November - Women`s Empowerment International
Transcription
November - Women`s Empowerment International
Business Loans and Ser vices for Women in Pover ty Women’s Empowerment International NOVEMBER 2012 Village Savings Partnership Calendar WomensTrust Gramen de la Frontera Adelante WE STAR Center Upcoming Events Grameen de la Frontera site visit – November 11-14 Holiday Reception in City Heights – Dec. 8 ~ 10.am. to noon, City Heights Library, 3795 Fairmount Avenue, San Diego, CA 92105. Please join us for yummies, shopping and a chance to meet representatives from our newest program in San Diego, the Women Empowered Inititiatve. WE Board Retreat – Jan. 12, 2013 An Evening at Sea Rocket Bistro – Jan. 31, 2013 Dinner with Zoe Ghahremani, author “Sky of Red Poppies” – Feb. 10, 2013 International Women’s Day Celebration – March 10, 2013 WE Begins New Village Savings Partnership in San Diego WE has entered into a new pilot partnership! The Women Empowered Initiative will focus on creating village savings groups in San Diego for low-income women. This is a pilot project created by PCI, formerly known as Project Concern International, a San Diego-based nonprofit that focuses on disease prevention, community health and sustainable d e v e l o p m e n t internationally and in San Diego. The Women Empowered (WE) Initiative will begin this fall with the creation of six village MORE > Business Loans and Ser vices for Women in Pover ty Holiday Reception Features Village Savings Members Please attend our Holiday Reception to learn more about our village savings project and meet PCI staff and some of the village savings participants. Our reception will take place December 8, from 10 a.m. to noon, at the City Heights Library, 3795 Fairmount Avenue, San Diego, CA 92105. The hours coincide with the City Heights Holiday Farmers Market – only 1/2 block away from the library – which features many WE STAR Center clients selling prepared food, fresh produce and unique gifts. Stop by the library before you shop, and we’ll be happy to escort you to the farmers market to introduce you to STAR Center clients and products. Feel free to bring your best friends! savings groups in San Diego that will help participants save money together, lend to each other and start businesses, either alone or together. As the program continues, we expect the participants will be better able to contribute to their household incomes, provide a financial safety net for their families, increase family nutrition, promote education for their children and, ultimately, become powerful agents of change. What is a savings group? • 15 to 25 women form a group • They save money together at regular meetings • They lend to each other and collect interest on the loans • They may develop businesses together and manage • Groups are facilitated by and receive training from the program coordinator who provides expertise in entrepreneurial skills, small business management, literacy and numeracy, financial budgeting and leadership skills • Savings groups are based on savings rather than debt • Savings groups are managed by the members who set up a system of checks and balances to maintain the safety and security of the funds. Women’s Empowerment has pledged $10,000 for support of the one-year pilot project and anticipates that many of our members and supporters MORE > Business Loans and Ser vices for Women in Pover ty will serve as mentors to the program participants. The six groups are now in the early stages of formation. Two groups will be based in City Heights among the East African community and four will be located in San Diego’s South Bay, including two among Latina women and two for Filipina women We are extremely excited to participate in this new project in our own community. Such village groups - self-sustaining and self-managed - have been extremely successful in PCI’s projects in the developing world and we have high hopes that the same benefits will be seen here. Village savings programs give women a safe place to save and they bring community members together so they can work together on other community initiatives. Members of the groups determine the majority of the group’s policies (including membership, savings and loans, distribution of earnings and other issues). Members pool individual savings and rotate an internal fund that provides the basis for loans and an emergency fund. All members of the group serve in all leadership positions on a rotating basis, thereby spreading and building leadership skills equally among the group members. Established 50 years ago in San Diego, PCI operates programs in 16 countries. Programs vary by country and include providing access to clean water, fighting HIV/AIDS in Africa, providing disaster relief and microenterprise, combating world hunger and promoting women’s empowerment and gender equality. It has also focused efforts on San Diego and the border region. Last year, PCI launched the Women Empowered (WE) Initiative, a global effort to promote economic and social empowerment among women through the formation of village savings groups, internationally and in San Diego. Its goal is to enroll 100,000 women in savings groups in the countries where it works, including Bolivia, Botswana, Ethiopia, Guatemala, India, Indonesia, Liberia, Malawi, Nicaragua, Tanzania and Zambia. Already, 14,000 women are enrolled in PCI village savings groups in Ethiopia alone. In San Diego, the pilot project’s success will be measured by tracking financial performance, member satisfaction and operating efficiency. Also, the impact on individual group members will be tracked by measuring changes in poverty, food security, household expenditures and savings, gender equity, health and education. We look forward to sharing more details with you as the groups form and grow. Business Loans and Ser vices for Women in Pover ty Rosalind Serwaa sells household items – sheets and towels – from a shipping container on a busy road in Pokuase, Ghana. From a Leaky Kiosk to a Dry Shipping Container, Courtesy of Hard Work and Microloans Rosalind Acoto Serwaa wasn’t always able to display her stock in the secure, cozy shipping container that now houses her wares. When she first began her business selling gently used household goods, such as bed sheets, towels and curtains, Rosalind had only an outdoor kiosk with no roof and no protection from the heavy rains which visit Ghana annually. She was able to sell only towels in those early years, because that was all she had room for. But with the help of a small loan from WomensTrust, WE’s MORE > Business Loans and Ser vices for Women in Pover ty partner in Ghana, Rosalind was able to graduate to a covered table, increase her stock and eventually purchase a shipping container. Her present location is an excellent spot adjacent to the main road to Accra, the nation’s capital. Rosalind has been a borrower with WomensTrust since 2006, and as she repays each loan (there have been ten now), she’s able to get a larger loan to continue building her business. At 52, Rosalind is the proud mother of two grown children, a boy and a girl, ages 21 and 26, who sometimes help with the store. She works long hours, from 7 to 5, six days a week, but she doesn’t mind because she’s working for the future. Her sister owns a similar shop in Accra, so they’re able to pool their resources to buy their goods in bulk, making their scarce dollars go further. With her next loan, Rosalind hopes to buy a sewing machine so that she can make pillow cases to match the sheets she sells and offer complete sets to her customers. She dreams of adding a second shipping container some day, but that’s a dream for another day. For now, Rosalind is just grateful that business is good, and that her association with WomensTrust allows her to have health insurance as she ages. Her greatest immediate need? A pair of reading glasses. WomensTrust is WE’s fifth partnership, and our second in Africa. WE has partnered with WomensTrust, located in the rural village of Pokuase, Ghana, since September 2010. A delegation of WE members visited Pokuase this fall to meet with staff and clients. Rhea Kuhlman, one of our ambassadors, provided this story. WE will retur n to Ghana next year. Please consider traveling with us. For more information, email us at [email protected]. Business Loans and Ser vices for Women in Pover ty Determined Businesswoman Credits Her Work, Dedication and Patience “It’s up to you to rise above where you are,” says Simona Aldama, glowing in her pink shirt and wide smile. She is a 34-year-old single mother of four children who speaks both Mayo and Spanish. In 2005, she received her first loan of $1000 pesos ($96 US at that time) from Grameen de la Frontera (GDLF), WE’s partner in Sonora, Mexico, and used it to buy a pair of goats to breed and sell. In seven years, she has never missed a payment. In 2011, she took out a loan for $7000 pesos ($550 US) to build her business. She now has dozens of goats she is breeding. She dreams of expanding her enterprise to include horses and cows. In Sonora, Mexico, Simona Aldama is a seasoned borrower and a successful breeder of goats. In seven years, she has never missed a loan payment. make home improvements. each month. Her success has allowed her to pay educational expenses for her four children. Her son will graduate from high school and plans to apply for scholarships to go to the university where he wants to study medicine. He will be the first doctor in the community of Bacajaquia in Sonora. Simona’s business also helps her provide food for her family and She is able to save one third of what she earns Simona’s day starts at 4 a.m. when she gets her children ready for school. She says the hardest part of her work as a goat breeder has been seeing an animal die, and not being able to do anything to prevent it. She wishes she had a veterinarian close by and the money to pay for services. In addition to her affiliation with GDLF, Simona is also the coordinator of her community food bank. She stands out in GDLF Center meetings because she MORE > Business Loans and Ser vices for Women in Pover ty Now on her fifth loan, María de la Cruz Mejía Rodríguez sells snacks out of a wheelbarrow in a small village in Honduras. She has used her profits to renovate her kitchen, build a patio and take care of her family. Turning Loans Into a Successful Snack Business María de la Cruz Mejía Rodríguez is an enthusiastic small business entrepreneur in the village of San Pedro de Tutule, near Intibucá, Honduras. The first loan she obtained from the Adelante Foundation, WE’s partner in Honduras, in 2010 was for only $211. Now she is on her fifth loan cycle, and is paying back a loan for $632. This is a testament to her excellent repayment history, assembly meeting attendance and diligence investing in her business. María de la Cruz uses her small business loans to invest in her micro enterprise of producing and selling snacks. Next to the central park in her hometown of San Pedro de Tutule, Maria offers passersby her delicious snack products out of a wheelbarrow. One of her most popular items is the nacatamal, which is a MORE > Maria: Turning Loans Into ... Simona: Determined Businesswoman Credits ... Business Loans and Ser vices for Women in Pover ty is always ready to help another member who can’t make a payment. Asked what advice she would give to a new GDLF borrower, she said: “That you give it your best, because it is all about work, work and work. If you give up at the first obstacle, you haven’t done anything yet. You have to dedicate time and work in your business, and have patience. And every two weeks, make your payment. You have to have a good credit history for the next time that you want to get a loan.” Then, in Mayo she adds: “Jamuchim naute karmake GDLF Tamaky!” Women, let’s work together with GDLF! Yes, Simona. Let’s do that! At WE’s Annual Meeting in June, Beatriz Marina Bours Munoz gave a moving report on the impact Grameen De La Frontera has had in the small indigenous villages around Ciudad Obregon in southern Sonora. To read more about some of these success stories, contact GDLF Liaison Linda Corey at ljcorey@ sbcglobal.net steamed corn cake stuffed with meat and vegetables. Especially popular on weekends, she produces and sells up to 500 nacatamales every Saturday! Although María de la Cruz has worked with other microfinance institutions before, today she is a client only with Adelante. In support of Adelante’s simple qualification process, she confesses, “I prefer working with Adelante because they don’t ask for much; there are not many requirements.” At age 58, this widowed mother is still committed to supporting her family. She has five children who are no longer dependent on her income, but they all still live at her home. Not only do her adult children live there, but she also hosts eight grandchildren and the wives of her two sons. With the income she has earned from her micro-business, she has renovated her kitchen and built a new patio. María de la Cruz’s is driven to work hard in order to improve her family’s quality of life. That is inspirational. Business Loans and Ser vices for Women in Pover ty A Garden Grows into a Business Luchia Lokonyen loves to farm. It makes her feel fit and healthy, allows her to feed her five children healthy, organic food and helps support her family. Luchia is one of 85 farmers with a plot at City Height’s New Roots Garden, run by the International Rescue Committee (IRC), WE’s partner in the WE Center for STAR Women in City Heights. She is the first of the farmers to get her Certified Producers Certificate, which allows her to sell her products independently at the City Heights and Linda Vista farmers markets. Luchia Lokonyen, from Uganda, turns a of gardening into a business in City Heights. love Luchia has been in the U.S. for four years. She came as a refugee from Uganda with her children, who are now 6 to 18 years old. Having been a farmer in Uganda, Luchia was happy to discover that she could also be one in San Diego through the New Roots Garden. Wanting to be productive and to feed her children healthy food, she went to the International Rescue Committee to get her own garden plot. She started her garden originally just for her family, then realized she could also sell her food to earn income. She grows 24 types of produce, from amaranth to watercress. She works two long days a week in the garden, on Mondays and Tuesdays, from 6 a.m. to 5 p.m., and sells another two days. “Farming is like exercise to me. I feel so healthy doing it,” she says. At the WE Center for STAR Women, she received help to get her garden business started, including loans to purchase driving lessons and buy a van to transport her produce. She also got help navigating the county bureaucracy to get her producer’s certificate and advice for finding ESL classes. Luchia is clearly proud of her business. She is popular with her customers who are from a variety of countries. Some don’t know how to cook what she sells, so she happily shares her recipe advice along with her produce! Business Loans and Ser vices for Women in Pover ty WOMEN’S EMPOWERMENT BOARD OF DIRECTORS • Sue Alpert – Membership Chair • Carol Clause – Co-President • Linda Corey – GDLF Liaison • Winifred Cox – Co-Founder, Fundraising Chair • Rebecca Drexler • Leigh Fenly – Co-Founder, Co-President • Jean Fort – MFI Relationships Chair • Janet Hamilton – Secretary • Kirsten Hanson – WomensTrust Co-Liaison • Sandy Hoover – WomensTrust Co-Liaison • Rhea Kuhlman – Treasurer • José Nuncio – Finance Chair, Adelante Liaison • Mary Rutland – STAR Center Co-Liaison • Lorna Strang – Marketing/PR Co-Chair Women’s Empowerment International P.O. Box 501406, San Diego, CA 92150-1406 www.womenempowerment.org [email protected] 619-333-0026 WE is an independent 501(c)(3) tax-exempt corporation. All donations are tax-deductible Copyright 2012 All Rights Reserved