STUDENTS' BUSINESS IN THE MALL
Wednesday, June 1, 2005
TOWN CENTER OWNER AGREES TO RENT SPACE TO GLENDALE GROUP TO EDUCATE THEM
ON BUSINESS SKILLS
By: ROBERT CHACON
NEWS-PRESS AND LEADER
The owner of one of Burbank's largest retail centers is reaching across
Glendale's border to lend a hand to at-risk students.
Crown Realty & Development, owner of the Burbank Town Center, has agreed to
allow We Care for Youth to utilize a 700-square-foot retail space for three
years free of charge.
The Hoover High School nonprofit group, specializing in assisting students in
danger of failing school, will open Bliss Unlimited, a store where the students
will learn management skills while they create and sell corporate gift baskets,
apparel and hand-crafted jewelry. Students from Burbank's public and private
schools will also be eligible to work at the store.
Bliss Unlimited will open by the beginning of the fall semester. "Without Crown
Realty, this would not have been possible," said Linda Maxwell, who along with
Jose Quintanar, founded the group in 1991 with some 20 teenagers from rival
gangs.
The lower-level storefront has been pulled off the market, even though other
business owners have been asking to rent it, said Jim O'Neil, executive vice
president of Crown Realty. Supporting education and giving back to the community
fall under some of the company's guiding principles, O'Neil said. "We are
excited with what they have to offer and are working with them to define what
their needs are," he said, adding that although no lease has been signed, the
deal is as good as done. Both sides will reevaluate Bliss Unlimited's
performance at the end of the three-year period before deciding whether the
lease will be extended.
This is not the first time We Care for Youth has opened a store in a local mall.
The group operated a successful business in the Glendale Galleria from 1998 to
2001, bringing in several hundred-thousand dollars that helped fund salaries for
staff and students and other programs that receive little financial assistance.
Bliss Unlimited is expected to employ about 30 to 40 students who will work for
minimum wage and credits from the Regional Occupational Program. To become
eligible, students will have to enroll in job-training classes and work about 90
hours to receive five credits a semester.
While the gift baskets will be the major source of revenue, T-shirts, pants and
other apparel manufactured by Home Boy Industries -- a Los Angeles-based job
referral center run by at-risk, gang-involved youth -- will be sold.
"This will be more like a business academy, where kids can learn the nuance of
running a business and how to be good human beings in the transacting of that
business," Maxwell said.
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