La Fortaleza, Group 4


Status: Paid Back

$1,350.00   Loan Request
$1,350.00   Paid Back

About the Group

Group Name: La Fortaleza, Group 4
Group Members: Armanda Ortega
Aurelia Then
Belkis Urena
Maria Martinez
Miguelina Reyes
Location: Santo Domingo, Dominican Republic
Activity: Decorations Sales

About the Loan

Loan Amount: $1,350.00
Loan Use: To purchase sheet and bedspread fabric, foamed fabric, zippers for cushions, lace for bedspreads and pillowcases, ground foam to fill pillows.
Repayment Term: 7 months - View details below
Lenders Repaid: Monthly
Currency Exchange Loss: Covered
Date Listed: May 1, 2009
Date Disbursed: Apr 15, 2009
Date Funded:May 16, 2009
Loan Ended:Oct 15, 2009

About the Country

Country:Dominican Republic
Avg Annual Income:$7,611.00
Currency:Dominican Republic Pesos (DOP)
Exchange Rate:35.8700 DOP = 1 USD



Armanda Ortega is the representative of this group of five micro entrepreneurs. She started her business a year ago. She took a first loan of 8000 pesos (about 220 dollars) and is applying now for a second loan of 10000 pesos (about 277 dollars).


She is a seamstress and makes bedding items such as bedspreads, sheets, pillowcases and curtains. She makes different models to offer her customers when she visits them, but also accepts special requests. Her clients can pay her cash or take credit. In this case she arranges payment plans with her customers.


Armanda says that "preoccupations never cease to exist." She finds it challenging to sell enough merchandise to complete her loan payments and generate profits. She envisions her business as a house store with more variety. She wants to have a shop with employees that sew for her, and a secretary to take the orders. She would want to do this venture with her other group friends as business partners.


Please help us support Armanda and her friends. Thank you!



About Group Loans
In a group loan, each member of the group receives an individual loan but is part of a group of individuals bound by a group guarantee. Under this arrangement, each member of the group supports one another and is responsible for paying back the loans of their fellow group members if someone is delinquent or defaults. Learn more


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Journal entries for La Fortaleza, Group 4


Loan has been disbursed
 
Entrepreneur: La Fortaleza, Group 4
Location: Santo Domingo, Dominican Republic

Thank you for your loan. It has been disbursed to La Fortaleza, Group 4, consisting of Armanda Ortega, Aurelia Then, Belkis Urena, Maria Martinez, Miguelina Reyes by Esperanza International, a partner of HOPE International in Dominican Republic. We are excited to watch this business grow. Over the 5 months of this loan, Esperanza International, a partner of HOPE International will be collecting repayments from this entrepreneur and posting progress updates on the Kiva website.


Posted by from Santo Domingo, Dominican Republic
May 17, 2009
Comment on this entry

Kiva Field Update - Message from the Dominican Republic
 
Entrepreneur: La Fortaleza, Group 4
Location: Santo Domingo, Dominican Republic

Dear Esperanza lenders,

As you may know, all entrepreneur profiles on Kiva’s website are posted by local Field Partners like Esperanza, whose mission is to “free children and their families from poverty through initiatives that generate income, education, and health, restoring self-worth and dignity to those who have lost hope.” As a Kiva Fellow working with Esperanza International in the Dominican Republic and Haiti, I saw Esperanza’s mission at work most recently while visiting a batey.

For those that are not familiar with the term “batey,” it is a small, barrack-style community built and maintained by large sugar corporations. These communities are often completely surrounded by sugar cane fields, and often they lack basic resources such as clean drinking water, transportation, reliable electricity, and medicine. The majority of a batey’s members work in planting, cutting, and loading sugar cane for eight months of the year. The other four months are a stalemate, during which there are no sugar cane earnings.

In order to ensure continued earnings, one entrepreneur, Cloreta Yan, who lives on a rural batey, used her Kiva loan to open a small store in her house. Her community previously did not have a store where they might buy basic supplies, which meant that community members had to travel to nearby communities to shop. When my fellow Kiva Fellow Kalie Gold and I first visited Cloreta, she offered very basic supplies, such as sugar, oil, and rice. When I conducted a follow-up visit, she was selling over 20 items, including tobacco, ice, drinks, and cookies. She is now earning 600 pesos a week and, according to her loan officer, continues to expand the line of merchandise she sells.

Esperanza has supported 4,251 Kiva entrepreneurs thus far, resulting in approximately $200,000 loaned. Continually working to improve their organization, they have recently opened an office in Trau de Nord, Haiti. Esperanza continues to grow - thanks to Kiva lenders like you!

Staff members at various offices throughout the Dominican Republic visit their entrepreneurs frequently, and many of you will receive an update on an entrepreneur who received a loan contribution from you. Unfortunately, due to logistical and administrative constraints, reaching every entrepreneur for an update is just not possible, even with Esperanza’s dedicated team. Whether or not an update is provided on a specific entrepreneur to whom you made a loan, I hope that you have enjoyed this update on the impact that Esperanza has had with Kiva funds.

Finally, I would like to thank you personally for supporting an entrepreneur in Haiti or the Dominican Republic. It saddens me to realize that this letter marks the end of my time working with Kiva’s Field Partner Esperanza here in the Dominican Republic. For the last three months I have had the pleasure of working with Esperanza, visiting numerous Kiva entrepreneurs, and training staff members in writing business profile updates for Kiva lenders such as yourself.

To see all current fundraising loans from Esperanza on Kiva.org, please click here:

http://www.kiva.org/app.php?page=businesses&partner_id=44&status=Fundraising&sortBy=New+to+Old&_te=mj&_te=mj

To see a short YouTube video on Cloreta Yan, please click here:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8reiqg1pbBo&_te=mj

On behalf of Kiva, Esperanza, and its entrepreneurs, we thank you for your continued support.


Posted by JD Bergeron, Kiva Staff, from San Francisco, United States
Jun 11, 2009
Comments (14)

Sowing together the future
 
Entrepreneur: La Fortaleza, Group 4
Location: Santo Domingo, Dominican Republic

Armanda Ortega has had a very successful loan cycle with Esperanza International and has been able to repay all of the money wtihout too much difficulty. She is a seamstress who makes sheets, cushions, bedspreads, and decorative toothbrush and toothpaste holders in the shape of a young girl where the items are held in her pockets. With the loan she bought lots of cloth of all colors, thread, needles, etc that she has used to make all of her items. She takes pictures of her items to show to potential clients and her daughter has started a website for her to upload these pictures on to reach even more people. She has learned more about business and publicity and is currently saving money so that she can buy a new sowing machine that makes neater seams. This machine will allow her to start making clothes to sell since there is a very high demand for nicely made clothes which she will be able to sell for less than her competitors. Armanda is hoping to make enough money from this business to one day buy her own house as well as rent a room elsewhere to start up her own shop so that she can be more productive than working from home. Armanda would like to extend her thanks for this loan!


Posted by Sarah Colten from Santo Domingo, Dominican Republic
Sep 30, 2009
Comments (1)

Kiva Help Repayment Schedule for La Fortaleza, Group 4

  Expected Repayments Actual Repayments Comments
July 2009 $336.34 $336.34 Repayment Received
August 2009 $224.65 $209.86 Repayment Received
September 2009 $225.00 $239.79 Repayment Received
October 2009 $225.35 $225.35 Repayment Received
November 2009 $338.66 $338.66 Repayment Received