These Funding and Business Assistance Programs Are Helping Felons Restart Their Lives
Even incarcerated felons can get funding for a startup business if they know where to look.
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For incarcerated felons and those who have been released, there are more funding choices than ever for starting a business. There are even training opportunities and mentorship programs.
Wait. Back up. Felons start businesses?
Yes, they do! Starting a business a terrific way to wipe the slate clean and start over. No one needs to know the business owner has a criminal record. But there’s no way to guarantee a funding provider won’t conduct a background check either.
Related: Surprising Funding Ideas for Your Business
Here are great business resources for convicted felons.
Mostly non-funding.
These services help felons and ex-convicts get their own funding.
1. The correctional facility
For those incarcerated at present, there may be options through the facility itself. California inmates can work with (post-release), (develop skills for a technology startup), and (post-release).
Inmates in Colorado, Connecticut, Illinois, New York, and Washington can also work with Defy Ventures. Indiana, Kansas, Michigan, and Oklahoma inmates can also work with The Last Mile.
Oregon and Washington state inmates can work with for training, , and to start and grow a business.
In, Tennessee, offers training, networking, mentoring, and more for inmates. Ohio inmates can receive in-prison education from the , OPEP. In Virginia, offers training.
Florida’s female inmates can work with . The program offers a course on how to write a business plan and where to find funding to start a small business.
In Texas, the , PEP, has an in-prison educational program which is a lot like a “mini-MBA.” Released participants can access a weekly “eSchool” program. For those completing the program, anyone starting a new business qualifies for a $500 eSchool Completion Bonus. This is a reimbursement for qualifying, to help with basic small business start-up costs.
2. HelpForFelons.org
has lists of grants and loans for felons and links to reentry programs around the country. Getting thorough information involves clicking links and reviewing sites that come up to see if they apply.
3. Inmates to Âé¶¹Éçs
In North Carolina, the program offers in-person entrepreneurial training and online courses.
4. Your local community
This will vary greatly from place to place, but be sure to check all the available resources in the county you live in to see what you can learn.
Related: What Âé¶¹Éçs Need to Know About Early-Stage Funding
Federal loans and grants
1. Federal education loans for felons
Financial need is the main criterion for getting a Pell Grant or student loan for going back to school. For a Pell Grant, a person can apply while still an inmate but cannot receive funds until release.
2. Grants.gov
Use to search for federal government grants under a particular business idea, or by heritage or nationality, or other personal characteristics, rather than by the term “felon.”
There are more grants for nonprofits than for-profit businesses. Starting a nonprofit is often the best bet for getting federal government monies.
3. SBA microloans
are easier to get than standard SBA loans. Amounts run under $50,000, with an average of about $13,000.
A felony conviction does not automatically disqualify a person from getting an SBA loan. However, a conviction for a “crime of moral turpitude” does. In general, these crimes involve dishonesty, like embezzlement, or violence, like aggravated assault.
Federal non-monetary
1. Small Business Development Centers
The helps business owners and entrepreneurs with free advice and counseling from experts like lawyers, accountants, and marketing professionals. They host networking events, seminars, and webinars to help anyone start and grow a small business.
2. SCORE
At ,professionals, entrepreneurs, and former business owners serve as mentors, providing free consulting and advice. Find a local SCORE chapter or get mentoring online. The site offers resources like online courses, articles, webinars, etc.
Crowdfunding
1. Indiegogo and Kickstarter
and can help ex-offenders get financing to start businesses and bring new product ideas or inventions to life.
2. GoFundMe
is a personal financing site. Since the site acts as the go-between, donors feel confident giving money.
Online lending
1. Prosper
is a peer-to-peer lending platform. The entire process is online, with no background check. Hence criminal history does not affect getting a loan.
Related: Stages of Funding a Startup
Funding through working.
1. Freelancer marketplaces
Starting a business from home is often low cost and low risk. Ex-convicts with skills in graphic design, writing, IT, or marketing, can try , , and .
Justice-served entrepreneurs make the world a better place.
Normally, more than half of all within three years. But recidivism rates for ex-convicts who go through reentry programs can be as low as .
For incarcerated felons and those who have been released, there are more funding choices than ever for starting a business. There are even training opportunities and mentorship programs.
Wait. Back up. Felons start businesses?
Yes, they do! Starting a business a terrific way to wipe the slate clean and start over. No one needs to know the business owner has a criminal record. But there’s no way to guarantee a funding provider won’t conduct a background check either.