{"id":81611,"date":"2022-02-07T22:30:00","date_gmt":"2022-02-08T07:30:00","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.juneauempire.com\/news\/entrepreneurs-get-a-boost-on-the-path-to-prosperity\/"},"modified":"2022-03-17T16:30:00","modified_gmt":"2022-03-18T00:30:00","slug":"entrepreneurs-get-a-boost-on-the-path-to-prosperity","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.juneauempire.com\/news\/entrepreneurs-get-a-boost-on-the-path-to-prosperity\/","title":{"rendered":"Entrepreneurs get a boost on the Path to Prosperity"},"content":{"rendered":"
Two small businesses in Southeast Alaska each took home a $25,000 prize and a big helping of knowledge and support from the Southeast Conference Mid-Session Summit.<\/p>\n
On Tuesday, Ketchikan resident Jack Finnegan, owner of Fishability<\/a>, and Stormy and Bonnie Hamar, who own Kasaan Arts, Museum, and Canoes,<\/a> were announced as winners of the Path to Prosperity contest<\/a>, put on by nonprofit Spruce Root.<\/a><\/p>\n This year’s contest focused on supporting businesses that promote sustainable and regenerative tourism.<\/p>\n A panel of judges selected the winners from an initial field of 53 applicants and 12 finalists<\/a> who attended an intensive business development boot camp sponsored by Spruce Root. Spruce Root is a community development organization that provides local entrepreneurs with access to business development and financial resources to support businesses in Southeast Alaska through increased self-sufficiency.<\/p>\n The boot camp covered how to operate a business that makes communities stronger.<\/p>\n “This program is amazing,” said Sealaska Corp., CEO and President Anthony Mallott as he introduced one of the winners. “They motivate me with their ideas and passion.”<\/p>\n In an interview, Izzy Haywood, Path to Prosperity program administrator for Spruce Root, said that selecting the winners this year was particularly difficult.<\/p>\n “Bonnie and Stormy really stood out because of their deep, deep commitment to their community,” Haywood said.<\/p>\n She noted that the Kasaan Arts, Museum, and Canoes business offers rich cultural experiences and opportunities for visitors to watch a canoe being carved and see stone tools in a locally-curated museum in the small town on Prince of Wales Island.<\/p>\n “They want to serve as a gathering space and keep their culture and art alive and to share that with any visitor who comes. They have so much they want to share, and we thought that was extraordinary.”<\/p>\n