Isles Financial Solutions Receives Funding from Citi Community Development

Trenton, N.J. – Summary: Most of us are hard-wired to make illogical decisions about our money at times, especially when we are under financial duress – a constant pressure for a majority of lower income workers.  Isles has developed  tools  and techniques to help people overcome those tendencies and make it easier for them to reduce debt and improve their financial decisions. Using what we’ve learned from years of experience and research on behavioral psychology, we teach financial concepts, but more importantly we create realistic budgets, automate savings and payments, refinance high cost debt, and provide one on one coaching until good habits are learned and practiced.  Good financial decision-making is a key building block for self-reliance. Citi agrees.

Isles, Inc. recently received a $160,000 contribution from Citi Community Development to support the expansion of Isles Financial Solutions. Isles Financial Solutions (IFS) is an employer-based financial capability initiative for low-wage workers, designed to create positive, long-term behavior change in financial knowledge and decision-making.  

Isles empowers IFS customers to improve their financial capacity through an innovative mix of financial coaching, credit-building finance, savings products and group-based learning.  Currently, Isles works with employees at Princeton University and Trenton community members.  With this funding, Isles will expand these services at Princeton University as well as begin working with  at least one new local employer of lower wage workers.  

In addition, $10,000 of this contribution will be used to fund the Personal Finance Employee Education Foundation (PFEEF) to conduct an evaluation of the effectiveness of IFS services.  The year-long evaluation will measure the improvements in employee financial capability, savings, and credit scores, as well as the benefits to employers of improved worker productivity and reduced financial distress.

“We’re honored and delighted that Citi would provide us the support to expand IFS services to more  workers in Mercer County,” states Peter Rose, Isles Managing Director of Community Enterprises.  “We’re excited about this opportunity to measure the effectiveness of our model, which we believe offers a unique blend of services that can rapidly help improve the financial capacity, increase savings and lower high-cost debt for lower wage workers.”

During an IFS pilot at Princeton University in 2012, 40 low to moderate income employees were invited to join the program to reduce their debt and build assets.  These individuals became active participants with measurable positive consumer financial behavior changes that included: 

  • 100% prepared and are using a household budget;
  • 50% improved their credit scores (at least 100 points);
  • 100% accumulated at least $500 in savings; 
  • 75% decreased overall debt at least 25%; and
  • 50% decreased what they paid in interest and fees.

“Isles Financial Solutions is truly a results-oriented program helping lower income workers effectively address their financial issues and enabling them to focus more on their jobs and careers, benefitting both themselves and their employers,” said Helen Steblecki, Citi’s State Director of Community Development for New Jersey.  “Citi is pleased to support Isles in its expansion of this program and the Personal Finance Employee Education Foundation in its evaluation of IFS to provide further evidence of the critical need and benefits of this type of comprehensive financial counseling program.”

 To learn more about Isles Financial Solutions, visit us here or contact [email protected]

New Jersey Climate Adaptation Alliance Conference Registration is Open

The New Jersey Climate Adaptation Alliance (of which Isles is a partner) is hosting Climate Change Preparedness in New Jersey: Leading Practices & Policy Priorities.

Wednesday, May 22, 2013
7:45 AM to 5:00 PM
Cook Campus Center, Rutgers University
59 Biel Road, New Brunswick, NJ

The purpose of this conference is to highlight climate preparedness and resilience activities underway in New Jersey, as well as leading practices throughout the United States, in order to enhance climate change adaptation capacity in New Jersey.

Click here for a complete agenda. 
Click here to register online.

 

March Update

Spring is on its way, and soil is being turned in neighborhood and school gardens around the region. When we started Trenton’s first community garden in 1981, we didn’t know how the “grow your own” movement would, well, grow. 
 
The benefits are now clear – you can eat better, cleaner food, save money, improve the environment and most importantly, build community through gardens.   Recently, Isles embarked upon a statewide study of the potential for more urban agriculture and what our role might be in furthering this movement. Funded by the Rita Allen Foundation, the study will be released in a few weeks. 
 
Many have heard about food “deserts,” where quality produce is unavailable or expensive at local delis or corner stores in lower income neighborhoods. (This is a good example of how expensive it really is to be poor!). One additional finding is that healthier food is not just an access issue – consumers must demand it, buy good food, and know how to prepare it.  As a result, Isles invests in education and changing the culture of food in the region. 
 
As the adage goes, “many hands make light work” and springtime brings out many corporate partners and volunteers for which we are thankful. Helping out in gardens that need extra hands, volunteers often leave feeling physically satisfied and enriched by the experience of working and learning alongside local gardeners and their families. Yes, there is lots of good news in Trenton!
  
In Community

Marty

 

Give for Youth Challenge: Voting is Open

Isles has entered a microproject in the Give for Youth Challenge and we need your vote! The top 20 youth-focused nonprofits with the most votes win a spot on GiveforYouth.org, a microgiving portal that helps nonprofits get new projects funded and off the ground. Give for Youth is a Microsoft YouthSpark program in partnership with GlobalGiving. Our project focuses on Isles YouthBuild Institute, which provides the tools for self-reliance in a non-traditional educational environment and better prepares at-risk youth for employment and higher education. Voting is open until March 1st!

Visit our project page here and click “Vote for this Idea” to vote for us! After you vote, leave a comment in the discussion section at the bottom of the project page to help get the word out!

If you need to register, please remember to validate your email address (you’ll receive instructions after you vote) so your vote gets counted. You’ll see a notification at the top of the screen once your vote has been successfully counted. Remember, everyone can only vote once, so be sure to also let your friends know and spread the word! 

Please take a second to help us out with your vote, and if you’re feeling extra helpful, share this message with your friends and post it on Facebook! You can also share this announcement by clicking on the social media buttons at the bottom of this page. Thank you for supporting this important work – We need all the votes we can get!

February Update

Four years ago, the State of New Jersey had just completed a new Energy Master Plan, and they were gearing up for big investments in green energy. Given Isles’ mission, we wanted to assure that some of the new jobs in this field went to underemployed folks who needed them the most. After years of running Isles YouthBuild Institute serving young people wanting high school diplomas and job training, we created the Center for Energy and Environmental Training (CEET). CEET could also train and help place adults that already had high school diplomas. 
 
The result: CEET has impacted the environment, increased jobs and incomes, and saved money for families living in drafty old homes. This is a great example of how a good idea can be turned into an entrepreneurial startup that innovates and impacts thousands of others.  CEET’s success can be attributed to good people working hard, asking the right questions, and engaging other funders, friends, and supporters who care about the same things. CEET could not have succeeded without readers and donors like you. 
 
I hope you enjoy this newsletter. CEET and other elements of our work should be replicated in settings throughout the country. As we finish our work on our new Strategic Plan for the next four years, we will expand our ability to make that replication both possible and likely. We couldn’t do it without you. 
 
In Community,

 

January Update

As we welcome 2013, I am optimistic. This is despite the unpredictability of Washington, the economy’s slow growth, and other challenges. This optimism is partly based on a strong 2012, when learning and development here at Isles helped us set an exciting foundation for 2013. 
 
This month, we highlight the challenges and opportunities for energy work at Isles. It is winter, and way too many older homes are heating the sidewalks and the outdoors. Thousands of low-income homes are costly, polluting energy hogs. So what can we do about it? At Isles, we train local residents to perform energy audits and retrofits. We also set up E4, a subsidiary designed to retrofit older homes throughout the county and region. This way, we can train, employ, and build wealth for workers. In addition, households save energy costs, improve the comfort of their homes, and reduce their carbon footprint. 
 
As in all of Isles’ work, we strive to bring strong benefits at a low cost to those that need it most – including the environment. I’d love to hear your feedback on our work and our new website. 
 
In Community,

Marty

IYI Students Perform at Urban Word NYC!

On December 20, the Isles Job Developer, in partnership JurzeeCat Entertainment, took 8 students from Isles YouthBuild Institute to perform in Harlem at Urban Word NYC’s UPTOWN OPEN.

Uptown Open is a monthly open mic series for teens. These events are run by youth for youth, with youth DJ’s, youth hosts, and a monthly featured poet. Our students performed all original material and was well received by the artists, staff, and participants. See more phtotos on our facebook page!

 

Isles’ Marty Johnson Receives Community Leader of the Year Award

Four business leaders, including Isles’ President Marty Johnson, were recently  recognized for their contributions to the Princeton area business world by the Princeton Regional Chamber of Commerce. The honorees accepted their Business Leadership Awards at a dinner attended by more than 230 business leaders, local officials and friends held at the Tournament Players Club Jasna Polana on November 28, 2012.

The newest award, Community Leader of the Year, is reserved for the non profit community and past honorees include Nancy Kieling of the Princeton Area Community Foundation, Leslie Burger of the Princeton Public Library and Judith and William Scheide.

“We feel lucky to have spent 32 years at Isles exploring ways to bring meaningful change alongside communities that we respect and love,” said this year’s Community Leader of the Year Marty Johnson, Founder and President of Trenton-based Isles Inc. “But it takes more than an organization or even a village to raise great places. It takes a region, and business leaders increasingly know that Trenton’s future and the health of central Jersey are joined together. That makes us optimistic even when there are many reasons to be cynical. I am honored to be recognized this way by the Chamber.”

Congratulations, Marty!
 

December Update

In The Christmas Carol, Ebenezer Scrooge has the good fortune to experience a realistic dream. Most of us don’t have dreams that are quite that vivid, so we have to think about our future while we are awake.
 
In the midst of the world’s craziness, I am reminded that life is really short, and we should plan now for how we want to be remembered.   As we move into a new year, we are excited by the possibilities and humbled (and a bit unsettled) by the deep challenges that confront us and the communities where we live and work. What I am so grateful for though, is to wake in the morning and know that our day’s work makes a real difference. Your support makes that possible. Thank you for being there and for considering a gift of self-reliance this holiday season.
 
We hope your dream and awake states bring meaning and happiness this holiday season!  

In Community, 

Marty