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Welcome ACCIONISTA Summer Interns!

CEO Paul Quintero inspiring us to think beyond any limits we have set for ourselves

CEO Paul Quintero inspiring us to think beyond any limits we have set for ourselves

On Wednesday we had a orientation at ACCION USA for our summer interns- 14 interns joined from New York and remotely from Atlanta and Boston through our gotomeeting platform and via Skype.

A few of the most memorable moments were when our “historian” Carmen told stories about our first clients, seeing the interns in Boston live through Skype video and of course, our CEO Paul Quintero uplifting everyone’s spirits and dreams about the limitless possibilities at ACCION USA.

A warm welcome to our entire Summer ACCION USA intern brigade!

In Atlanta:

  • David McNeill is a Lending and Outreach Intern who recently returned from his Kiva Fellowship in Sierra Leon- he is very excited about combining his international microfinance experience with work in Atlanta at ACCION USA.

In New York:

  • Airi Kobayashi is a Communications Intern studying IT Business at Notre Dame University. Airi speaks Japanese and Mandarin and has worked in marketing, technology, and design.
  • Alvaro Gutierrez is a Lending Intern. Alvaro studied Business Administration and has experience teaching and working with entrepreneurs in his home country of Chile. Alvaro also worked as an Business Executive in The Nielsen Company.
  • Kimberly Edwards is a Lending and Financial Education Intern from Columbia University doing her year-long field placement at ACCION USA. Kimberly has previous microfinance experience working at Self Help in North Carolina.
  • Alicia Quinn is a Volunteer Partnerships and Business Development Intern. Alicia is graduate intern from Columbia University doing her year-long field placement at ACCION USA. Alicia worked in health care administration for 7 years in Vail, Colorado.
  • Etel Echevarria is a Lending Intern. A native to Argentina, Etel is completing her MPA at City University of New York. Etel previously interned at Make The Road New York.
  • Matt Roth is a Lending In tern. Matt recently returned from the Peace Corps in El Salvador and is also working part-time in homeless outreach in New York City.
  • Lauren Yothers is a Communications Intern who studied at the University of Miami. Lauren speaks Spanish and Portuguese and also worked in community development with a renowned activist and anthropologist in Haiti.
  • Mauricio Delgado is a Lending Intern. A native to Ecuador, Mauricio completed his Business Administration degree from Queens college. Mauricio has many experiences working with small business in his home country and in the U.S.
  • John Remson is a Resource De velopment Intern. John recently graduated from the University of Maryland with a degree in Government and Politics. John previously worked as an enumerator for the United States Census Bureau.
  • Marisa Casellas is the Kiva Intern and a graduate student at NYU Wagner. Marisa worked for three years at the Hispanic Federation of New York and is fluent in Spanish and Italian.

In Boston:

  • Hajar Elaalej is a lending summer interns.  Hajar recently graduated from Boston University with a double major in Economics and International Relations.  She is from Morocco however, moved to Boston to finish her studies in 2008.  She served at BU as the President of the Arab-Israeli Peace Alliance.
  • Brinya Bjork is a Microtest Inte rn studying Business Administration from Notre Dame University. She has many experienences working as an advocate for the disabled, immigrant, women, homesless, and victims of natural disaster.
  • Ryan Quillard is a Microtest Intern hailing from the University of Notre Dame where he studies Business Adminisatration. He has interned and/or worked at the Center For Homesless, Big Brothers and Big Sisters and as a swimming instructor in New Orleans.
  • Carolyn McMahon is Managing Intern for Microtest. She is completing her Masters degree from the Fletcher School at Tufts University. She has vast experience in Justice working at a microcredit bank in Senegal, with a peace and justice organizations in San Fransc iso and San Deigo. She is driven to combine her experience and knowledge of microfinance with peace building initiatives.

Welcome to our newest Accionistas-Much of the success of ACCION USA is owed to the extraordinary talent and efforts of interns and volunteers.New York Interns returning from lunch at client restaurant Dardanel

New York Interns returning from lunch at client restaurant, Dardanel


What’s a Bike Doing In ACCION USA’s Bathroom?

September 23rd, 2010 by Erica Dorn in Current Events
I heard the word  “MicroBike” being spoken around the ACCION USA office and my ears immediately perked. As a bike commuter, MicroBike means that my two passions—microfinance and biking—had finally converged. I’m not alone: other staff members at ACCION USA share my passion and so our work attire and habits have been temporarily transformed.
You have to see what I mean by taking a look at the recent “footage” we have from around the office.  Watch the video, then go and www.microbike.org and register to ride with ACCION USA and ACCION International to help us “pedal against poverty.”

What is MicroBike, and how do I get involved?

MicroBike is a global microfinance awareness and fundraising event that is taking place October 1-3, 2010.  Anyone can register a team, create a unique ride, promote the ride and fundraise for microfinance. You can also join one of the many teams and routes that have already been established. Go to www.microbike.org to learn more.

If you are in New York City you can ride with ACCION USA on one of our two established routes that converge at City Hall.
Pick one of two ACCION USA team locations and meet at by 9:45AM. Riders will enjoy coffee and conversation, along with a group riding safety overview before hitting the road at 10:30AM sharp.
Brooklyn (12 miles)Cheryl’s Global Soul Restaurant, 236 Underhill Ave, Brooklyn (Eastern Pkwy/Brooklyn Museum Subway Stop)
Upper Manhattan (10 miles)Tanto Dulce Café, 3446 Broadway (at 140th Street)
Finish Line Festivities: Join us at Thomas Payne Park (near City Hall) for a finish line event around 11:30 a.m. Celebrate the end to a rewarding ride with ACCION USA CEO, Gina Harman and ACCION International CEO, Michael Schlein at the finish line.  We’ll have raffle items, prizes, and treats galore to send you cycling home happy!
See you at the proverbial finish line!
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Microfinance: What’s In It for Today’s Teens?

August 16th, 2010 by admin in Youth Microfinance Series

This post is presented as part of our Youth Microfinance blog series. By nurturing student thought leadership, ACCION USA is helping to build future leadership for the microfinance industry as a whole. We hope that you’ll enjoy the ideas and perspectives of ACCION USA’s youth leaders as well as Main Street Microfinance’s regular posts from industry professionals.

By: Percy Allison

What attracts a high school senior to microfinance?

It may be hard to draw the comparison between a stusoccer2.jpg_0[1]dent’s soccer struggle and the effort of the entrepreneur, but I would argue that the raw similarities are surprisingly real.

During four years of struggling to become the varsity starting goalie I learned about risk, drive, persistence and perseverance.

Every entrepreneur is taking a risk. They are starting their own business. They are taking a chance to succeed. Every young person takes risks. Every young person needs someone to give them a chance to prove to the world that they too can do it. Whether it is the teacher staying after class and giving an inspirational pep talk or the football coach giving the quarterback another chance after he threw the game-losing interception – every young person needs someone to believe in them – and so does the entrepreneur.

This is why so many young people are fired up by microfinance. It is other people being creative and finding their own way. So are we. It is other people putting their heart out for something. So are we. It is other people being courageous, intelligent and believing in themselves and more importantly believing in the world to support them. I guess that is the big thing. They believe. As young people, that is the most important thing. We believe. We are new to life and we believe in it. We want to find our way. These entrepreneurs share that same contagious passion. How could we not be inspired? How could we not see ourselves in the ACCION USA client?

There are a ton of organizations and a variety of ways to help alleviate poverty and do good. But among all of those, microfinance finds a special place in the heart of teens. In this way, helping the entrepreneur is like helping ourselves — seeing them achieve is seeing ourselves achieve. And it all is confirming our belief that in the end, success is believing in yourself.


The Incredible, Shrinking Tax Refund!

February 22nd, 2010 by speterson in ACCION USA in Action, Current Events, Financial Education
ACCION USA provides taxpayers with the financial education and resources they need to make smart, informed decisions about RALs.

ACCION USA provides taxpayers with the financial education and resources they need to make smart, informed decisions about RALs.

And so it begins. Tax season. The time of year when tax prep software commercials sandwich prime time TV shows and your friends in the tax prep industry sleep on office couches. For many like myself, it’s another opportunity to procrastinate for four months and then spend my entire refund on priority mail.

Unfortunately, this time of year is also notorious for coercion and scheming, and the latest trend is in refund anticipation loans (RALs). A tax preparer may advertise these loans as “instant loans” or “instant refunds” – in reality, the only instant thing about them is the speed with which your real refund will shrink.

Here’s how it works: your tax preparer offers you a RAL; you accept the offer and sign a document, which is essentially a loan agreement authorizing the preparer to use your refund as a guarantee, with interest rates as high as 50-500% a year; the loan is (instantly!) approved; you walk away with fast cash but actually receive a significantly smaller refund; and the tax preparer makes one hefty profit.

Certainly, the tax prep industry provides a highly-demanded service for many, many people. But according to the Woodstock Institute, 8.67 million taxpayers received RALs in 2007. A RAL may very well have been an appropriate solution for some of these individuals, but I will venture to guess that they comprise only a small portion of that 8.67 million. What about the millions who are essentially handing over their hard-earned money? I believe the answer lies in education and empowerment.

ACCION USA’s financial education team is on top of this. We have already distributed an article addressing RALs, and we are featuring RALs in our online tip of the month. In addition to educating clients on the implications of refund anticipation loans, we also provide them with valuable resources, including smart alternatives to RALs, lists of free tax preparation locations (including our Miami, FL office), and helpful websites. These resources not only have the power to produce more informed taxpayers; but they also have the potential to mold a new generation of educated, responsible, and empowered consumers.

This type of generational change may not be instant – but in terms of the return, the investment is surely worth the wait.


What Makes an Entrepreneur an Entrepreneur?

August 18th, 2009 by Elise Tosun in Stories from the Field, Success Stories
A single mother working hard to put her daughters through school. A shoe repairman proudly opening his own shop after years of working as an apprentice. An ambitious young man starting his own company based on his passion. Any of these stories could describe the clients of a microfinance institution in India or Brazil, but they don’t— they describe the U.S. clients I’ve gotten familiar with as an intern for ACCION USA.
ACCION USA borrower Frederick at his emissions testing center.

ACCION USA borrower Frederick at his emissions testing center.

“The driving need isn’t different, and the dreams aren’t different, and the final outcomes may be influenced by different factors, but in essence [U.S. and international borrowers] aren’t different,” said Gina Harman, ACCION USA’s CEO, shortly before the organization formed its groundbreaking partnership with Kiva, regarded primarily for its work in the developing world. She stressed the importance of conveying what a massive change small business ownership can mean for a client – “it’s about the human desire to provide, and the devotion to doing whatever has to be done to make it work.”

Her words describe exactly what I’ve been experiencing for the last few weeks, as I meet with clients and hear stories revealing their drive for success. I know if I had a business idea that my local bank didn’t seem to believe in enough to give me a loan, I would probably just resign myself to thinking it was harebrained in the first place and call it a day. ACCION USA borrowers do just the opposite—when they are turned down by a bank, they come to us instead.

Just last week I spoke with Frederick, an ACCION USA borrower who had tired of working for government agencies as a fire inspector and dreamed of starting his own emissions inspection business. After he told me he was turned down by a bank before he came to ACCION USA, I asked him why he was so devoted to starting his own business.

“What makes you happy?” I asked him.

“Giving others the best service I can,” he said. “I knew I couldn’t do that unless I was working for myself.”

How often do we complain about our lack of professional fulfillment without attempting to do something about it? When people like Frederick share their stories and express the devotion with which they tackle, as Gina said, “whatever has to be done,” it should make us all reflect on the choices we have to pursue our own ambitions.

Elise Tosun has a background in economics and has worked on designing financial products for farmers in India and for a microfinance investment fund in New York. She is currently the Kiva Program Intern at ACCION USA.


A Mainstreet Microfinance Mission

August 13th, 2009 by Erica Dorn in Stories from the Field, Uncategorized

On one of my very first missions as a Kiva Fellow, I wandered through a maze of food cart vendors searching for a borrower. A newbie to the profession, I thought  his address would be enough to locate him to take a the photo needed for his profile. As anyone who has ever tried to find anything in a developing country, region, or neighborhood will tell you, I needed much more than just an address. I was surrounded by food carts in all directions, slinging everything from fruit and pretzels to dumplings and falafel. Where was I? Not in India, or Kenya, or Guatemala. No, I was in downtown Manhattan.

As a Kiva Fellow for ACCION USA, I learned that  New York borrowers were more similar to international borrowers than not. If  75% of ACCION USA’s borrowers are immigrants, it’s even possible that some of them could have been microloan borrowers in their home country before applying at ACCION USA!

Perhaps one of the most revolutionary aspects of ACCION USA’s jump into the person-to-person lending market is just that: the divide between Kiva lenders and borrowers has grown much smaller. As one Kiva/ACCION USA lender recently conveyed to me, her son was inspired by Ray’s business in Atlanta. Her son receives his allowance in Kiva cash, and he is an avid lender. Seeing a successful small business being built closer to home has inspired him, and has made the other business he sees around the world that much more real and respected.

My last attempt to contact the elusive food cart borrower landed me at a hot dog cart smack dab in the spot where my guy had been 10 minutes prior. I decided to strike up conversation with his replacement.

“So where are you from?” I asked.

“Bangladesh,” he said- sounded like music to my ears. I bought the quintessential NYC treat from him, as we chatted about Muhammad Yunus and the American dream. We both concluded that New York City is an incredible and magical city. I couldn’t have asked for a better end to my Kiva mission – to learn that microentrepreneurs here in the U.S. are as inspiring and resourceful as those in the developing world.

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Erica Dorn served as Kiva’s first domestic Fellow, she now coordinates the Kiva program at ACCION USA. Learn more about Erica’s U.S. microlending adventures at Vimeo.


You’d Never Guess (or Would You?)

May 18th, 2009 by Georgia Team in Stories from the Field

Which state is number one in entrepreneurship in the nation? That’s right: our very own state of Georgia. I, too, was surprised to learn of the findings of the Kauffman Foundation’s 2008 Index of Entrepreneurial Activity, released earlier this month. Georgia ranks first, with 580 entrepreneurs per 100,000 adults, and our capital Atlanta tops U.S. metropolitan cities with 740 per 100,000 adults!

Home to more than just peaches, Georgia ranks first in entrepreneurs per capita.

Home to more than just peaches, Georgia ranks first in entrepreneurs per capita.

Then again it should not have been a surprise given that working at ACCION USA we come in daily contact with many budding and seasoned entrepreneurs. So we like to think that we had something to do with Georgia’s ranking. Last year, ACCION USA Georgia alone helped 134 entrepreneurs with $751,082 in loans. Interestingly, Massachusetts and New York, where two of the other ACCION USA offices operate, follow in the third and fourth spot. Impressive, right? And there’s good news throughout the country, with all regions showing an increase in entrepreneurial activity from 2007 to 2008. With our Internet lending we reach out and help entrepreneurs all over the nation, so “yay” to us ACCIONistas (and goes without saying our many colleagues and partners in the microfinance field).

Kudos also go to the small business owners: the Index reports that it is the smallest businesses just like our clients (a good percentage of which are immigrant-owned) that drive this trend. Larger businesses, on the other hand, show a decline in entrepreneurial activity, which is not surprising given the current state of our economy. Small businesses come to the rescue, yet again, and tackle recession by creating jobs and increasing prospects for their families, employees and communities. This just goes to prove that ACCION USA’s mission is right on target. So the next time you come across an entrepreneur who is looking for help with starting or growing a business, send him/her our way; chances are there is one right around the corner.

As for us down South, that person is probably sitting right next to you. So if the rest of you still think the South is laid back – a common (mis)perception – think again all y’all. Come visit Georgia, the state of entrepreneurs (oh, yes, and peaches too).


Looking for Some Inspiration?

May 13th, 2009 by Erica Dorn in Politics & Public Policy

If you need some energy or inspiration I can recommend one women who may provide that- Congresswomen Nydia Velasquez. She is a fierce and energetic woman who is completely dedicated to supporting small businesses.

 

This week at Brooklyn Borough Hall Velasquez opened a panel discussion about the current economic stimulus package and what has been implemented to help small business in America. The panel included CFO Paul Quintero of ACCION USA.

 

Quintero spoke warmly about AUSA’s commitment to its communities and the importance of collaboration within the industry. Velasquez resounded with extreme vigor and honesty about the role of government in helping small businesses. She talked about the importance of supporting institutions like AUSA, before leaving to attend a similar rally in Manhattan.

 

After the panel spoke, there was a short discussion and later entrepreneurs from diverse industries mingled to share ideas and learn more. I watched as Glamis Haro, an AUSA loan consultant representing Brooklyn listened to the challenges, hopes, and concerns of each individual and spoke wholeheartedly to them about their options for attaining capital through ACCION USA.

 

As I was leaving, in walked Velasquez again! She had finished her delivery at the other small business rally and was anxious to be in the crowd talking to entrepreneurs in Brooklyn. A young woman came running to give her a warm embrace and many other entrepreneurs gathered as the congresswomen lent an open ear. Velasquez, along with AUSA, understands that by supporting small businesses you are supporting something much larger.

 

Check out the video to see both the commitment and dedication conveyed by Velasquez and Quintero.

 

 

 

 

ACCION USA and Nydia Velasquez from Erica Dorn on Vimeo.