Texarkana Gazette

Spreading the start-up gospel

Miami missionari­es preach entreprene­urship

- By Rob Wile

Miami Herald

Church attendance in America has been in a secular decline for decades—and South Florida is no exception.

With less than 40 percent of residents reporting active church attendance, Miami ranks near the bottom among major metropolit­an areas in expressing being religious. That puts it just above places like the Bay Area, Seattle, and Las Vegas, according to a 2010 Census by the Associatio­n of Statistici­ans of American Religious Bodies, which studies religiosit­y in the U.S.

But two longtime South Florida businessme­n are showing not only that faith is alive and well in South Florida but that it can also motivate entreprene­urship. Their initiative­s are a twist on social entreprene­urship, a concept gaining traction in the business world that combines social benefit with business.

James Merritt, known to friends and colleagues as “Al”, spent more than two decades running Miami-based medical supplies firm MD Internatio­nal before selling it for an undisclose­d sum. Whatever the amount, it afforded him an enviable level of material comfort.

“I decided I had enough money,” he said.

He had long donated to local charity groups and foundation­s. But as he found himself with not only more financial freedom but more time, Merritt said he was motivated to start something new.

Merritt’s church, Kendall United Methodist, had been working on service projects in Port Antonio, Jamaica, on the island’s northeast coast for several years. Without a natural harbor like Kingston, northeaste­rn Jamaica has been largely left out of the island’s main economic generators, tourism and trade. Merritt estimates one out of two young adults in the northeast are unemployed.

Until recently, his church engaged in mostly short-term impact activities, like home-building or teaching Bible school. But about three years ago, he said, he realized he wanted to leave a more lasting legacy.

“Everyone feels good, but problems persisted,” he said.

Merritt and his wife, Patricia Chin Merritt, a Jamaica native, decided to create the Portland Arts and Vocational Education (PAVE) Centre. It provides training, mentoring and hands-on experience needed to succeed in students’ vocation of choice.

“It’s cheap,” he said. “We’re having a big impact with a pretty low investment, especially compared with government programs.” He estimates they’ve spent $112,00 in the two-plus years they’ve been active, graduating 52 students. Merritt has supplied most of the funding.

Merritt is not alone among Miamians preaching the gospel of entreprene­urship.

Evan Rees, a senior vice president at SunTrust Bank with a background in agricultur­e, has created his own Christian-based entreprene­urship initiative to creative sustainabl­e community gardens in the Bahamas and hydroponic ones in Jamaica.

For example, farmers in Abaco, the Bahamian islands west of Fort Lauderdale, turned bushels of over-ripe tomatoes into 150 jars of tomato sauce that can be sold at farmer’s markets. In Jamaica, his gardens are growing 750 plants-worth of leafy-green vegetables, which are hard to come by on the island.

Merritt and Rees both say the bottom line goal of their efforts is a paraphrase of the Jewish sage Maimonides: Anticipate charity by preventing poverty.

“They have to recognize it’s an opportunit­y for them,” Rees said. “It can’t just be someone from the outside coming in and running the program.”

In recent years, social entreprene­urship—using business techniques to create societal benefit—has gained traction

“Social ventures can address problems that are too narrow in scope to spark legislativ­e activism or to attract private capital,” is how the Harvard Business Review defines it.

Secular social entreprene­urship is booming in Miami. Lauren Harper, founding director of Social Venture Partners Miami, said her organizati­on is currently helping channel investment and resources to the National Alliance of Mental Illness, the Opalocka Community Developmen­t Corporatio­n and the Community Justice Project.

It is also exploring an opportunit­y fund to invest in Opportunit­y Zones, which would connect investors with social impact projects in real estate, infrastruc­ture and small businesses within designated areas. Under the new tax laws, investors in these zones get tax deferral and reductions.

Miami-based Radical Partners, which calls itself a social impact accelerato­r, has a similar mission. It trains non-profit leaders to do their best work. Its current cohort includes leaders from a freshwater conservati­on group and a company hoping to raise the profile of black media.

For both organizati­ons, outside investors are looking for a monetary return on investment while benefiting the community. Rigorous metrics measure impact.

Merritt and Rees put a different spin on social entreprene­urship: They see their missions as charity. And while they also closely track the progress of their efforts, their goal is to leave those who enter their religious communitie­s with sustainabl­e lives of their own. If their efforts fall short financiall­y, they know they have still made an impact.

But their efforts appear to be so far succeeding.

Pastor John McIntosh of New Hope Baptist Church works with Rees on the Abaco gardening project. He said that once his 1,500 parishione­rs learn proper farming methods, they will be able to sell vegetables that otherwise would be too expensive to import.

“In my area, there are not much jobs—it’s mostly fishing,” he said. “Now it looks like it will be fishing and farming, a whole lot of people are interested.”

Ainsley Dixon, an operations director on Fisher Island, has volunteere­d to teach hospitalit­y skills for PAVE, so pupils can eventually set up their own hospitalit­y businesses, like tour guide shops or events planning.

PAVE just received a donation of four sewing machines; a former employee of JOANN Fabric and Craft Stores worker will use them to teach sewing skills. Every Jamaican hotel and villa needs soft goods like linens, towels, dishcloths, and potholders—items that could be made and sold locally, said Merritt.

“It’s social in the sense that it’s changing lives,” he said. “It’s entreprene­urial in that it’s showing people how to be self sustaining.”

“We’re having a big impact with a pretty low investment, especially compared with government programs.” —James “Al” Merritt

 ?? Al Merritt/Miami Herald/TNS ?? ■ The Portland Arts and Vocational Education Centre provides training, mentoring and hands-on experience to at-risk youth in Jamaica. The venture was created by Miami businessma­n James “Al” Merritt and his wife, Patricia Chin Merritt.
Al Merritt/Miami Herald/TNS ■ The Portland Arts and Vocational Education Centre provides training, mentoring and hands-on experience to at-risk youth in Jamaica. The venture was created by Miami businessma­n James “Al” Merritt and his wife, Patricia Chin Merritt.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States