| HOT
TOPICS |
|
New
Report Shows that Self-Employment
is the Best Way Out of Poverty for
Low-Income Women
Findings shared at a symposium at
City Hall

The resource
fair and expo featured guided
self-assessments and practical
business tips. Thanks to our
graduate ambassadors who shared
their stories and helped affect
policy in San Francisco.
| “Nearly
eighty percent of all
new job growth in California
between 1999 and 2003
came from microbusinesses.
By supporting these storefronts,
restaurants, and home-based
business owners, we help
ensure a more stable foundation
for California’s
economy," said
Speaker Pro Tem Yee. |
On
September 29, Women's Initiative
and its graduates affected policy
in San Francisco. The City’s
budget has earmarked $500K for
microenterprise development
for women and thanks to a core
group of supporters it seems
that more of this money will
go for what women need most
in order to jump start their
business -- training. Speaker
pro Tem Leland Y. Yee, Ph.D.
and Supervisors Sophie Maxwell
and Chris Daly shared their
vision for investing in women
microentrepreneurs as a key
element of San Francisco’s
economic development strategy.
Supervisor Daly said that Women's
Initiative's strategy needs
to be incorporated in San Francisco's
development strategy along side
plans for biotech and other
bigger industries. He promised
to find the money to make it
happen. This event was put on
by Assemblymember Leland Yee
and Women’s Initiative
for Self Employment in recognition
of ACR76 2005 which named October
as Microenterprise Development
Month to raise awareness of
microenterprise training programs.
“Microenterprises, businesses
with fewer than five employees,
fuel our local economy, said
Yee. “Nearly eighty percent
of all new job growth in California
between 1999 and 2003 came from
microbusinesses. By supporting
these storefronts, restaurants,
and home-based business owners,
we help ensure a more stable
foundation for California’s
economy.”
A recently released report revealed
that the Women’s Initiative
training program generates a
return of $23 to the local economy
for every $1 invested. Additionally:
• Annual household income
for participants entering the
Women's Initiative program is
just $14,000. Two years after
Women's Initiative training,
their income leaps to over $37,000.
• 205 new jobs were created
by Women's Initiative clients
this year and another documented
179 jobs were retained from
previous years, according to
a survey with a sample of graduates.
• The average Women’s
Initiative client business pays
$14.49 an hour in wages, over
double the minimum wage in California.
This wage is especially impressive
given that many client businesses
operate in sectors such as housekeeping
and food service that traditionally
pay close to minimum wage.
You are part of this success story!
Thank you business connectors, donors
and others who have giving their
time and talent to launch women
entrepreneurs to success.

Supervisors
Chis Daly and Sophie Maxwell
listen to graduates speak about
their experience at Women's
Initiative
Graduate
ambassadors pose with Assemblymember
Leland Yee
You
can make our space more welcoming!
and meet graduates
at the same time
Graduate Antoinette Loupe, owner
of In the Loupe Design, is heading
up the renovation of our office's
welcome areas! She has a fabulous
vision that includes a fresh
coat of paint, display shelves
for showcasing client products/services
and a space for a small library
of resources. Now we need creative
types and others to help make
the plan real. There are two
beautification days: Nov. 4
in San Francisco and Nov. 11
in Oakland, 9 am - 3 pm. If
you are interested in making
our welcome area look gorgeous,
please contact Justina Cross
at (510) 287-3109 or jcross@womensinitiative.org.
In
Search of Outstanding Business
Consultants to Work with Latina
Business Owners
| Do
you have a match? Please
forward this on to any
Spanish speaking business
consultants. |
Women’s Initiative is
seeking Spanish business consultants
who will propel our clients
forward. This is either a volunteer
position if you can commit 10
hours a week as a minimum, or
a paid contract position. Who
do you know who might be a good
match? Please forward it to
them. We are seeking new team
members who can help women who
are struggling with issues like
competition, market penetration,
operations, lease negotiations
and more. Are you the expert
that can help them build their
business or do you know someone
who'd be perfect for the job?
Do you have networks, knowledge
and a drive to show the way
to a woman with great potential?
Spanish speakers are a priority
for us. For
more information please contact
Thais Rezende at trezende@womensinitiative.org.
|
| |
|
|
GRADUATE
SPOTLIGHT |
|
|
Graduate
Francesca Valdez Creates Quality Jobs
Through Broadway Studios
When Francesca Valdez first started her
business with two partners in 1993 it
was a night club called Club Arte. Four
years later the club was not doing well
financially and closed for ten months.
During that time Ms. Valdez completed
a business management training course
with Women’s Initiative and reopened
the business, on her own, as Broadway
Studios. When she reopened Ms. Valdez
had one or two employees doing cleaning
and bartending in the nightclub and she
was renting the building.
Today, over nine years later, Ms. Valdez
is re-opening at Broadway Studios after
being closed for retrofit and remodeling.
The club will open with a newly refinished
floor and restrooms and a focus on renting
the venue for special events and multimedia
seminars. Ms. Valdez now employs over
20 people in a mix of full-, part-time
and contracted positions and has hosted
numerous fundraising events for nonprofit
agencies such Blue Water Network.
While Ms. Valdez's business is an exciting
success story, what makes it truly remarkable
is that similar stories can be told about
many of the businesses run by women who
have completed business management training
courses with Women's Initiative.
Between July 2005 and June of this year,
Women's Initiative client businesses created
more than 205 jobs in the Bay Area. This
was in addition to180-plus jobs retained
by client businesses over a two year period.
Not only are these businesses contributing
to the growth of the regional economy,
on average employees at client businesses
earn $14.49 per hour. That is nearly double
the California minimum wage and well above
San Francisco's living wage of $10.77
per hour.
According to the Economic Policy Institute,
a living wage is the pay rate required
for a full-time employee to support a
family above the federal poverty line.
The hourly wage is usually calculated
at between 100% and 130% of poverty level
for a family. While minimum wage laws
apply to all businesses and organizations
with over a certain number of employees,
living wage ordinances are usually restricted
to companies doing work under a contract
for the city or jurisdiction that has
passed the law.
Women's Initiative client businesses are
largely unaffected by San Francisco's
Minimum Compensation Ordinance. However
business owners that pay higher wages
reap the benefits that backers of living
wage laws often list as incentives for
the business community to support city-wide
living wage laws. These benefits include
lower rates of turn over and absenteeism
and improved productivity and product
quality.
"A lot of the employees have been
here 10, seven, five years," reports
Ms. Valdez, who started Broadway Studios
under the name of Club Arte in 1993. "Some,
like the cleaning crew, have worked for
me for 14 years. We're like a family."
In the past 12 years more than 60 municipalities
across the United States have passed living
wage ordinances since 1994. Studies have
found that these ordinances not only benefit
the individuals earning the higher wages,
but can also reduce the level of family
poverty in the regions they affect. Thanks
to the economic gains experienced by municipalities
that have passed living wage ordinances,
similar measures are gaining support in
a growing number of communities. Those
who are reluctant to support living wage
ordinances or who oppose them often cite
concerns that higher wage requirements
will make an area inhospitable to large
businesses and ultimately cause job loss.
A study conducted by researchers at UC
Berkeley found that the San Francisco
economy did not experience job loss or
business closure in 2005 after the city
enacted its increased minimum wage requirements,
which affect a larger number of businesses
than the city's living wage ordinance.
Other studies have shown that most job
creation in the United States happens
in small, local businesses like Broadway
Studios and the other businesses started
by Women's Initiative clients.
More growth is planned for Broadway Studios
and the staff there. “My next project,”
says Ms. Valdez, “is a health care
plan for the full-time staff.”
-
Kyla Calvert
|
|
|
Get
Out and Vote!
There
is 12 days left
to register to vote in the November
elections. Make sure your voice is
heard. For more information CLICK
HERE.
Taking
Care of Business
 |
|
Wednesday,
October 25
7 :30am - 5:30pm
Oakland Marriott
By now you should have received
your Leadership Luncheon invitation
in your mailbox so you can register.
If you didn't receive it you can
still register online.
CLICK
HERE to view
conference seminar descriptions.
We
need volunteers! Please
call Madhuri at (510) 287-3107
if you can spend a few hours in
the office in the next week.
|
|
| |
| EVENTS |
|
Building
Bridges Networking Event
Women's Initiative and one
of our graduates Susan Grant of Baja
Nights will be showcased at the upcoming
Building Bridges Networking Event. There
are still two vendors spots open and
plenty of room to be an attendee. Vendor
cost: $100.00. Everyone gets a light
breakfast & a good lunch. Call Alicia
with questions or for more info at (510)
459-6072 or visit the website.
Group
Healing Session with graduate Kim Le
Every Sunday starting Oct. 15, Nurturing
Salon hosts a
time to come together to create positive
energy by supporting and nurturing each
other.
Sessions held at Nurturing Salon (1929
Lombard St. at Buchanan). Call Kim for
more info at (415) 297-4394. $10 suggested
donation.
Green
Business Forum of Marin
Thursday, Nov. 2, 6:00 pm - 8:30 pm
at the Mill Valley Community Center
(180 Camino Alto, Mill Valley). Tickets
are $25/chamber members and $35/non-members.
Purchase tickets online at Brown
Paper Tickets.
|
|
|
| GOT
COURAGE? |
|
Julie
Castro Abrams, CEO, and Evelyn
Dilsaver, Board Chair of Women's
Initiative are featured in top selling
non-fiction book, The Courage Code.
Evelyn Dilsaver and Julie Castro Abrams
are two of 44 women throughout the country
featured in the recently released book
written by Megan Raphael and Jennifer
Byron of Traverse City, Michigan. For
years, there has been an unspoken language
about courage – a Courage Code.
It undermines, excludes, dominates –
yet, it is rarely talked about. The
book – based on interviews with
everyday yet accomplished women throughout
the country – presents an entirely
new way of looking at power and courage.
To learn more about the book visit The
Courage Code online.
|
| |
| IN
THE NEWS |
|
|
Graduate
Eva Saavedra and her
restaurant El Huarache Azteca was featured
in The
Chronicle's Bargain Bites section
on Sept. 17.
Julie
Castro Abrams, CEO was featured
in San Francisco Business Times
(Sept. 22) in a story about micro-loans.
Women's
Initiative team members Heather
Haxo Phillips and Karuna
Jaggar comment about our SuccessLink
program in the Oct. issue of Bay
Area BusinessWoman. The article
gets to the core about why Business
Connectors are important mentors for
women starting in business.
|
|
| |
|
| |
|