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Bronx Mechanic is Legally Blind

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Entrepreneur Fitz Octave does a hands-on job supervising the work at FGO Motor Services, the Bronx auto repair shop he opened last May.

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Fitz Octave working hard at his shop.

Fitz Octave can’t see well enough to drive a car, but he can see to it that yours runs like it just came off the assembly line.

The auto mechanic turned entrepreneur is legally blind. Last May, he opened a shop of his own, FGO Motor Services, in the Park Stratton section of the Bronx.

He’s been fixing cars since he did after-school training at age 10 at a garage in Castries, St. Lucia, where he grew up. Now 52, he refuses to let his disability keep him from the work he loves.

“People say I’m blind, but I’ll be honest with you - I am perfect to myself,” he said.

He left the Caribbean for the Bronx in 1986 to join one of his sisters. He became a U.S. citizen, and repaired and painted cars at a number of repair shops until glaucoma left him with severely limited vision in 2003.

Octave was given a cane for walking outdoors, but refused to use it. “I felt it would set me back,” he said, figuring his best bet for continuing his career was to become his own boss.

Octave went to numerous training programs, but found the one that helped him most was for visually impaired entrepreneurs at the Brooklyn Economic Development Corp. He learned bookkeeping and marketing. He fine-tuned a business plan. To find a suitable site for a shop, he searched on foot.

“I was determined not to depend on other people,” he said.

In a notebook he carried (and using a big black marker so he’d be able to read what he wrote), he jotted down the addresses of vacant garages. If he couldn’t see a phone number on a “For Rent” sign, he asked a passerby to read it to him.

He walked all over the South Bronx, even down into Washington Heights in Manhattan. He made 100 phone calls.

Octave said the fact that David Paterson is now New York’s first blind governor proves a point about visually impaired people. “I’m very happy because it shows we can do the job,” he said.

The day he found the space he wound up renting, he walked from his apartment in Park Stratton to the Throgs Neck Bridge and back - and at the end of the trek discovered a place on Beach Ave. a few blocks from where he lives.

Octave got a $15,000 state grant for startup capital and had $30,000 in personal savings to add to it, but needed more money to open for business. He went to Chase, HSBC, Bank of America and Washington Mutual for a small business loan. They all turned him down. He recalled that, at various training programs he’d attended, he was told how credit unions are supportive of entrepreneurs. He became a member of Bethex Federal Credit Union, which is open to all city residents.

The Bronx-based institution has about 9,800 members and $14.7 million in assets, and has loaned money to small businesses since 1989. It currently has almost $1 million in small business loans on its books, made to 42 borrowers.

With few options, Octave took a credit union loan of $15,000 at 14.25%. The rate was set by the U.S. Small Business Adminstration, which guaranteed the loan.

“He had a convincing business plan - I was so impressed,” said Bethex loan officer Maria Estrella.

At Octave’s shop just off E. Tremont Ave., business is steady. He’s open six days a week, and now has six employees - three mechanics and three painters. Read more..

 

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Using development fund, Bronx business goes off grid with solar panels

amd_lewis-gold.jpg Lewis Gold, owner of New York Beverage.

Using development fund, Bronx business goes off grid with solar panels

Sometimes it can be easy being green.

But environmentally safe power still takes a lot of, well, green.

Lewis Gold, owner of New York Beverage, found that out when he wanted to take his Bronx warehouse off the electric grid.

“At first I looked at using wind power,” said Gold, “but found out that would be very difficult to do in the Bronx.”

He finally opted to go with rooftop solar panels, because the building’s location - just north of the Bruckner Expressway in an area with low-rise zoning - assured maximum exposure to sunlight.

“We actually have the perfect location for solar power,” Gold said.

But the price of a rooftop solar array was sky-high.

Even taking off about $50,000 in tax credits offered to businesses going solar, the 72 panels Gold needed would cost $100,000 out of pocket.

“That’s a lot of money,” said Gold, “especially for a small business.”

Despite being one of the largest retail and wholesale drink warehouses in the city, New York Beverage - which has been forced to add a fuel surcharge for deliveries - just didn’t have the green to go green.

That’s when the Bronx Initiative on Energy and the Environment stepped in. The green development fund is part of a broad push by Borough President Adolfo Carrión to make the borough a model of sustainable development.

The BIEE provided about $100,000 in grants to make sure the plan went ahead.

“Now we hope to have them up and running by early 2008,” said Gold.

Work will soon begin on installing the 15-kilowatt solar array atop the warehouse at 515 Bruckner Blvd. between E. 149th St. and Austin Place.

An analysis by the company installing the system estimates the first year’s energy savings at just $3,197. But over the 25-year life of the panels, the savings will be nearly $168,000.

“When you think about it long-term as a businessman,” said Gold, “it’s a smart thing to do.”

That’s not only true for one local business’ bottom line.

The annual environmental impact of an array the size New York Beverage plans will reduce carbon dioxide emissions by approximately 30,089 pounds, according to the maker.

That’s the equivalent of planting 38 trees each year - or recycling 290,384 12-ounce cans like the ones the sun will soon chill for New York Beverage.

ENERGY ASSISTANCE

Businesses interested in getting funds from the Bronx Initiative on Energy and the Environment program can contact the Bronx Overall Economic Development Corp. at (718) 590-3498.

SOURCE: NY Daily News

 

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