Business Briefs BUSINESS COMMENTS Minority businesses complain of roadblocks to success By JEFF DONN Assoaated Press Writer SPRINGFIELD, Mass. (AP) ? He totes a power briefcase, wears a monogrammed shirt, and supplies corporate clients like Digital and Coors. So why is Lennox D. Bundy angry? Like many blacks climbing the business ladder, he says he has fought harder to achieve and pro long his success than white com petitors. His business is headquar tered in Merrimack, N.H. "If you're in a Communist country," he says, "they tell you, 'Don't cross the fence!' At least they tell you. Here, they tell you you can cross the fence ? and then they shoot you." He spoke recently during a break at a Springfield trade show that brought together major corpo rate buyers with minority-owned suppliers. The keynote speaker was Wayne Budd, the associate attorney general running the federal investi gation of the beating of Rodney ? King, a Mark, by white Los Ange les policemen. Budd set the tone by saying, "All people have an equal opportunity under the law, but you know as well as I that has not been true as a matter of practice." Representatives of minority owned companies say they need such trade shows to help to make up for their lack of access to cash, , social pressures and other road blocks to riches for them and their businesses. "Traditional financial institutions redline minority com munities and businesses," said Har riet R. Michel, president of the New York-based Minority Supplier Council. Indeed, the progress of minori ty-owned businesses has been slow by some measures. Such companies provided about 1 percent of the needs of corporate purchasers 20 years ago. They still represent only 1 percent to 2 percent, Michel said. Yet the difficulties have not discouraged blacks, Hispanics and Asians from trying. The number of minority-owned businesses in this country has swelled to more than 15,000. Their ranks grew by 12 per cent even in the year that ended in June 1991 during the recession, according to director May Ling Tong of the New England Minority Purchasing Council. Suppliers at the Springfield trade show were selling everything from bookends to space shuttle pans, security services to sophisti cated money management Bundy, 59, founded his busi ness in 1979 to distribute and design specialty promotional prod ucts ? key chains, pen and pencil sets, T-shirts, awards, balloons ? " for businesses. He started with firsthand knowledge of the business because he used to buy such products when he worked for 12 years in product quality at Honeywell, the computer maker. But even that familiarity with personalities and practices has not put him squarely on an inside track, he says. He said neither government agencies nor skeptical banks wanted to help him raise the $20,000 he SlSliEODORE R. DANIELS 111 ippliiii i 1 1 II it p i 2d Qv _ Is auto UMi l! MM 1 1 | - | | || - - il II 1 1 i r /act thtu^ta^n^nat've to m* can be a userutt * ^ '?tttflNb ? Essentially. a lease is a Iwg-tedtt I context of automobile leases, ? leaser with the former bong the roost jk/yuMu tuuay. TYIIR 9 CiOSCOga?ding the cat's market value at the end bf the lease. With an open end lease, on the other hand, if the contract calls far you to return the car |||gte teaser at a certain market value* you will have to pay the leaser the difference before you walk away, IP ^.?0SCd'erKl fca9s is iust another way of financing an automobile. P6 following are common characteristics of the closed-end wtomobite lease: i ... i >; i ? I | ? & ,x ?^^Vv^/'Sx^yxiX'^x^X'Xiv^viyX^'/^^Xv^xixvX'A'X'^Vxv::::;^^ H *1Better teases will not require a downpayment but do reauire a Security deposit and one month's rent . : MMM W, .* * Monthly payments are madebyyou, the lessee; which reflect wily depreciation, and the lessor's cost of financing. ; | 1 - Most teasing companies finance their purchase of car? tfywgti ^ banks and financial instituiirme mut ran KrniwaibMW^i' _ ? rent property. In tbe dthcr-closSr^o^ .