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How a Philly Entrepreneur is Using Fashion to Help Formerly Incarcerated Women Get Back On Their Fee


When Kimberly McGlonn was growing up in Milwaukee, her food activist father opened a healthy deli across the street from a KFC and her mother volunteered as a counselor at a local prison.

“While I had this really rich early childhood of activism and safety, I also have another life experience, I know what it’s like to have to choose between difficult options because you are just trying to survive,” said McGlonn, who now lives in Jenkintown.

And she knows survival can be especially difficult for people re-entering society after a prison term.

“No one wants to create a space for them,” McGlonn said. “In fact, everyone wants to create more and more distance.”

McGlonn, an educator who has studied mass incarceration and regularly volunteers with Books Through Bars, wanted to do something to help.

In 2017, she founded Grant Blvd, a sustainable clothing company that supports those impacted by the criminal justice system. McGlonn named the business after the street where she grew up with her activist parents.

Grant Blvd has a partnership with Books Through Bars, through which proceeds from product sales at Grant Blvd go to donate books to imprisoned people.

Last August, Grant Blvd launched a fellowship that taught women who were formerly incarcerated for non-violent offenses how to sew.

And this year, McGlonn hopes to provide employment opportunities for returning citizens. Grant Blvd has partnered with the state Department of Corrections to identity potential talent. McGlonn’s ultimate goal is to “provide pathways to self-sufficiency to women with convictions who have a really hard time finding employment.”

The 40-year-old entrepreneur also hopes her business can help the planet and get African Americans to talk about sustainable fashion.

“There’s not too many of us who are actually trying to figure out how to bring us into the conversation about sustainability,” she said. “Centuries of oppression make us have to focus on right now. People who can think about sustainability are often people who have the privilege to think about the future.”

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