Startups

Meet recipients of BGE’s latest Energizing Small Business grants

Does BGE know what’s best for small businesses?

Powerlines for small businesses. (TECHNICAL.LY/ALANAH NICHOLE DAVIS/MADE WITH DALL-E)

BGE knows what’s best” were the words from Baltimore Gas and Electric Company’s (BGE) memorable “Wires Down” commercial, which initially aired locally in the late 1990s.

Perhaps that phrase still holds for entrepreneurs in central Maryland, as the Baltimore-HQed natural gas and electric company embarked on a second round of its philanthropic partnership and grant program with Hello Alice and the DC-based Global Entrepreneurship Network (GEN).

The Energizing Small Business grant program recently provided funding to another group of small businesses in central Maryland, to help them “succeed and thrive,” as stated in a release from BGE. Here are some of the businesses from the first round.

 

Interested companies had to submit applications for this cohort by Aug. 18.

It’s worth noting that Hello Alice is currently facing a lawsuit, as it pointed out in a tweet last month. The suit, similar to another filed against Fearless Fund, revolves around a previous grant program in partnership with Progressive Insurance, which offered $25,000 in grants to ten Black-owned small businesses to purchase commercial vehicles.

The eligibility criteria for the Energizing Small Business program included being in good standing with or working toward compliance with the State of Maryland, as well as having under 25 employees. These criteria were well-suited for 2023 BGE Energizing Small Business grant recipients like Susan Clayton, the founder of RunMitts who won Baltimore Homecoming’s 2022 Crab Tank pitch competition and received a Comcast RISE grant earlier this year. Clayton commented on her “big news” in a post on LinkedIn.

Another entrepreneur who met this year’s criteria and received funding is founder Todd Sheridan of Treehouse Juicery, which won the audience choice award at the latest Crab Tank contest last month at Loyola University of Maryland’s Baltipreneurs Accelerator demo day in March.

According to the aforelinked release, a total of 651 businesses have received grants amounting to $13.06 million since the inception of this partnership. Meet some more of this round’s recipients here:

Full disclosure: This editorial article features news about Comcast, which is a Technical.ly client. That relationship had no impact on this report.
This first appeared in Technical.ly's Baltimore newsletter. Sign up to get more stories like this in your inbox before they go online.
Companies: BGE / State of Maryland

Before you go...

Please consider supporting Technical.ly to keep our independent journalism strong. Unlike most business-focused media outlets, we don’t have a paywall. Instead, we count on your personal and organizational support.

Our services Preferred partners The journalism fund
Engagement

Join our growing Slack community

Join 5,000 tech professionals and entrepreneurs in our community Slack today!

Trending

Trump may kill the CHIPS and Science Act. Here’s what that means for your community.

Despite big raises and contracts, a tech training giant lays off staffers and loses its CEO

After nearly a decade, the federal program for immigrant entrepreneurs is finally working

Block the bots or feed them facts? How Technical.ly uses AI in journalism

Technically Media