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Community lenders serve as a vital source of funding for nontraditional borrowers.
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http://www.entrepreneur.com/magazine/entrepreneur/1999/march/17310.html
If you've tried to get a loan from a traditional institution
and been turned down, there's another source of business
financing to consider.
"There are about 450 Community Development Finance
Institutions (CDFIs) in the country that act as bridges to link
unconventional borrowers to conventional capital," says Mark
Pinsky, executive director of the National Community Capital
Association, a CDFI trade association.
Until recently, CDFIs concentrated primarily on helping people
get mortgage loans. But the advent of entities like Chicago's
Southshore Bank inspired President Clinton to create a national
network of more than 100 such institutions.
Today there are a growing number of partially government-backed
CDFIs, such as the Austin Community Development Corp., which focus
almost exclusively on lending to entrepreneurs. "We have
approximately $2.2 million in our capital fund," says Margo
Weisz, executive director of the Austin CDFI. "We just got
half a million from the federal CDFI fund, but our primary funders
are banks."
CDFIs typically lend to businesses other lenders deem
unfundable, but their default rate is only 1.5 percent, says
Pinsky.
According to Weisz, "We work within the Austin city limits
in low and moderate income census tracks and primarily make loans
to minority- and women-owned businesses. But you don't have to
be a minority [or a woman] to access the financing."
The Austin CDFI funds ventures that will provide high-quality
jobs or make improvements in blighted neighborhoods in its target
area. Loans start at $20,000 with three- to seven-year terms and
interest rates that range from 11 to 13 percent.
Although CDFI lending may seem implausible to the larger
financial community, there's nothing magical about it, says
Pinsky. They're just lenders that have the flexibility to
devise creative solutions and that are willing to take risks.
Bank rejections didn't stop this entrepreneur.
I was raised in a small town near Lubbock, Texas, and my family
were migrant workers," says Joe Salinas Jr., 33, president of
Austin-based Advanced Networking Solutions (ANS). "It was in
high school, after being exposed to the cotton fields, that I knew
what I didn't want to do for the rest of my
life."
In 1991, after serving in the military, earning a degree in
computer science from the University of Texas and working as a
computer analyst for IBM, Salinas used $4,000 in savings to
co-found ANS with his brother Bob. ANS provides networking
solutions from software and workstations to cabling.
Six years later, with $750,000 in sales, 15 employees and four
pending projects worth about $4 million in revenue, Salinas sought
$150,000 in expansion funding.
"We went to some pretty good-sized banks, but they felt we
had grown too fast, that we had too much business; they wanted to
see how we would manage growth before lending to us,"
remembers Salinas.
Margo Weisz of the Austin Community Development Corp. didn't
have the same reservations. "We needed manpower and equipment,
and we needed to beef up our statewide infrastructure to handle the
projects, and [Weisz] was willing to assist with that," says
Salinas.
About a month after talking with Weisz, Salinas obtained a
bridge loan of $50,000 from her organization. That paved the way
for bank loans a few months later.
Today, ANS has 100 employees, projected 1999 sales of $9.5
million and five bank credit lines.
"We wouldn't have gone out of business without the
financing from Margo," says Salinas, "but the road would
have been bumpier, and we would have had to slow our growth or even
give up a piece of the company."
Contact Sources
Advance Networking Solutions Computers Inc., 1111 S.
Congress Ave., Austin, TX 78704, saved@anscomputers.com
Austin Community Development Corp., 5407 N. IH35, #307,
Austin, TX 78723, (512) 371-1776
National Community Capital Association,ncca@communitycapital.org,
http://www.communitycapital.com
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