and have been involved with the Taos Time Bank since. Like many people in Taos, I advocate for equality, justice, and compassion; for sustainability and good stewardship of our resources; and for preserving the deep and varied cultures and traditions of the Taos Valley. I love that the Time Bank gives me opportunities to meet and do things with and for other members of our community, and I hope to help make it a major resource for resilience and good living for all who live here.

    Miriam Trujillo

    Miriam is a Taos transplant who moved here for a change & has settled into the Taos lifestyle after being here 15 years. Miriam has a history working with nonprofits & specialized her career in administration & behavioral health. She is currently volunteering with High Desert Helping Hands, Mystic Dance Studio, Taos High School Sports, Taos Integrated School of the Arts as well as Taos Time Bank. Mostly, Miriam enjoys baking, gardening, spending time with her family- husband Diego from Taos, son Nick (17) & daughter Shaolin (9) watching their sports, dance, activities & watch movies as a family!

    Why a time bank for Taos?

    By launching Taos TImeBank, we’re aiming to address a few key social problems:

    Problem #1: Today’s social climate is rife with political partisanship, cultural divisiveness, and economic insecurity.

    For many people, these perceptions and realities are accompanied by high levels of powerlessness, individual isolation, anxiety and despair. Locally and nationally, we are experiencing a crisis of confidence, a breakdown of the common good, and a lack of coherent community. The common spaces that encourage interdependent neighborliness across different cultures are mostly gone. The social bridges that foster healthy intergenerational support between youth and elders are largely absent. We need opportunities for people to connect in trusting and beneficial ways.

    Problem #2: Many, many people are left out, undervalued, and underserved within today's corporate economy in modern America, and the economy in Taos is no exception.

    In particular, these sectors of our population are often under-valued and neglected in our modern economy:

    1. Parents raising children at home
    2. Teens with talents and time but little opportunity for creative employment
    3. Elderly with untapped skills
    4. Immigrants needing to live under the radar
    5. People involved in agricultural and seasonal work
    6. Poor and underhoused folks in need of support

    In an economy that values corporations far more than community, those who don't fit into the system as full-time employees end up being undervalued, under-resourced, and under-utilized. They are tossed to the margins, which then leads to feeling undignified, unrecognized, and unnecessary as community members.

    We need opportunities for people to be valued, resourced, and utilized.

    Taos TimeBank is a direct antidote to these two problems.

    It will be a complementary economy that dignifies relationships—a network that enriches, includes, uplifts, creates, and connects. Taos needs a community-based economic engine to bring people together—and incentivize them to keep coming together—in common trust and common benefit — across races, across cultures, across age differences, across neighborhoods, across class differences. Taos TimeBank is just that.

    Daniel “Ryno” Herrera & The Watershed Way

    The Taos TImeBank is dedicated to Daniel “Ryno” Herrera. We were a rather unusual pair, he and I, but over seven years he not only became my most valuable multicultural guide and incredible community development collaborator, he became my best friend. We did everything together: played together, prayed together, envisioned together, and worked side by side for the health of this incredible watershed and all the beings who call it home. Over the years we cultivated a social-spiritual place-based way of being we came to call the Watershed Way; our motto is “do unto those downstream as you would have those upstream do unto you.” His spirit lives on in the Taos TimeBank, and the annual covenant we wrote together for the Watershed Way forms the foundation and inspiration for what the Taos TimeBank is about:

    "We all want a better way to live together, don’t we? Yet too often we remain shackled to destructive habits and systems. Too often we remain distrustful of those we call strangers.

    I’m done with wanting to be destructive and distrustful. How about you? Do you want to be a community that comes together—conjuntos as una gente, una familia, as a new kind of community, as a new kind of County-- a community that cares of all our children, takes care of our air and water and food together, and provides enough support so that all of our community members might live and thrive?"

    "Will we trust each other? I tell you today I am going to trust, even though it seems crazy. I tell you today I am going to commit to this way of life, this movement we call the Watershed Way. I am going to build bridges across the lines that divide our County, our culture, our races, our religions. I will do so by my sweat and my labor, by my willingness to trust others, and my willingness to trust that our Creator will take care of us and this beautiful planet that we are blessed to share.

    Will you join me? We of the Watershed Way are hard workers. We are going to get to work building the community that we want our children and grandchildren to grow up in. We will work for and delight in the kind of community that our Creator wants us to have, a community in which we all have enough: healthy local food on all our plates, good water for all to drink, renewable energy for all to use, a safe roof over all of our heads, jobs with dignity, confidence in our hearts, trust in our handshakes, and peace in the land." --our annual vow, spoken by Daniel "Ryno" Herrera

    Ryno would be proud of the Taos TimeBank–it feels like the fruit of the seeds we planted together, the manifestation of the dreams we dreamed together: Taos County, conjuntos. WIll you join us? Will you cross cultural divides and risk trusting your neighbor to make Taos a better place? Like Ryno often did, I hope you respond by lighting up with a grin and saying, “Hey, why not? I’ve done worse things with worse people.” Lets do this!
    Todd Wynward, founder of TiLT and the Taos TimeBank

    Land Acknowledgement

    Despite our histories or habits, those of us who moved here can choose to set aside the mindset of the colonizer. If we do, we are welcome here. One part of this humbling process is to recognize that all of us who relocated here are guests, whether we’ve been here for five months or five centuries. As we settlers seek to settle well and join in the life of this precious and ancient place and the many beings who have lived here before us, we are welcome, but there are some steps to respect.

    At TiLT, we have been taught a straightforward process from friends at Tewa Women United, native allies just south of us here in Taos. First, we should always acknowledge the peoples who lived here first. We need to name and authentically apologize for any ancestral damage, trauma, colonization, exploitation, and cultural destruction that might have been done by our forebears. Second, we need to pledge to live in resource-sharing, earth-honoring, Pueblo-dignifying ways.

    For many of us in the Watershed Way, this seemingly simple process of truth and reconciliation has become a process of transformation, opening doors of healing in our hearts and making healing changes through our hands, our calendars and our pocketbooks. Our friend Mirian Naranjo of HOPE [Honoring Our Pueblo Existence] gave us a tool to keep this identity of “welcome guest” in mind. She is of Tewa territory, south of us, and we have modified it to include the Tiwa region around Taos as well. Based on her suggestion, we offer it as a blessing to start any legislative session, community meeting, civic initiative, or gathering of intention:

    Everyone here is walking, living and breathing within these sacred lands of Tewa and Tiwa Peoples. Let us acknowledge where we stand and give thanks for the living mountains, valleys and waters, which sustain our lives and form Tewa and Tiwa ancestral homelands. Let us ground our activities in the awareness of where we are, and may the mannerism of Pueblo Peoples enter our lives and fill us with gratitude, love, care and respect for all that is shared between us and all beings.