After years of offering other sorts of support services for people with autism, Commonwealth Autism decided it was time for a program expansion with the introduction of workforce training.
Naturally, the Henrico-based nonprofit needed a workplace to do that.
Tyler Hart, the organization’s CEO, said it had been on the hunt for such a venue and looked at different types of businesses in the area, before it stumbled upon the right fit in South Richmond.
The 28-year-old nonprofit has struck a deal to purchase Good Foods Grocery, a longtime independent local grocery store at Stony Point Village shopping center that was looking for a buyer ahead of the retirement of founder Donnie Caffery.
“We were looking at coffee shops and things like that, a retail-type establishment to do training in. By happenstance we came across the listing for Good Foods,” Hart said.
Hart declined to disclose the terms of the deal, which closed Monday and gives Commonwealth Autism the vehicle it needs for its new vocational training venture.
The acquisition was a stock purchase of Good Foods, and the grocery store will continue to operate as a separate, wholly owned subsidiary of the nonprofit.
Hart said the vocational program, which is new ground for the group, is being developed because autistic adults as a population experience high levels of unemployment. The program is expected to launch early next year and is intended to teach both job and social skills needed for employment.
“The goal is long-term sustainable employment so they can have an independent lifestyle,” he said.
Hart said a portion of the program would take place at Good Foods, while another segment would take place at a partner business that would hire the program students.
“You learn job skills but we hope to make it more robust than that. It’s also how you work in a social environment,” Hart said. “We want to find community partners who want to hire neurodiverse employees. We don’t have them lined up yet, but we have begun those conversations.”
Hart said he expected the program would offer local job placement opportunities primarily but not exclusively at retail businesses, including at Good Foods.
The acquisition of the grocery store is being financed by the sale of Commonwealth Autism’s real estate assets, among them its headquarters at 4108 E. Parham Road.
The two-story, 6,000-square-foot building is expected to be listed soon. It has an assessment value of $920,000, per county land records.
The sale of that property would be added to the proceeds from the December 2022 sale of a transition house for autistic adults the nonprofit operated in the Willow Lawn area. The house sold for $585,000.
“The concept was to take the real estate assets and put them into programs,” Hart said.
Hart said Commonwealth Autism is working on lining up a new location for its administrative offices, which would also be home to programming space and a training kitchen, near Good Foods. He said the group was weighing more than one possible site.
Commonwealth Autism has 17 employees and also leases office space in Virginia Beach. The 43-person team at Good Foods is expected to stay on with the change in ownership, and will likely be made employees of the nonprofit at some point, Hart said.
Grocery stores are known for their tight margins, but Hart said Good Foods has good financials, and he is optimistic the store could be a new revenue source for the nonprofit.
“They have a great business. We want to keep that customer base happy and keep the people in the store who have been in the store,” Hart said.
It also helps that Good Foods founder Caffery plans to stick around to show the nonprofit the ropes. He has been hired by Commonwealth Autism to serve as a hands-on advisor for a year, and will serve in a more limited consulting role for the following two years.
In the runup to the sale, Caffery told BizSense that the grocery store’s business has been strong, so he felt it was an opportune time to pass the torch in order to retire.
Commonwealth Autism’s ownership ushers in a new chapter for the long-tenured South Richmond grocery store. Caffery opened the store at Stony Point Village nearly 40 years ago, and expanded its square footage in 2012 and again in 2020 to its current leased footprint of 9,400 square feet.
In 2016, Good Foods shuttered a second location at Gayton Crossing, which originally opened at Westpark Shopping Center in 1990 before it relocated to Gayton Crossing in 1993.
Commonwealth Autism’s other programming includes a resources database for families of autistic people, independent-living counseling for adults and an in-school behavioral support program for preschoolers.
The nonprofit, which is also known as the Autism Program of Virginia, reported revenue of $1.5 million and expenses of $1.2 million in fiscal year 2022, according to tax filings.
Max’s Positive Vibe Cafe founder Garth Larcen has been working as a consultant to Commonwealth Autism, and has helped in the development of the vocational training program. The now-closed cafe had also served as a space for job training for people with special needs.
After years of offering other sorts of support services for people with autism, Commonwealth Autism decided it was time for a program expansion with the introduction of workforce training.
Naturally, the Henrico-based nonprofit needed a workplace to do that.
Tyler Hart, the organization’s CEO, said it had been on the hunt for such a venue and looked at different types of businesses in the area, before it stumbled upon the right fit in South Richmond.
The 28-year-old nonprofit has struck a deal to purchase Good Foods Grocery, a longtime independent local grocery store at Stony Point Village shopping center that was looking for a buyer ahead of the retirement of founder Donnie Caffery.
“We were looking at coffee shops and things like that, a retail-type establishment to do training in. By happenstance we came across the listing for Good Foods,” Hart said.
Hart declined to disclose the terms of the deal, which closed Monday and gives Commonwealth Autism the vehicle it needs for its new vocational training venture.
The acquisition was a stock purchase of Good Foods, and the grocery store will continue to operate as a separate, wholly owned subsidiary of the nonprofit.
Hart said the vocational program, which is new ground for the group, is being developed because autistic adults as a population experience high levels of unemployment. The program is expected to launch early next year and is intended to teach both job and social skills needed for employment.
“The goal is long-term sustainable employment so they can have an independent lifestyle,” he said.
Hart said a portion of the program would take place at Good Foods, while another segment would take place at a partner business that would hire the program students.
“You learn job skills but we hope to make it more robust than that. It’s also how you work in a social environment,” Hart said. “We want to find community partners who want to hire neurodiverse employees. We don’t have them lined up yet, but we have begun those conversations.”
Hart said he expected the program would offer local job placement opportunities primarily but not exclusively at retail businesses, including at Good Foods.
The acquisition of the grocery store is being financed by the sale of Commonwealth Autism’s real estate assets, among them its headquarters at 4108 E. Parham Road.
The two-story, 6,000-square-foot building is expected to be listed soon. It has an assessment value of $920,000, per county land records.
The sale of that property would be added to the proceeds from the December 2022 sale of a transition house for autistic adults the nonprofit operated in the Willow Lawn area. The house sold for $585,000.
“The concept was to take the real estate assets and put them into programs,” Hart said.
Hart said Commonwealth Autism is working on lining up a new location for its administrative offices, which would also be home to programming space and a training kitchen, near Good Foods. He said the group was weighing more than one possible site.
Commonwealth Autism has 17 employees and also leases office space in Virginia Beach. The 43-person team at Good Foods is expected to stay on with the change in ownership, and will likely be made employees of the nonprofit at some point, Hart said.
Grocery stores are known for their tight margins, but Hart said Good Foods has good financials, and he is optimistic the store could be a new revenue source for the nonprofit.
“They have a great business. We want to keep that customer base happy and keep the people in the store who have been in the store,” Hart said.
It also helps that Good Foods founder Caffery plans to stick around to show the nonprofit the ropes. He has been hired by Commonwealth Autism to serve as a hands-on advisor for a year, and will serve in a more limited consulting role for the following two years.
In the runup to the sale, Caffery told BizSense that the grocery store’s business has been strong, so he felt it was an opportune time to pass the torch in order to retire.
Commonwealth Autism’s ownership ushers in a new chapter for the long-tenured South Richmond grocery store. Caffery opened the store at Stony Point Village nearly 40 years ago, and expanded its square footage in 2012 and again in 2020 to its current leased footprint of 9,400 square feet.
In 2016, Good Foods shuttered a second location at Gayton Crossing, which originally opened at Westpark Shopping Center in 1990 before it relocated to Gayton Crossing in 1993.
Commonwealth Autism’s other programming includes a resources database for families of autistic people, independent-living counseling for adults and an in-school behavioral support program for preschoolers.
The nonprofit, which is also known as the Autism Program of Virginia, reported revenue of $1.5 million and expenses of $1.2 million in fiscal year 2022, according to tax filings.
Max’s Positive Vibe Cafe founder Garth Larcen has been working as a consultant to Commonwealth Autism, and has helped in the development of the vocational training program. The now-closed cafe had also served as a space for job training for people with special needs.
I am sorry – but there is something wrong with the tax code that allows Non-Profits 501 C 3’s to purchase and operate for profit businesses. Since Good Foods will be a subsidiary – from a tax standpoint Good Foods should never make a profit because they will “donate” all their profits to Commonwealth Autism. So Good Foods Grocery will never pay their “fair share”? Will Commonwealth raise food prices to exorbitant levels under the guise of “donating to Autism”?? Why can’t Commonwealth just have contracts with companies to hire X amount of people to train? (i.e. Publix/Kroger/Walmart/Lidl/Target/etc.) Is Commonwealth… Read more »
Sigh… The grocery store becomes part of the non-profit. “Non-profit” is a bit of a misnomer as non-profits are allowed to make profits so long as they are not distributed to any private individual (e.g. founders, investors, directors, stakeholders, etc). Profits must be funneled back into the organizations activities. The grocery store will do just that, funnel the minor profits (grocery margin is very low) back into the organization to continue to help folks with autism prepare to enter the workforce. It baffles me that anyone would be up in arms about this like you are. Nice straw man in… Read more »
Thank you for name calling me just because I have a different opinion from you. That is usually a sign that you are losing the argument….sigh.
It baffles me you INCORRECTLY assume I don’t shop there.
Quibbling. I tried to explain how this non-profit would operate and help some members of our community. I’ll let the upvotes/downvotes decide who’s “winning” or “losing.” Spoiler alert: people generally support workforce/social training for autistic/neurodiverse (or anyone in need for that matter) to allow them to have an independent and fulfilling lifestyle.
The fact that downvotes/upvotes justify and validates you is sad. Don’t be a sheep.
BTW – my first cousin is autistic, and works part time, and yes, she has benefited from organizations (for profit & non-profit). I am not ranting about autism, I’m ranting about the proliferation of non-profits because of the tax code allowing them to make profits.
Hi Victoria – I don’t understand your gripe. To add a bit to Terry ‘s explanation, when a nonstock, not-for-profit enterprise is able to take in more “revenue”, be it from donations or the sale of goods and services, in any given year than it deploys for programs and operating expenses, it does not run afoul of its mission, duty, or purpose…. or tax law. It simply means that in that fiscal year it has generated a surplus to further support and possibly expand its future mission-driven activities. On the face of it, this organization is pursuing just that. Now,… Read more »
My gripe is not with Commonwealth – they are using the tax tools to their advantage – just like any good governance should. My gripe is from a broader view. If non-profits can vertically integrate to increase their cash flow to expand programs – why wouldn’t all small business become 501 3 c’s so they can take advantage of vertical integration to expand? Why not Shamin hotels become a 501 3 c and place a couple of their hotels as “training facilities”? I guess I view Good Foods as a for profit grocer – not a training facility. I will… Read more »
Good for Donnie that he can retire after decades of running a profitable grocery business. Kudos to Donnie for expanding Good Foods when Trader Joes opened in Stony Point. Blessings to Donnie and his staff for all the years they’ve provided great service and products. Thank you Donnie and all the beautiful staff that made my life better and for this new venture you are embarking on.