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Self-Employment Strategies for Persons with Disabilities Kim Cordingly , Job Accommodation Network Russell Sickles, Job Squad Incorporated Brian Connaughton , Job Squad Incorporated. Presentation Overview. Introduction of presenters and programs Variety of entrepreneurial strategies
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Self-Employment Strategies for Persons • with DisabilitiesKim Cordingly, Job Accommodation Network • Russell Sickles, Job Squad Incorporated • Brian Connaughton, Job Squad Incorporated
Presentation Overview • Introduction of presenters and programs • Variety of entrepreneurial strategies • Importance of self-employment/small business to people with disabilities • Why place matters in employment, economic development, and entrepreneurship • West Virginia overview: the economy, small business, disability issues • Job Squad: Experiences at the state and local level • Questions and answers
Presenters • Dr. Kim Cordingly • Lead Consultant - Self-Employment • cordingly@jan.wvu.edu • Russell Sickles • Director of Operations and Business Development • rsickles@jobsquadinc.org • Brian Connaughton • Community Economic Development Manager • bconnaughton@jobsquadinc.org
Using JAN • Self-Employment Team • Individualized consulting and resource materials based on specific needs • Ongoing electronic and telephone access and support • JAN entrepreneurship • Website access • For-profit, non-profit, • customized employment, • home-based businesses, and telework
Job Squad Incorporated • Private nonprofit organization • Community employment (wage and/or • self-employment) and state, • federal, and commercial contracts • Community Economic Development • Program: focused on • customized employment and economic • development approaches • Provides Social Security benefits planning & analysis • Uses Discovery – an individualized and customized method for work exploration with small business ownership or wage job outcomes (or both)
Entrepreneurial Strategies • Entrepreneurship, small business ownership, and self-employment • Integrated employment (e.g., competitive and self-employment) • Customized employment • Inclusive entrepreneurship • Microenterprise development • Home-based business • Online business (e.g., Etsy, eBay) • Business within a business • Family business • Non-profit organizations(e.g., social enterprise)
Entrepreneurship • Why An Important Option? • Customized approach • Social Security & Medicaid advantages • Accommodation opportunities • Integration in community • Employment creation • Resolve transportation issues • Autonomy and ownership • Increased flexibility • Economic development (e.g., hiring others with disabilities; job creation) • Fulfills a dream and lifelong interests • Enables continuation in one’s chosen field of work
Place and the Economy Economic Diversity
Economic Development • Economic restructuring and development are place specific • Rural communities affected differently by globalization • Resource periphery and restructuring of coal industry • Increase in service sector and contingent employment • Livelihood strategies and informal economy • Changes in economic activities and social relations (e.g., household changes, gender roles) • Local responses to restructuring • Push/pull into self-employment and • home-based work (e.g., caregiving, job loss, create employment)
West Virginia Profile • W.V. has one of the oldest populations in U.S. • Wal-Mart is West Virginia’s largest employer • It was anticipated 1 in 4 West Virginians would fall into poverty during the “Great Recession” • W.V.’s unemployment rate is at its highest rate in 16 years; 6.7 percent in April 2012 – many geographic variations • 21.1 percent of households in W.V. are without sufficient net worth to subsist at the poverty level • In early 2012, W.V. had the highest rate of home ownership in the country • In late 2011, W.V. had five workers available for each job opening • Between 2006-2010, 17.4 percent of persons were living below the poverty level; national 13.8 percent • Without stimulus monies, 20,000 additional West Virginians would have slipped into poverty • Currently, W.V. ranks 2nd in the nation in U.S. • (non-agricultural) job growth
Economic Geography of West Virginia • Unemployment Rates by County in West Virginia, March 2012 • Monongalia County4.4% (higher education; technology; pharmaceutical; natural gas) • Hancock County 12.9% (Fiesta tableware; former Weirton Steel) • Hampshire County 8.6% (Agricultural; logging; tourism) • Boone County 8.7% (Coal; tourism)
W.V. Small Business Statistics • Most of W.V.’s small businesses are very small; 74.6 percent did not have employees and most employers had fewer than 20 employees • Small businesses employed 305,711 workers in 2009 • While the employment situation was weak in 2008-2009, small businesses represented 53.1 percent of net new private-sector jobs • In 2009, Morgantown placed 7th in the country for best small metro area to launch a small business • 75 percent of all businesses are non-employerbusinesses • Self-employment surged over last decade, especially among women. • Between 1997-2005, the Appalachian Regional Commission (ARC) invested nearly $43 million to promote entrepreneurship noting its importance to the future of Appalachia.
Disability Statistics in W.V. • W.V. ranks 1st in prevalence of disability among working age adults in the nation at 18.4 percent • For those in W.V. living with a disability, the poverty rate is 32.6 percent; for those without a disability it’s 12.7 percent • In 2009, the percentage of working-age civilian veterans with a VA service connected disability was 20.8 percent • From 2007-2008, the percentage of the total population with a disability grew more in W.V. than any other state - growing 4.1percent • In 2009, the employment rate of working-age people in W.V. was 28 percent; the employment rate for those without a disability was 74.2 percent • W.V. ranked 19th in the nation in 2011 based on the strength of its Medicaid services for individuals with intellectual and developmental disabilities
Communities JSI Serves • Can you talk about the communities JSI serves in W.V.?
Clients JSI Serves • Can you describe in general the individuals JSI serves? - Types of disabilities - Age range - Types of work experiences - Social Security beneficiaries - Rural areas versus cities/towns
JSI - Economic Development • JSI focuses extensively on a community economic development approach to providing customized services (e.g., wage and self-employment). Why is this strategy best suited to support people with disabilities in W.V. with their self-employment goals?
JSI – Steps to Self-Employment • Discovery • Benefits planning • Business plan development • Social Security work • incentives (e.g., PASS) • Communities of support • Mentoring process • Financing • Ongoing support - sustainability
Creating an Entrepreneurial Economy • What conditions or factors do you believe are most important in supporting people with disabilities interested in pursuing self-employment or small business ownership? • Starting with the individual • Access to capital • Enabling culture • Local network • Supportive infrastructure • Beneficial government policies (federal, state and local) • Flexibility and experimentation in policy formation and practices
Using a Compensating Balance Loan • JSI uses some innovative funding approaches. Could you talk more about the compensating loan program? Are there other innovative financing approaches your organization is considering?
Using JAN • Contact • Job Accommodation Network (JAN) • (800)526-7234 (V) & (877)781-9403 (TTY) • AskJAN.org & jan@askjan.org Job Squad, Inc. • (304)848-0850 • rsickles@jobsquadinc.org • bconnaughton@jobsquadinc.org • http://www.jobsquadinc.org/