GATE News and Updates

Program set up for laid-off workers

May 13, 2009
SOURCE: NEWS-JOURNAL

Project GATE will operate as a scholarship program, with up to 750 scholarships likely to be awarded in North Carolina. A new program becomes available this week to help laid-off rural workers start their own small business.

Project GATE will operate as a scholarship program, with up to 750 scholarships likely to be awarded in North Carolina. Selected individuals will be eligible for individual assessment of entrepreneurial skills, business and entrepreneurship courses, and focused, one-on-one business counseling. 

The program is offered as part of a U.S. Department of Labor demonstration called Project GATE or Growing America Through Entrepreneurship. GATE targets dislocated workers from rural counties for a variety of assistance directly related to starting and running a business. "This program has the potential to do far more than provide a source of income for individuals who've lost jobs," said Billy Ray Hall, president of the N.C. Rural Economic Development Center. "It can help us build homegrown economies in struggling communities all across the state." 

Unemployment in North Carolina's 85 rural counties hit 12.3 percent in February. Seventeen rural counties had jobless rates of 15 percent or higher. Rural unemployment can be attributed in large part to continuing layoffs and closings by textile, furniture and other traditional manufacturers. With other jobs scarce, self-employment may help keep rural workers in their communities, officials say. That potential is reflected in the growing numbers of dislocated workers expressing interest in creating their own job or small business, Hall said. 

Participants also will be introduced to a statewide network of business resource professionals. Those who complete workable business plans will be eligible to apply for microenterprise loans. The program, however, will not award grants to individuals or businesses. 

Locally, the Small Business Centers of eight community colleges, which serve 13 rural counties, are partnering with their local JobLink Career Centers to provide GATE services. Dislocated workers in other rural counties may participate through a "virtual site" that includes counseling by telephone and online training programs combined with training and business counseling at local community colleges. 

"I hope Project GATE will be a good starting point for dislocated workers and they will be able to benefit from the resources they offer," said Rep. Garland Pierce. 

Interested individuals should visit their local JobLink Career Center, which will help detenftine eligibility. Applications will be available at the JobLink office and online at www.ncprojectgate.org. Additional information may be obtained online or by phone toll-free at 1-877-9NC-GATE.

SOURCE: NEWS-JOURNAL

 For questions or more information about the GATE program, contact Barry Ryan at (919) 250-4314 or barry@ncruralcenter.org.

Click here to download the initial press release about the Growing America Through Entrepreneurship program.