Nonprofit Provides California Small Businesses with an Alternative to Predatory Lenders

PCV, a Bay Area nonprofit with two decades of experience investing in California’s small business community, is aiming to combat predatory online lending by offering microloans to small businesses that have been turned down by banks or the Small Business Administration.

San Francisco, CA, September 16, 2016 --(PR.com)-- Sarah Kersten Studio in Berkeley has been manufacturing heirloom-quality ceramics for Bay Area consumers and restaurants for the past four years. Sales have increased steadily, as has their popularity with major San Francisco restaurants like Frances and Octavia. As a growing small business, owner Sarah was having trouble accessing traditional sources of capital to expand her inventory. Her company didn’t meet the guidelines of most mainstream lenders, so Sarah had to look for an alternative lender. Pacific Community Ventures (PCV), a San Francisco-based Community Development Financial Institution, was able to provide Sarah a loan with a fair and affordable rate.

Sarah’s story is the story for thousands of California small businesses. Unlike Sarah, many small businesses in California are forced to turn to online predatory lenders when they have trouble accessing capital.

PCV, a Bay Area nonprofit with two decades of experience investing in California’s small business community, is aiming to change that. They’re growing their mission to combat predatory online lending by offering microloans to small businesses that have been turned down by banks or the Small Business Administration. And, they pair each borrower with a pro bono expert advisor, because small businesses with mentors succeed at double the rate of those without.

Since the economic recession, PCV has been filling part of the small business funding gap in California with loans between $50,000–$200,000. Over the past two years, however, 20% of the small businesses that came to PCV – like Sarah Kersten Studio -- were looking for microloans of less than $50,000. So to meet this growing need, PCV has launched a microloan program in which businesses across California are able to acquire loans of $50,000 or less – with a special focus on businesses located in Alameda and Contra Costa Counties. Plus, it’s more than just a check. PCV’s borrowers are assigned a pro bono small business financial advisor to help complete a strong loan application and have access to free-one-on-one technical assistance throughout the life of the loan.

“The need for services such as those provided by PCV continues unabated in persistent pockets of poverty throughout Contra Costa County. In December of 2011, for example, Richmond reflected a high unemployment rate of over 15% and a poverty rate greater than 18%. About one-third of those in poverty in Richmond are foreign-born. Access to capital for such communities to start or expand small businesses provides a way for them to generate increased income and economic security,” says Jeff Butler, Director of Women’s Business Center for Anew America.

Small businesses employ half of California’s private sector workers, but far too many of those businesses are unable to access loans from traditional financial institutions because they are too young or too small. African American, Hispanic, Asian, and female small business borrowers in particular face difficult access-to-capital challenges and often lack the guidance to develop strong loan applications.

“The Federal Reserve’s research shows 39% of all small business loan requests are below $50,000. A third of entrepreneurs who apply for a bank loan are rejected; 54% among people of color,” says Darlene Rios Drapkin, Principal of Urban Transformation and a Contra Costa Small Business.

Development Center Advisor. “And women in general are turned down for loans 20% more often than men. Traditional financial institutions aren’t meeting that need, so unfortunately more and more small business owners are turning to online lenders with more often than not predatory rates.”

“Our small business lending program is filling the gap for entrepreneurs who can’t access capital from the traditional banking system,” said Mary Jo Cook, President and CEO of Pacific Community Ventures. “The deck is stacked against small business owners – yet these are the people who are creating good jobs in our communities and strengthening our local economies. We have both a moral and an economic imperative to help them succeed.”

In the Bay Area, our economic boom has outstripped the majority of the country when it comes to creating new jobs — but those gains have gone to investors or highly-educated workers in high-paid fields.

“PCV Small Business Lending helps communities grow by investing in people who build businesses and generate jobs in their neighborhoods,” says Robert Porter, Managing Director of PCV Small Business Services. We’re providing small business capital to entrepreneurs from underserved communities across the state of California that are struggling to stay afloat. We’re talking about small business owners such as women, people of color, immigrants, and combat veterans.”

PCV has already committed close to a million dollars to small businesses in the East Bay. In the next three years, PCV will lend $5 million more to California small businesses. If you’re in Alameda or Contra Costa counties and you’ve been in business for at least one year, then PCV is eager to work with you. Visit pacificcommunityventures.org/loans to learn more and apply for funding.

About Pacific Community Ventures
Pacific Community Ventures is a nonprofit that engages small businesses, investors, and policymakers to build an economy that works for everyone. Their programs strengthen local economies, create new quality jobs, and stimulate private and public investment in underserved communities.
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Pacific Community Ventures
Patrick Duggan
415-442-4312
www.pacificcommunityventures.org
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