ST. LOUIS, Oct. 8, 2008

Helping The Homeless Get Into Business

St. Louis Shelter Opens Business Incubator To Help Homeless Find Stable, Well-Paying Jobs

  • Janese Jordan poses for a photo in a small apartment in the Clinton-Peabody housing development where she is training to become a certified painter with help from a new program through the St. Patrick Center Tuesday, Oct. 7, 2008, in St. Louis. Photo

    Janese Jordan poses for a photo in a small apartment in the Clinton-Peabody housing development where she is training to become a certified painter with help from a new program through the St. Patrick Center Tuesday, Oct. 7, 2008, in St. Louis.  (AP Photo/Jeff Roberson)

  • Interactive The Nation We Live In

    Who are Americans and what do they do? A comprehensive look at our economic, sociological and racial breakdown.

(AP)  A homeless shelter here is going way beyond providing hot meals and a bed for the night. The St. Patrick Center this week opened a new small business incubator and trades training center with a goal of helping the homeless, or those at risk, find stable, good-paying work.

The president of the Ohio-based National Business Incubation Association, Dinah Adkins, said it's the only business incubator in the country she knows of that's focused primarily on the homeless.

The St. Patrick Center in downtown St. Louis is the largest provider of homeless services in Missouri and has been helping those in need for a quarter century.

Like many homeless agencies, it put much of its focus on emergency assistance. That work continues - last fiscal year the St. Patrick Center served more than 150,000 meals to the hungry - but it hopes the new programs will get at some of the root causes of homelessness, said Dan Buck, the center's chief executive officer.

The St. Patrick Center transformed its fourth and fifth floors into space to launch new businesses and help the homeless learn skills in demand by area employers. It's a $5 million investment using funds from the U.S. Department of Commerce, Catholic Charities of St. Louis and the center's assets.

"When we talk about homelessness, I always say it takes more than shelters and soup kitchens," said Jan DeYoung, director of the new Project Begin incubator and trades training programs. "It's a new beginning for us, a whole new model for addressing homelessness issues."

The center isn't taking people off the streets and turning them into overnight entrepreneurs. Rather, the approach is to help people find stable housing and address health issues, and then, once approved by a caseworker, train them in new job skills, DeYoung said. Once they start a job, they continue to meet with work counselors and have access to social support services, if needed.

The small business incubator space offers small, professionally outfitted offices for low rent. But more than that, the businesses that are accepted into the incubator will be assessed to determine their areas of strength and weakness, receive guidance through a mentoring program, be able to share administrative services and learn from other entrepreneurs.

Other businesses will be considered affiliates, meaning they're not fully in the incubator program but use the center's business address, facilities and services.

In turn, the businesses or their vendors work to employ some St. Patrick Center clients. The homeless center is also opening a furniture construction and restoration program onsite.

Adkins expected a small business incubator focused on employing the homeless might face unique challenges - because it would be working with individuals that might have mental health issues or other obstacles. But, she said, careful screening should help to make sure those who participate are ready.

DeYoung said several culinary businesses are already working through the incubator, like an area pastry maker and a barbecue sauce business. He said businesses in construction trades, landscaping, health care, hospitality and security are expected to be good fits.

The hope is to establish up to 30 companies in the next four to five years, DeYoung said.

© MMVIII The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

Video and Galleries from U.S.

Add a Comment
by tiredofitnow October 8, 2008 1:00 PM EDT
This sounds like a great idea. I pray it works they way they think it should and that it can be expanded to the rest of the United States. This is the kind of program we need. I think the mentoring will be an important part of it. Some people just get overwhelmed, don''t know what to do next and have no support system in place. Thank you St. Patrick Center.
Reply to this comment
by easeup-2009 October 8, 2008 1:10 PM EDT
You know what they say--

Give a man a fish & he eats for a day, teach him to fish & he''ll sit in a boat & drink beer all day.
Reply to this comment
by mjvw2 October 8, 2008 5:20 PM EDT
Just the type of people I plan on hiring. NOT
Reply to this comment
  • MOST POPULAR
  • Viewed
  • Commented
Latest News
Featured Blogs