KANE — The nonprofit PA Wilds Center for Entrepreneurship is encouraging small tourism-related businesses in the 13 counties of the Pennsylvania Wilds to join its free network as a way to help prep for the upcoming small business grant round announced this week by Gov. Tom Wolf.
The state’s network of Community Development Financial Institutions, or CDFIs, will be distributing more than $225M in grant funds statewide to small businesses impacted by COVID-19 shutdowns. The application for the grant program is in development.
David Kahley, President and CEO of The Progress Fund, the CDFI that serves the Pennsylvania Wilds region, said Wednesday the COVID grant program will be geared toward Main Street type, for-profit businesses with fewer than 25 full-time employees and less than $1 million in annual gross sales revenues. He anticipated the application period to open around July 1. The PA Department of Community and Economic Development has posted general guidelines for the program.
PA Wilds Center, which operates programs for rural communities, entrepreneurs and small businesses involved in growing the region’s $1.8 billion nature and heritage tourism industry, has teamed up with The Progress Fund to get COVID grant funds into the important tourism economy of the Pennsylvania Wilds.
More than 240 small businesses — outfitters, lodges, restaurants, breweries, wineries, distilleries, B&Bs, retailers, makers, craft ag food producers, and creative services companies — from across the PA Wilds already participate in the Center’s free business network, The Wilds Cooperative of PA, as do many chambers, visitor bureaus, state parks and other non-profit partners.
“Tourism makes up 11 percent of the Pennsylvania Wilds’ economy and has been heavily impacted due to closures and restrictions on travel, as highlighted in our recent white paper,” said PA Wilds Center CEO Ta Enos. “Our region has seen four decades of population decline due to industry losses. To have a wave of service-sector closures on top of that would be devastating to our rural communities. These grants are critical to helping stop that.”
Enos invited small tourism-related businesses in the Pennsylvania Wilds that are not already part of the Center’s network to join it at WildsCoPA.org to stay in the loop on any updates the Center has on the grant program. There is no membership fee to join.
In May, PA Wilds Center launched a facebook live interview series where it pays small businesses in the Wilds Cooperative $250 to share pivots and reopening strategies they are using to keep their companies viable amid the COVID public health crisis. More than a dozen interviews in the Wilds Are Working: Rural Entrepreneurs in Uncharted Times Series have already gone live.
The COVID grant funding was developed in partnership with state lawmakers and allocated through the recently enacted state budget, which included $2.6 billion in federal stimulus funds through the Coronavirus Aid, Relief, and Economic Security (CARES) Act, of which $225 million was earmarked for relief for small businesses.
Kahley said it is a goal of the CDFIs to have a portion of the grants go to rural areas, and the Progress Fund has been working with The Center for Rural PA, the state’s Rural Development Council and others to provide information to the group developing the application.