e Maria Delorenzo | Mission Throttle | Page 5

‘Saving trees and saving lives’: Urban Ashes expands nationally with the help of ex-inmates

During an early September 1988 morning, Calvin Evans and a friend set out on what was supposed to be a routine drug run.

But the deal suddenly went south. The acquaintance they were buying from stole their dope, leading Evans’ friend to shoot and kill the man. The Mt. Clemens police hit Evans, then 18 years old, with a second-degree murder charge.

While Evans maintains he wasn’t the shooter, he doesn’t deny a role in the crime, and he admits that he “lived by the code of the street” and existed in a desperate situation likely to end with his own death or a life sentence.

Thus, he considered the 25- to 40-years he received for the murder a sort of blessing in disguise that forced him to assess his life.

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Eyes on the Horizon: The Impact Investor Survey

Eyes on the Horizon, the 2015 edition of the GIIN and J.P. Morgan annual impact investor survey, reveals a growing global market, with impact investments being made across all geographies and a range of sectors. In its fifth year, the survey continues to provide detailed insight into a number of key market variables such as the types of investors, the number and size of investments made and targeted, as well as reported risk and use of loss protection.

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Michigan can be global laboratory for new ways to solve old problems

I think most people would agree that Michigan is on the rebound. In Detroit, where I live, new restaurants are popping up on a weekly basis, national retailers are moving in, and corporations are opening new offices. This hint of change in the Pure Michigan air is still polluted, however, by many of the same intractable issues — homelessness, unequal access to education and food, and environmental degradation, to name a few.

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Mission Throttle to Offer Impact Investing Course for Executives

A dynamic learning opportunity for any mission-driven leader considering social impact investing

Mission Throttle is committed to empowering nonprofit leaders and social entrepreneurs with the knowledge and resources necessary to successfully pursue impact investment funding. We are pleased to partner with the Tony R. Wells Foundation to offer a three-day course that explores the legal, tax and financial considerations of using impact investments to support operations or social enterprise initiatives.

KEY TOPICS

  • Understand the broader social impact investing ecosystem and how industry trends are creating exciting new funding opportunities.
  • Discover how a nonprofit organization can generate earned income without jeopardizing its tax exempt status by using hybrid legal structures, contract relationships, or joint ventures.
  • Learn ways a foundation can leverage its balance sheet to support nonprofit organizations and social enterprises beyond grants.
  • Assess your organization’s risk from a lender’s perspective and learn about easy first steps to prepare to receive impact investment funding.

PROGRAM DATES

Tuesday, February 10th – 12th 2015
9:00 a.m – 5:00 p.m.Two Towne Square
Southfield, MI 48076

PROGRAM FEE

$2,100 (scholarships are available in amounts of 60-100% of the program fee)

Learn More 

Apply now

Common Ground cuts hospitalizations, costs by widening access to services

Seeking ways to expand and improve its services for mental health patients in Oakland County, Common Ground looked in a surprising direction — inward.

It had offered a number of programs, including a crisis hotline, the mobile Crisis Intervention Recovery Team, a crisis residential program, a runaway and homeless youth shelter in Royal Oak, a transitional living program for homeless ages 16-23 and other services, such as its victims of crime counseling and advocacy program.

But those programs had been operating in silos and rarely, if ever, were offered to the mental health clients it had been assessing for psychiatric hospitalization under a contract with Oakland County Community Mental Health Authority.

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Mission Throttle Invests in A2B Bikeshare

Mission Throttle has invested in A2B Bikeshare, a Michigan-based social enterprise dedicated to helping urban communities of all sizes become better connected, healthier, and more environmentally responsible.

A2B Bikeshare provides urban communities with a distributed network of bikes that contain automated, solar-powered software, at rental stations in which bikes are made available for individual riders for short-term use (thirty minutes to one hour). Once rented, a bike can be returned to any other station. The A2B system provides accessible, affordable, environmentally sound transportation solutions for any urban area without using taxpayer subsidies.

“We are grateful for the funding from Mission Throttle and excited to see this program thrive in Michigan and beyond,” A2B Bikeshare Founder and CEO Ansgar Strother said. “Our success is made possible because of the support from a wide range of community partners who all share our belief in accessible urban transportation.”

With a swipe of a credit card on their bike of choice, A2B Bikeshare members can rent a bike and new riders can register for membership. This streamlined process enables riders to quickly check out bikes and begin their ride. The on-bike software provides maps and directions and can display promotions for local organizations as riders stop nearby. An A2B Bikeshare mobile app is available on personal smartphones and, in conjunction with the A2B Bikeshare website, allows access to a real-time system map which shows bike and station availability. The personal app also allows members to place short-term reservations that ensure a currently-docked bike will still be available when they arrive at the station.

“Communities throughout the U.S. are looking for affordable, healthy, and environmentally friendly ways for community members to navigate around their urban centers,” says Jamie Shea, Managing Director of Investments for Mission Throttle. “Traditional methods such as walking, taxis, cars, buses, and rail systems only provide part of the solution. We are pleased to be partnering with a social enterprise that has such a strong model, and we believe that over time this program will contribute to the health and economic vitality of Michigan’s urban communities.”

A2B Bikeshare maintains an in-house engineering team to assist individual communities with developing custom bike sharing solutions. A2B successfully piloted its system in Lansing, Michigan in 2013 and will be returning there this spring to expand the current operation. They also plan to launch a 120-bike system this summer in the City of Fairbanks, Alaska.

About A2B
A2B Bikeshare is a transportation startup company that is passionate about helping communities become better connected, healthy and environmentally responsible. Founded in 2011 with support from University of Michigan’s Center for Entrepreneurship, A2B Bikeshare was created to address a need for affordable and flexible urban transit.

About Mission Throttle
Mission Throttle, LLC is an impact investing firm dedicated to accelerating positive social change in our local community. We invest in, advise, and support mission-driven organizations and entrepreneurs that intend to use business solutions to generate positive social outcomes. Although our work is based and focused in Michigan, we share our learning broadly, supporting tools and research to drive the global impact investing system forward.

Ann Arbor nonprofit wins top prize, raises $94,850 in RiseDetroit crowdfunding challenge

Ann Arbor-based Non-Profit Enterprise at Work leapfrogged two other leading contenders on crowdfunding website Crowdrise, to take the $50,000 grand prize for raising the most money in the RiseDetroit Challenge. The winning nonprofit, which does business as NEW: Solutions for Nonprofits, more than doubled its fundraising total in a surge between last Wednesday afternoon and the contest’s conclusion Thursday at 11:59 p.m.

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A Way for Local Businesses to Grow

ON Tuesday, Michigan became the first state in the country to enact a law allowing the modern equivalent of a local stock market. The Michigan Investment Markets bill went little noticed. But it revives a forgotten American tradition that once fueled economic growth — and perhaps could again.

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