metro >> on the cover A Legacy Of Lending Ideal Detroit Loan Corporation does business the old-fashioned way. David Bussell, president of the Ideal Detroit Loan Corporation, and his mother, Joan, the financial secretary, go over loan payments at a board meeting. G Barbara Lewis I Contributing Writer etting enough money to start a busi- ness was often challenging in the 1920s. Personal credit wasn't easy to come by, especially for Jewish immigrants. Going to banks, where they might face anti-Semitism, could be a hassle. Many new Americans relied on pawnshops for loans. Israel "Sam" Bussell, an immigrant from Belarus, and some of his small businessman friends found a better way to help each other secure their financial futures: They started the Ideal Detroit Loan Corporation. Bussell served as an early president. Bussell made axles for General Motors and then started his own company, Detroit Barrel and Box. Sam's son, Harry, also served as Ideal Detroit president and used loans from the corporation to help grow a business recy- cling steel drums. Today, Sam and Harry's descendants are among those keeping the loan corporation active. Sam's grandson Joel Bussell, a retired attorney from West Bloomfield, is a board member, as is his son, David, a mechanical engineer from Southfield. Joel's wife, Joan, is financial secretary The corporation continues to help its members through small business and per- sonal loans, functioning pretty much the way it always did. In order to get a loan, you have to be a member, but membership is open to anyone who buys $50 worth of stock in the corpora- tion (purchasers receive an impressive stock 12 November 12 2015 JIN Joel Bussell, a board member and former president of the Ideal Detroit Loan Corporation, writes a check for a loan applicant. Israel "Sam" Bussell, owner of Detroit Barrel and Box, was one of the loan company's founders. certificate) and deposits at least $100 in a savings account. After that, members can borrow up to two-and-a half times as much as their sav- ings, to be repaid in a specific number of installments. The maximum the group will lend is $10,000 over a 36-month term. The corporation charges 5 percent interest per year of the loan and 1 percent per year for credit life insurance. The amount of the interest and insurance is taken out of the loan amount up front. Say a member with $1,000 in savings wants a $2,400 loan, promising to pay it back at $100 a month over two years. With $240 deducted for interest (5 percent for each year) and $48 deducted for credit insur- ance (1 percent for each year), the member receives a check for $2,112. The corporation invests its assets, which now total about $500,000. At the end of the year, the interest on the assets, which has been averaging 3.5 to 5 percent, and the interest from loans is disbursed as a dividend to members who have had active loans dur- ing the year. A 5 percent dividend on $1,000 would be $50; after two years, the savings account in our example would be worth $1,100. If the member continued to take loans, the following year's dividend would be a little larger because it would be based on a larger savings account. West Bloomfield business owner Hartley Harris, the current corporation president, was introduced to Ideal Detroit Loan by his father, Louis. Harris, 62, joined 40 years ago and took out his first loan at age 23 to buy a truck that he used to start his first business. Now Harris' daughters and sons-in-law, Mychal and Jason Glass, and Erin and Kevin Chupak, all have accounts. Harris and his wife, Debi, also opened accounts for their four grandchildren, ages 1 to 5. Members realize that making a series of loans can build a small account into a size- able nest egg by the time a grandchild comes of age. Joel Bussell's grandson Jacob Bussell, 21, used his account this year for a loan to buy a used car. Another grandson is using his account to help with college costs. The corporation has about 150 members, including many immigrants from the former Soviet Union. Most have between $1,000 and $10,000 in their corporation accounts. Most, but not all, of the members are Jewish; ifs certainly not a requirement. New members are welcome. The board hopes to boost membership to at least 200. Loan applications can be approved in as little as a half-hour, said David Bussell, but loans that are for an amount greater than the member's savings and loans going to minors or members over age 70 need an insurable co-signer. The corporation's affairs are handled the old-fashioned way. Savings and loans are recorded in a pair of battered black ledger books. Promissory notes are filled in by hand on paper forms, and the checks are written by hand as well. Borrowers make their pay- ments by checks or money orders sent to the corporation's post office box. The board meets for about an hour every Monday evening (except on national or Jewish holidays) at Congregation Beth Shalom in Oak Park. The corporation's expenses are less than $12,000 a year, which covers a small salary for the bookkeeper and small stipends for board members. Ideal Detroit Loan is "a great way to get money in a fast and easy way without a lot of red tape," Harris said. And, added David Bussell, it's much less expensive than borrowing via credit card. *