One of the examples I can give you is not an example that my firm has been engaged in, but it is a fairly well-known example. It's actually out of Yonkers in the United States. It's called Greyston Bakery. Greyston Bakery has a partnership with the local jail in New York. When certain individuals come out of the jail system—and I don't know the exact particulars of how it works—they automatically get jobs within Greyston Bakery.
For those who enjoy Ben & Jerry's ice cream, Greyston Bakery is the company that makes the brownies that are put into Ben & Jerry's ice cream. They have a fairly robust business just making brownies for Ben & Jerry's ice cream.
They hire directly from the jail system and they guarantee the person a job.
You can imagine a scenario where if a government were asked to finance directly a group that was taking such a risk, or perceived risk, that group would probably not be able to receive financing. A lot of the work that Greyston did was to harness private capital, because it's a bakery. This is a group that is selling goods into the marketplace to create an opportunity for individuals who have two-, five-, or ten-year gaps in their resumés to be able to give them a job.
Greyston Bakery has been able to show very low turnover in its staffing. They have been able to show that individuals who have come through Greyston Bakery have been able to move into full-time employment. In a lot of ways, from the testimonials of the Greyston Bakery, if you speak to anyone there, they'll say this is the only business that actually hired them out of the court system. They probably would have re-committed and then gone back into the court system.
My understanding is that most of that financing was coming from private sources. I don't know the exact breakdown of how much government funding was put in place. I think if government was involved, or government moneys were involved, it was more the, forgive the pun, icing on the cake versus the core funding that Greyston needed to operate.
I think that's one of the things the committee should keep in mind. In a lot of ways, the government's role is to incentivize and to create the mechanisms by which social finance could operate, not necessarily to be the one that actually takes the main risk of putting the capital in place. In a lot of ways, it's all a mix. In some models, government financing is the minority financing in place.