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A Los Angeles-based initiative that has aided the rehabilitation of countless ex-gang members for over thirty years is now branching out into a new sector as it fosters opportunities for its participants.
Homeboy Industries, the nonprofit responsible for Homegirl Café and a variety of services including tattoo removal, substance misuse assistance, and educational programs, has ventured into the electronics recycling industry. This marks the 14th social enterprise initiated by the organization and provides its clients with practical experience and the chance to acquire new competencies.
“We are fundamentally about individuals, committed to the planet, and focused on purposeful action,” stated Bill Deliman, Director of Marketing and Business Development for Homeboy Industries.
At the recycling facility, employees assess the gadgets they receive to determine their potential functionality. Devices that are operational are then evaluated, repaired, and certified for quality assurance. After completing this checklist, the gadgets are put up for sale with a warranty included.
“We aim to offer individuals affordable technology,” Deliman expressed. “Therefore, providing reasonably priced technology allows people to remain connected to the world.”
Devices that cannot be refurbished are dismantled for parts and disposed of properly with licensed vendors.
“We process hundreds of pounds of plastic and circuitry here,” remarked Franky Valdez, the test and repair supervisor.
Deliman mentioned that the social enterprise’s mission extends beyond offering affordable sales – it creates job opportunities for those who have faced systemic obstacles.
Jose Echeverria, a work readiness trainer at the electronics recycling facility, considers himself proof of this. He recounted his early years, which led him to juvenile hall by the age of 12, followed by incarceration, gang involvement, and years living on the streets before discovering Homeboy Industries.
“I instantly felt a sense of belonging,” Echeverria recalled. “The warmth of my reception was perhaps the sense of acceptance I had been seeking my entire childhood.”
Currently, he is managing his job alongside his social work studies in college while also volunteering at a treatment center.
“Those are the lessons I’ve learned from Homeboys, and those are the achievements I take pride in, you know what I mean,” he said. “Totally transforming my life, leaving gang life and everything behind. I just wanted to improve my situation and finally give myself a chance.”
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