Time Magazine
Posted Monday, Jul.
31, 2006
A Car Salesman You Can Trust
LIFE AFTER WORK
Robert
Chambers, 62, wanted to scale back his work hours and
responsibility. So he left his career in computer services and
began selling cars, seeing it as a fun way to stay as busy as he
wanted while generating some income. But he quickly grew
disillusioned with his new job. "I got sick of watching guys
high-five behind glass walls" after they had bullied someone
"who probably makes $10 an hour" into overpaying, he says.
That's when Chambers discovered his calling. He founded
Bonnie CLAC (Car Loans and Counseling), a nonprofit that
attempts to negotiate fair car prices for the working poor and
offers them low-rate loans. Since launching his firm in Lebanon,
N.H., five years ago, Chambers has underwritten $10 million in
loans, and his clients have saved an average of $7,000 over the
life of their loan, he says.
Chambers and others like him are an emerging face of
philanthropy in the U.S. Individually, they will never have the
impact of, say, Bill Gates, whose foundation can lay claim to
assets that dwarf the gross domestic product of many
not-so-small countries. But collectively, regular people who
have just retired or are approaching retirement age are making
their distinctive mark as social entrepreneurs.
And why not? They are part of the healthiest retirement
generation to date. "A second, non-core career with a focus on
service will be their hallmark," predicts Marc Freedman, founder
and president of Civic Ventures, a think tank dedicated to
helping people find personally rewarding careers and volunteer
work as they age.
Chambers, for his part, takes a salary for his do-good
efforts. But that's a small reason he's in the game. "It's
changing people's lives," he says of his loan and counseling
service. By making reliable transportation affordable, he helps
clients hold a job, which builds their credit. Civic Ventures
recently established a $100,000 Purpose Prize to reward five
people who are over 60 and making a difference in the world.
They will be named in September, and all finalists are eligible
for a grant to further develop their ideas. Freedman was worried
that he might not get enough nominees, but he has received more
than 1,500.
Chambers is a finalist. Among the others are Martha Rollins,
63, of Richmond, Va., who runs a furniture store and café
staffed by ex-convicts; June Simmons, 64, of San Fernando,
Calif., whose nonprofit trains social workers to cut down on
life-threatening errors in their care of the elderly; and
Charles Dey, 75, of Lyme, Conn., who places high school students
who have disabilities in paid internships that provide a
workplace mentor. Chambers hopes to use any prize money to
expand his New England auto-loan operation across the U.S. If
more folks can afford to get to work, more will, he reasons.
That's making a difference
