© 2024 Ideastream Public Media

1375 Euclid Avenue, Cleveland, Ohio 44115
(216) 916-6100 | (877) 399-3307

WKSU is a public media service licensed to Kent State University and operated by Ideastream Public Media.
Play Live Radio
Next Up:
0:00
0:00
0:00 0:00
Available On Air Stations

Where manufacturing jobs have shrunk, a library is giving a leg up to entrepreneurs

Zach Huber, left, and Marsha Hill work together in the small business and nonprofit workspace at the Toledo Lucas County Public Library in Toledo, Ohio on Oct. 3, 2024. Huber was assisting Hill with creating her website for her nonprofit, Families For Fitness.
Nic Antaya for NPR
Zach Huber, left, and Marsha Hill work together in the small business and nonprofit workspace at the Toledo Lucas County Public Library in Toledo, Ohio on Oct. 3, 2024. Huber was assisting Hill with creating her website for her nonprofit, Families For Fitness.

TOLEDO, Ohio — Marsha Hill feels like she's been coming to the public library for a hundred years. She came with her kids when they were young. Later, she came for computer help.

Now at 66, she's discovered yet another reason to love the library. She's one of thousands of Toledo-area residents making use of the free services the library offers to entrepreneurs like herself. She's been coming in weekly, sometimes twice weekly, for help scaling up her nonprofit focused on children's health.

"Everybody knows me," she says with a smile.

Gone are the days when the public library was just about books. Today, it’s where people go to use the internet, get legal advice and pick up COVID tests.

And now, there's a movement among public libraries to become hubs of entrepreneurship.

A dedicated space for entrepreneurs

Back in 2018, Toledo was one of 12 public library systems awarded grants through the Urban Libraries Council to explore ways to engage entrepreneurs in their communities, particularly people of color, women, immigrants and veterans.

Six years later, the Toledo Lucas County Public Library is leading the way. This summer, the library officially opened its small business and nonprofit workspace.

Tucked in the basement of a stately 1940s art deco building, the brightly-lit room has flexible meeting spaces, cubicles and computers for anyone to use.

Librarians hold drop-in hours and take one-on-one appointments. They also hosts classes on topics like bookkeeping, grant writing and business plan development.

And it's all free.

Linda Faye Lucas, a former business consultant, used to charge clients hundreds of dollars for this kind of work.

The Toledo Lucas County Public Library has been a landmark in downtown Toledo since 1940.
Nic Antaya for NPR /
The Toledo Lucas County Public Library has been a landmark in downtown Toledo since 1940.
Prior to becoming a librarian, Linda Faye Lucas had her own business consulting practice, where she charged clients money to do the kind of work that she can now provide for free at the library.
Nic Antaya for NPR /
Prior to becoming a librarian, Linda Faye Lucas had her own business consulting practice, where she charged clients money to do the kind of work that she can now provide for free at the library.

Now as a librarian, she says, 75% of the people she works with are women, many of them women of color.

"I've been able to do what I did for people that never would have been able to afford the services," she says. "I have made some wonderful connections with business owners."

Serving the public's evolving needs

Allison Fiscus, adult services coordinator for the Toledo Lucas County Public Library, says paramount to library work is paying attention to what the public actually needs.

Five years ago, the small business and nonprofit team was just two librarians devoting a quarter of their time to this work. Responding to ever-increasing demand, the library now has three full-time business specialists.

The number of customer interactions — measured as people served through classes or one-on-one consultations — has nearly doubled since 2020, to more than 3,100 so far this year.

Marsha Hill has become a familiar face at the library's small business and nonprofit workspace over the past couple months as she works on scaling up her nonprofit Families for Fitness.
Nic Antaya for NPR /
Marsha Hill has become a familiar face at the library's small business and nonprofit workspace over the past couple months as she works on scaling up her nonprofit Families for Fitness.

The rising enthusiasm is welcome news in Toledo, where manufacturing jobs, once a mainstay, have shrunk by 20% since the 1990s, and unemployment hovers above the national average.

In a city looking to evolve from its industrial past, Fiscus says the investment in the library's business services is already proving to be taxpayer money well spent.

"Return on investment is big for us," she says. "We want to make sure we're maximizing everything that we put out."

Growing her nonprofit at the library

Hill started her nonprofit, Families for Fitness, in 2011, while she was working full time at the Jeep plant in Toledo.

Inspired to tackle childhood obesity, Hill hired certified fitness trainers to run an afterschool program in the public schools, collaborating first with the Ohio State extension program and then with a local hospital system.

It's been a labor of love, something she self-funded for years.

After retiring from her auto job in 2023, Hill started thinking about formalizing her operations and creating a board so she could seek outside funding.

But Families for Fitness had no digital presence. Hill doesn't even have a website.

Enter Zach Huber, a librarian who joined the team in 2019 after spending six years in the nonprofit world, wearing every hat — marketing, fundraising, programming.

Zach Huber worked in the nonprofit world for six years before joining the Toledo Lucas County Public Library. Nowadays, he teaches classes on grant writing and provides assistance to new and growing nonprofits in the community.
Nic Antaya for NPR /
Zach Huber worked in the nonprofit world for six years before joining the Toledo Lucas County Public Library. Nowadays, he teaches classes on grant writing and provides assistance to new and growing nonprofits in the community.

Since the spring, he's been putting those skills to use, working with Hill on what he calls "capacity building," strengthening her nonprofit.

Together, they are building a website and setting up a profile on the nonprofit database GuideStar, with the goal of getting Hill to a place where she can apply for grants.

"We're trying to make her competitive with all the other nonprofits that are in this community," says Huber.

A leg up for the smallest of businesses

While there are economic development services in Toledo supporting larger enterprises, Lucas says the microbusinesses, the mom-and-pop shops, deserve support, too.

"Their value is important because they are a job creator, even if it is just their own job," she says.

One woman she worked with started a gardening business. It now supports her life in retirement and pays for her travel to see her grown children in the off-season.

Another woman started a child care business out of her home, allowing her to care for up to six children, including a great-niece.

"Even the smallest business is going to help Toledo with raising up the whole community," Lucas says.

The Toledo Lucas County Public Library in Toledo, Ohio, is one of a dozen across the country that received grant funding in 2018 to explore how libraries can reach and engage local entrepreneurs.
Nic Antaya for NPR /
The Toledo Lucas County Public Library in Toledo, Ohio, is one of a dozen across the country that received grant funding in 2018 to explore how libraries can reach and engage local entrepreneurs.

At times, Lucas has tried to convince someone not to go into business. If someone doesn't have the financial resources to launch, for example, she'll be honest with them.

"A lot of times, it's giving them that real information that nobody else wants to sit and talk to them about," she says.

Real-world, real-time experience

Lindsay Williams, the newest addition to the library's team, joined in 2023 after experiencing first hand how game-changing their assistance can be for a small business.

"What I think a lot of our entrepreneurs experience is a really exciting idea, and then they get into the nitty-gritty of it, and then they need some help," she says. "Certainly, that was me."

Williams had started a jewelry business, making hand-painted, hand-cut earrings. But in 2020, COVID shut down all the jewelry shows.

Williams, a self-described library super-user, was aware that the library offered free access to business databases that are behind paywalls.

With help from Huber and Lucas, she compiled a list of jewelry boutiques and sent out solicitations. Since then, she's grown her consignment boutique business by 40%.

Last year, when the library was looking to expand the small business and nonprofit team, Williams knew immediately she wanted in.

Now, she says, her real-world, real-time experience as an entrepreneur helps her help others.

During the pandemic, Lindsay Williams sought help from librarians as she was trying to grow her jewelry business. In 2023, when the library decided to expand the small business and nonprofit team, she leapt at the opportunity to put her experience and skills to use helping others.
Nic Antaya for NPR /
During the pandemic, Lindsay Williams sought help from librarians as she was trying to grow her jewelry business. In 2023, when the library decided to expand the small business and nonprofit team, she leapt at the opportunity to put her experience and skills to use helping others.

"I am actively digitally marketing. I am actively reviewing consignment contracts. I am actively seeing how these things move and change and shape," says Williams.

"I'm doing it right now, and I'm able to help them through that journey, too."

New space draws new interest

With the opening of the new dedicated workspace this summer, the library's team has seen a jump in interest from the public.

Some days, as many as a dozen people will come in seeking help. Classes are full and often have a waitlist. Over 100 people signed up for a recent session on grants.

"The need's there. People want it," says Huber.

Lucas, who wants everyone to feel welcome, insists no question is off limits.

"We will find an answer if we don't know the answer," says Lucas. "I mean, we're librarians. We know how to find information."

Copyright 2024 NPR

Andrea Hsu is NPR's labor and workplace correspondent.