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HuffPost's Greatest Person Of The Day: Joe Selvaggio, Founder Of MicroGrants

The Huffington Post   First Posted: 01/05/11 10:37 AM ET Updated: 05/25/11 07:25 PM ET

Joe Selvaggio

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Sometimes all it takes is a little bit of faith for a struggling individual to finally find success. With MicroGrants, Joe Selvaggio is helping those he calls "people of potential" bridge the gap to their goals.

MicroGrants was founded in 2006, the same year that Mohammed Yunus won the Nobel Prize for pioneering a system of microloans to those in need with his Grameen Bank. The key distinction of MicroGrants, however, is that the program gives out $1,000 grants, rather than loans.

"Poor people have too much debt," Joe said. "It's too risky for them to put their own skin in the game."

Instead, MicroGrants gives the money outright to applicants who can submit their bid through twelve partner organizations in Minneapolis, Minnesota, where they are based. Assisting people in everything from buying the supplies they need to get a business running, to helping pay for educational training courses, or even to upgrade a vehicle for better transportation to work.

Take Shegitu: as an immigrant from Ethiopia, Shegitu found her way into a job, while also working at non-profits to help single mothers find jobs. Discovering that many of the women she met did not have the basic skills to find employment, she decided to start her own small cleaning business, though she lacked the money for a location or supplies. With her MicroGrant, Shegitu was able not only to launch her business, but currently employs 38 women while running several non-profits on the side to benefit women in need of assistance.

Joe, 73, has spent the past forty years dedicated to closing the gap between the wealthy and the poor. After leaving the Catholic ministry for a career in social justice, he founded the Project for Pride in Living and the One Percent Club. The first assists the impoverished to become self-sufficient through housing, employment training, education, and support services. The second encourages the wealthy to donate 1 percent of their net worth or 5 percent of their annual income each year to the charity of their choice.

According to Joe, his faith in the potential for all people to succeed, given the chance, stems from his childhood in Chicago as the child of Italian immigrants.

"It's that immigrant mentality--work hard and make more money, and get better jobs, more education..." he said. MicroGrants lets their grantees get the first foot off the ground so they can work to support themselves.

MicroGrants operates on a donation-based budget that has reached about $500,000 each year, allowing them to give out one or two loans each week. Joe credits the easy logic of reciprocity for the generosity that has allowed the organization to continue on.

"The heart message is stronger than the head--'I was helped by somebody, why not take a chance and help somebody?'" he said. "It's a simple concept: people launch themselves into self sufficiency, it's a very easy thing to understand."

Certainly, Joe has made a life of communicating that concept to others. Assigned to a parish in an inner city in Minnesota, he could not ignore his desire to help the poor become more affluent, and so left priesthood to pursue his passion. After a few years working to sell mutual funds, he realized that there were enough people willing to give their money to the less-fortunate that he could focus solely on administrating the exchange between givers and receivers.

Though Joe hopes that MicroGrants will go nationwide, or at least branch out to other states soon, he has only fond words for his longtime home, the Twin Cities.

"It's a very good culture of giving here in Minneapolis," he said. "There are good, generous, compassionate people here."

Joe, who will be 74 soon, has not wearied of his work in the past forty years.

"I am still excited about this stuff, I never get tired of it," he said. "Seeing people really improve their lives and become self-sufficient is universally accepted--to see people working and making their own way in life is a bridge between the rich and the poor."

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Sometimes all it takes is a little bit of faith for a struggling individual to finally find success. With MicroGrants, Joe Selvaggio is helping those he calls "people of potential" bridge the gap...
Sometimes all it takes is a little bit of faith for a struggling individual to finally find success. With MicroGrants, Joe Selvaggio is helping those he calls "people of potential" bridge the gap...
 
 
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07:09 AM on 01/07/2011
This is something Im very interested in. What a wonderful way to help others.People like him inspire me and renew my believe in my fellow man.Thank you for being such a mindful person.
08:19 AM on 01/06/2011
Way to go, Uncle Joe! After all these years, you still inspire me.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
anitaj
02:16 AM on 01/06/2011
It is amazing how much can be accomplished with strategic, small grants. Kudos to Mr. Selvaggio for his efforts.
05:35 PM on 01/05/2011
Joe is one of the most genuine people I've ever met and a real credit to humanity. What an inspiration!
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human2008
You only live once, so live for a human purpose.
03:43 PM on 01/05/2011
Wonderful!
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
riversideliberal
03:17 PM on 01/05/2011
How many people could get off the streets if they just had $2000? this could cover first and last, some sheets and towels, a mattress, a few outfits for work, a bus pass, a few pots and plates. This would be a miracle of hundreds of thousands of homeless people.

How many people could zero out a debt or high interest credit card if they just had a few thousand dollars in the form of a microgrant (free money) or microloan (zero or low interest)?

Microgrants, or even microloans, could change millions of lives.

Even for those who don't want to start a business, this could be a poverty-reducing godsend!

I support anyone who provides this kind of support to people who genuinely want to improve their lives, reduce their poverty, move forward, and be self-sufficient.

(I know, someone's going to comment that some of the money would be wasted, some of the people would blow it on drugs or pizza, some of the loans would not be paid back. All true. But you know, the Grameen microloans in India have a very high repayment rate, and most people really do want to be self-sufficient. It's worth trying, even if it wouldn't have a perfect success rate.)
02:06 PM on 01/05/2011
I received a microgrant through Joe's program. It has helped me get a small book off the ground, and I now have some publishers interested in it.! Thanks Joe!
Sherri Faye
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
pattyrenee
01:51 PM on 01/05/2011
Thank you, Joe! What a guy!
12:49 PM on 01/05/2011
Glad to meet you Joe .....................................................you are doing a beautiful thing .

I have used your service a couple of times ( even to help out a few people here ) .
thank you.
12:39 PM on 01/05/2011
I am a friend of Joe and have worked as a volunteer with MicroGrants in the past few years. The organization actually gives out 2 grants per day, not per week as this article indicates. I have met many participants of this program and have been fortunate to see first hand the amazing power that a grant like this gives to poor people who just want to pull themselves up and work hard to make their lives better for themselves and their family.

Joe has done with MicroGrants exactly what Beth Kanter http://www.bethkanter.org/ talks about in her Book "Networked Nonprofits" http://www.bethkanter.org/the-networked-nonprofit/ which is to build and use networks to succeed both in fundraising and program development/management. Joe may be old school and not be a big social media person, but he has used his strong Minneapolis network to raise the $1/2 million dollars each year the old fashioned way - by meeting with donors he has built great relationships with over the past 40 years, asking them to give and then partnering with local nonprofits to actually oversee the selection of grantees, mentorship and ongoing monitoring of their success. MicroGrants has no paid employees, everyone is a volunteer including Joe!

If you have not visited the MicroGrants website I urge you to check it out: http://microgrants.net/ and perhaps you will feel motivated to give and change someone's life today. It's powerful stuff!

Nicole Harrison
@socialnicole
www.socialnicole.com
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
seventhrama
Retired health educator/Ponderer of the Universe
11:37 AM on 01/05/2011
Call them micro grants, mini grants, or seed money the concept is intriguing. During the 90s, I work for the San Francisco Community Partnership Program where neighborhoods were given funding to develop and implement substance abuse prevention strategies for their neighborhoods. In addition, each neighborhood developed and implemented their own evaluation plan The program was so successful that the beverage industry successfully lobbied Congress to defund the program. Micro or mini grants are not rocket science; but there will always be those who wish to maintain the status quo of certain socioeconomic groups for their own nefarious reasons.