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Main Street Grant Program Gives Millions to Wisconsin Small Businesses PDF Print E-mail
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Written by Evers Press Wisconsin   
Wednesday, 13 April 2022 10:29

businessesMADISON, Wis. — In case you missed it, WPR highlighted how Governor Tony Evers’ Main Street Bounceback program is growing small businesses and revitalizing Main Streets across Wisconsin. 

During Gov. Evers’ first term, more than 3,400 small businesses in all 72 counties have benefited from the Main Street Bounceback program — and funding is still available for roughly 1,600 more small businesses.

In Crawford County, 30 small businesses have received Main Street Bounceback grants. Carol Roth, executive director of Driftless Development, Crawford County's economic development organization, said “downtown Prairie du Chien has been revitalized, in part, because of the grants and the new businesses that the funds have brought into the area.”

“For your small mom-and-pop businesses that’s on Main Street, it’s huge,” Roth said on Gov. Evers’ Main Street Bounceback program. “It can pay your rent for a whole year.”

Read more below on how Gov. Evers is prioritizing small businesses and helping power Wisconsin’s record economic growth.

WPR: Main Street grant program gives millions to Wisconsin small businesses, nonprofits

Wisconsin small businesses are still able to receive $10,000 grants to help start up or expand their operations as part of the state's Main Street Bounceback Program. Around $34 million has gone to more than 3,400 businesses and nonprofits throughout the state as of April 1, according to the Wisconsin Economic Development Corp., which manages the program.

The program launched in August and gives businesses grants they can use to pay leases and cover other costs that come from opening up a physical storefront.

Federal stimulus funds have made the grants possible.

Business applications in Wisconsin reached record levels during the COVID-19 pandemic.

The grant program gives people more chances to shop local and support their communities, Missy Hughes, secretary of WEDC, said.

"When you put this money to work in a small business in a community, that dollar gets stretched and used again and again by our small businesses," Hughes said. "You really see the local economies benefiting from having that influx and that stimulus."

Hughes said while many small business have survived the pandemic, seeing empty spaces along main streets across the state can be discouraging.

"Folks just aren't stopping in their cars to walk around because it doesn't look like much is happening," Hughes said. "By filling those vacant spaces, we can help not only the new businesses, but also the businesses that survived the pandemic."

That especially goes for smaller counties. Hughes said businesses in all 72 Wisconsin counties have received funds.

Carol Roth is the executive director of Driftless Development, Crawford County's economic development organization. She said $10,000 can go a long way.

"For your small mom-and-pop business that's on Main Street, it's huge," Roth said. "It can pay your rent for a whole year."

[...]

Roth said downtown Prairie du Chien has been revitalized, in part, because of the grants and the new businesses that the funds have brought into the area.

"We're actually looking for more spaces," Roth said. "It's creating a bigger sense of community with our residents and with our businesses."

As of March 31, Crawford County has received 30 of the program's grants. Roth said that helps create jobs in a county that had a 5.3 percent unemployment rate in February, well above the state's unemployment rate of 2.9 percent.

"Granted, these aren't like those huge jobs, but that's really important for our workforce development," Roth said.

Roth notes that funding helps public services such as local schools by way of tax revenues.

"This amount of money that's injected into the economy, it reaches way farther than really impacting businesses," Roth said. "It helps everything else in our communities as well."

Cynthia Olmstead is business operations director for Driftless Brewing Company in Crawford County. She said the grant money allowed the brewery to expand its patio and make its indoor space safer.

"It's been particularly hard because we have so many small businesses around here, they've been hit very hard by the pandemic," Olmstead said. "These types of grant programs have been great."

Roth said she hopes there will be ways to keep the momentum going.

"Is there a way that we can learn from this grant to make future things, future opportunities like this accessible to all communities, regardless of population?" Roth said.

It's one of multiple ways the Evers administration has used federal stimulus funds to help small businesses during the pandemic. Last month, he announced more than $86 million will go to organizations that support small businesses owned by the state's marginalized communities.

The Bounceback program still has funds available for approximately 1,600 more businesses. Small businesses that move into a vacant commercial space in the state before the end of June can apply with WEDC's regional partners.

Hughes said small businesses play a role in creating communities people want to live in.

"Our quality of life in Wisconsin is really dependent on our communities and our neighborhoods being thriving, safe, interesting," Hughes said. "That's what small businesses bring to the table, you know, they're unique, they're quirky, they're different."

***

tony-eversAbout Governor Tony Evers
Tony Evers is Wisconsin’s 46th Governor. A lifelong Wisconsinite and former educator, Tony is running for re‑election because he believes Wisconsin needs a common sense approach to the issues facing our state. Tony is focused on bringing people together to do the right thing for Wisconsin, whether that’s signing a middle-class tax cut, restoring funding to public education, or helping folks get access to high-speed internet. In addition to his accomplishments as governor, Tony has three children and nine grandchildren. He loves to play euchre, polka dance, and the Wisconsin Badgers.

 
Potawatomi State Park Observation Tower Request to Move Forward PDF Print E-mail
News
Written by Evers Press Wisconsin   
Wednesday, 13 April 2022 09:57

potawatomi-state-park-towerAnnouncement on Door County project Tuesday follows a DNR-led public input opportunity and publication of a Public Feedback Summary outlining input received.

Read more...
 
The Work for Wisconsin Must Continue PDF Print E-mail
News
Written by Jeff Smith, State Senator District 31   
Wednesday, 13 April 2022 09:50

wi-senate-swearing-inSen. Smith writes about what motivated him to enter into public service and the potential for Wisconsin’s future once we work past the politics.

Read more...
 
$115 Million in Federal Transit Funding Headed to Wisconsin This Year PDF Print E-mail
News
Written by WisDems Press, Julia Hamelburg   
Tuesday, 12 April 2022 09:18

road-repair-wiCap Times reports Milwaukee, Madison, Kenosha, Green Bay, and Appleton will receive funds to support their local transit agencies.

Read more...
 
Governor protects the freedom of Wisconsin voters with his veto PDF Print E-mail
News
Written by Wisconsin Conservation Voters Press   
Friday, 08 April 2022 20:30

vote-47On Friday, Evers vetoed bills that would have created barriers to the ballot box for voters with disabilities, older voters, communities of color, and voters in nursing homes.

Read more...
 
Gov. Evers Takes Action on 78 Bills PDF Print E-mail
News
Written by GOV Press Wisconsin   
Friday, 08 April 2022 15:44

tony-evers-1038-bill-signingActions will finally ensure movement of kids out of Lincoln Hills and Copper Lake to a Type 1 facility in Milwaukee County, vetoes a package of anti-voter bills passed by the Legislature.

Read more...
 
Conservation Voters endorsed candidates gain 70 local seats PDF Print E-mail
News
Written by Wisconsin Conservation Voters Press   
Friday, 08 April 2022 09:29

voter-us-electionsGroup vetted more than 100 local candidates who shared core values of clean water, clean energy, and an equitable, robust democracy.

Read more...
 
Senate confirms Jackson as first Black, female Supreme Court justice PDF Print E-mail
News
Written by The Hill Press   
Thursday, 07 April 2022 17:02

ketanji-brown-jackson-fbJackson needs to be sworn in before she’s officially a justice on the Supreme Court. Justice Stephen Breyer, whom she is succeeding, has said he will step down over the summer.

Read more...
 
Biden targets Putin’s daughters, Russian banks in new wave of sanctions PDF Print E-mail
News
Written by The Hill Press   
Wednesday, 06 April 2022 14:34

ukraine-conflict-2022U.S. and other international leaders have said the images of civilians discovered bound, shot at close range, piled in cellars and left for dead on the street likely amount to war crimes.


WASHINGTON, DC - The Biden administration on Wednesday announced a wave of new sanctions targeting Russia’s two largest banks, Russian President Vladimir Putin’s daughters, the wife and daughter of Russia’s top diplomat and blacklisted members of Russia’s Security Council.

A senior administration official said the measures are being imposed in alignment with allies in the Group of Seven nations and the European Union and are in response to “the sickening brutality” recently discovered in the Kyiv suburb of Bucha following the retreat of Russian forces.

Read the full story here.

Last Updated on Saturday, 09 April 2022 10:56
 
Economy adds 431K jobs in March, unemployment down to 3.6 percent PDF Print E-mail
News
Written by The Hill Press   
Friday, 01 April 2022 10:35

jobs-now-hiringResilient consumer spending and historically strong demand for workers helped power the U.S. economy to another steady job gain.

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House passes bill to cap the cost of insulin PDF Print E-mail
News
Written by The Hill Press   
Friday, 01 April 2022 10:09

diabetes-insulinUnder the bill, Medicare beneficiaries would pay no more than $35 for each 30-day insulin prescription.

Read more...
 
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