A typical Internet ad will promise thousands even if you don’t know the difference between a balance sheet and a balance beam. Real government grants are scarce, tightly targeted toward specific industries, and rigorously competitive. If it sounds too good to be true, it probably is.
Getting a refresher course in that truism cost Donna Hartley of Tahoe City, Calif., a cool $2,500.
A survivor of a major plane crash, cancer and open-heart surgery, Hartley works as a motivational speaker. Interested in raising capital for her management company, Hartley scoured the Internet for leads. She found Grant Financial Network, and in August 2007, she gave the company $2,500 in return for detailed information on grants and assistance in securing them.
Grant Financial Network asked Hartley to authorize payment of the fee as a bank draft, rather than by mailing a check or paying with a credit card. That’s a big red flag: Consumer groups warn that an ACH draft or wire transfer is the most difficult kind of payment to delay or dispute.
“Months and months pass,” she recalls, with her calling repeatedly and not hearing anything. She eventually received some information from the company, but Hartley says it was nothing she couldn’t have found out herself for free - and she never received any grant money.
When Hartley called to try to get her money back, the Las Vegas-based company instead tried to get her to part with an additional $6,500, for which it promised to help her turn her company into a 501(c)(3) charitable organization. The brazen pitch, she recalls, was about how that would make her eligible for even more grant money.
“I feel like I got taken to the cleaners,” she says.
When we tried to call Grant Financial Network for a comment, the phone number listed for the company was disconnected. The Better Business Bureau of Las Vegas rates Grant Financial Network as “unsatisfactory.” The bureau processed 26 complaints about the company in the last 12 months, mostly over refund issues and allegedly dishonest sales practices. More than half of those complaints went unanswered by the company.
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