From: Issue 41

Turning the disadvantaged into a competitive edge

22 November, 2012

Disabled? New to the country? A single mom or at-risk youth? Social Capital Partners is breaking down employment barriers that are keeping millions of North Americans out of work

Written by Tara Perkins, Contributor

Illustration Gracia Lam

In the heyday of the tech bubble, Bill Young found himself with a bank account that was growing by millions, and a gnawing feeling that something was very wrong. Young was not only the CEO of telecom upstart Optel Communications, he was also earning a small fortune thanks to an investment he made in his cousin Bob Young’s open-source software company, Red Hat. But his wealth only added to his anxiety.

“I sort of had the sense that the world had gone mad,” said Young, a generally understated individual who is exuberant when he comes to topics he’s passionate about. “I started to become a little disillusioned and told myself I need to find something else.”

The importance he placed on commerce remained intact despite the craziness of those days, but he increasingly became interested in philanthropy. Research led him to ideas emerging in pockets of the United States that combined business philosophies with charitable concepts. It didn’t take long before a new innovative social venture was born.

Young founded Social Capital Partners in 2001 as a non-profit organization. The goal was to use financing as a tool to prod socially minded organizations into hiring more workers with disadvantages.

“The challenge we picked was, how do you find meaningful employment opportunities for people who face employment barriers? Not just people with physical and mental disabilities, but also at-risk youth, single moms and new immigrants.”

Social Capital Partners (SCP) started off by offering financing and business advice to organizations that committed to hire disadvantaged workers, such as Inner City Renovations in Winnipeg, which employs aboriginals, and TurnAround Couriers in Toronto, which hires from youth shelters.

But after five years, Young had mixed feelings about SCP’s achievements.
“It worked financially and it worked socially,” he told Corporate Knights. “On the other hand, we stepped back and said: It’s taken us five years to provide 300-odd jobs to the population we are trying to help. What are 300 jobs in the global scheme of things?”

So SCP shifted its focus. It began partnering with franchises, such as Active Green and Ross auto centres, and offered start-up capital at attractive rates to potential franchisees. Those preferential rates, however, hinged on the willingness of franchisees to hire qualified job candidates that SCP helped identify through community service agencies.

“The amount of work that Social Capital Partners does is phenomenal,” said Peter Steele, general manager at Active Green and Ross. “They have established which agency to talk to in every market we operate. In St. Catharines, you’d talk to March of Dimes, but in Toronto you might talk to workplace agencies.”

The people the chain hires through the program tend to have a longer tenure than others, and many become managers, said Steele. But he acknowledged there are still barriers. “There’s resistance everywhere, including our own chain, so I don’t want to make it sound like everybody’s a saint.”

At the same time, he feels the program is making a difference in the lives of some people, including a young employee who had lost his legs in an industrial accident. “He’s really become an asset to the store he’s working in now,” said Steele. “When we first met him we got into a bit of a shouting match because he was mad at the world. He was in a wheelchair and didn’t want to be.”

The program has also been good for the company. After some time, Active Green and Ross told SCP that it wanted to use the program in its company-owned stores – ones that didn’t need the financing.

Share |

Featured Content from Issue 41 See all content

Report

The first-ever Canadian mining sustainability ranking explores which Canadian mining companies are taking the lead on sustainable measures of performance.

Report

Industry experts have compiled CK's 2012 Cleantech 10 and Next 10 list, a must-read annual snapshot of Canada's publicly traded leaders and up-and-coming startups.

Report

CK evaluates how effectively Standard and Poor's 500 top companies are incorporating gender diversity into their boards of directors

 

Report

Some firms perform better than others when it comes to following through on social and environmental responsibilities, as our first Global mining ranking demonstrates