Kevin Klingbeil - Managing Director, Big Water Consulting

Kevin Klingbeil
Kevin is the owner and Managing Director of Big Water Consulting.
He is a geographer and former Indian housing lawyer and regional quality assurance manager for the U.S. Census Bureau. Kevin has designed and implemented data collection, planning and technical assistance projects for dozens of tribes and Native communities throughout the country.
He has also coordinated state, regional and national Native studies and initiatives for the Seattle Indian Services Commission, the state of Washington, the South Dakota Native Homeownership Coalition, the National American Indian Housing Council (NAIHC), HUD, EDA, and the Treasury Department’s CDFI Fund, and has served as a technical expert for the IHBG Formula Negotiated Rulemaking Committee’s Data Study Group.
Kevin is currently coordinating together with the Big Water team, Kevin is currently coordinating numerous data collection projects in addition to the EDA-funded Indigenous Economic Development Community of Practice in partnership with Urban Institute and NAIHC.
Featured Events:
This session is the second installment in this 3-part training series and will describe approaches that tribal business entities, small business owners, and entrepreneurs can use as borrowers to cultivate relationships with lenders and investors to support economic development.
This session provides a non-exhaustive list of funding sources and the eligible uses and combinations of these sources as well as training on how to advance economic development through external borrowing/financing of activities (as opposed to purely grant-funded approaches) during the development and implementation of financing plans.
Many tribal and Native economic development plans are never fully implemented. This section will focus on the critical shift from planning to plan implementation. It will cover the timing and sequencing of coordinated and diversified economic development activities . It will also cover how to turn loose planning partnerships into solid development partnerships.
This in-person training at the 2024 NAIHC Legal Symposium in Las Vegas underscores the foundational elements of economic development and provided strategies for developing each of these specific elements. This training covered:
Workforce Development and Housing as Economic Development
Building Entrepreneurial Ecosystems
This virtual training introduced participants who are entering or considering an economic development planning process to its core components. Participants learned about the key internal and external actors, the process’s timeline and duration, the data required, and critical outcomes.
This first section of the track underscores the foundational elements of economic development plan implementation, including a qualified workforce/labor pool, an entrepreneurial ecosystem, and the primary infrastructure necessary to support economic activities.
The first training in the CoP’s 9-part series of a variety of topics across Indian Country. Cris Gastner and Kevin Klingbeil from Big Water Consulting led a discussion and exercises about the foundations and essential components of CED in Indian Country and an introduction to CED planning.
As tribes work on projects to grow and improve their communities, it is essential that all the various sectors of community economic development are involved in the conversation together through a holistic planning process.