Rep. Lancia’s Non-Profit Promising Veterans Jobs Has $700 After Seven Years

GoLocalProv News Team and Kate Nagle

Rep. Lancia’s Non-Profit Promising Veterans Jobs Has $700 After Seven Years

Rep. Robert Lancia (R - Cranston)
Rhode Island State Representative Robert Lancia created a non-profit in 2009 and in 2014 pledged to create a waffle restaurant to employ veterans.

Seven years later, his non-profit has raised less than $700, and made minimal progress -- raising $125 online --  in starting his restaurant, despite repeatedly seeking press attention to the effort.

The non-profit, "Bob Lancia Ministries," was incorporated in Rhode Island in 2009 and received tax-exempt status from the IRS in 2012, earning tax deductibility status as a public charity. Lancia cannot identify any programs that the non-profit has undertaken over the past seven years.

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Wholly Waffle

After forming Bob Lancia Ministries, Lancia began pitching his plan to start the "Wholly Waffle."

"I am creating a fun, family friendly waffle house that will offer job opportunities to young Vets (especially ages 18-24) to give them a great start as they integrate back into the civilian workforce. Join me today and provide real, practical help to our service men and women," wrote Lancia on the website. 

To gain visibility, Lancia did numerous press interviews in the fall of 2014, just before being elected to the General Assembly for the first time. (See his interview with WPRI below). He created social media pages, a website and is seeking donations online. When asked about the future of the project, Lancia said he hoped to get funding -- and that he would be the first employee.

"It's a self-employment project, and I wanted to turn it not into a job but to help veterans. It was the self-employment project that I chose with [the Department of Veterans Affairs]. I wanted to make it a restaurant and help more people," said Lancia. 

“I have a meeting with the VA vocational counselor shortly,” said Lancia. “There’s potential for $75,000 in funding. I'm category 1 as a 100% disabled veteran. To me, [the Wholly Waffle] would be a voc-rehab program."

Lancia is a Navy veteran, Marine chaplain, and disabled.

“The nonprofit has been involved in raising funds to create a restaurant that will help veterans,” Lancia told GoLocal on Wednesday. 

When asked to see the organization’s IRS reports --  990s, Lancia replied that as the gross receipts were less than $50,000, the non-profit is only required to file a 990-N “e-postcard” with the IRS, with basic organization information, but no financials. 

According to the Wholly Waffle’s fundraising page, the stated goal is to raise $50,000, but to date has only raised $125 on its crowdfunding site.  

“We have a little over $700 in the account,” said Lancia. It is unclear is the Bob Lancia Ministries and the Wholly Waffle are one in the same.

Announcement -- and Reality

“I experienced first-hand the challenges (including multiple surgeries) of returning to civilian life and learned of fellow vets whose challenges were greater. I continued on the path of faith, and founded Bob Lancia Ministries. A few years ago, I was inspired with the idea to serve my fellow service men and women again – and that was the start of The Wholly Waffle restaurant,” wrote Lancia.  

“We’ll hopefully raise the funds,” Lancia, who is running for re-election this November against Democrat Chris Millea in District 16 in Cranston, said on Wednesday in a phone interview regarding the Wholly Waffle. “Yes, the non-profit was formed in 2009, but it only got the IRS approval in 2012, they had lost the initial paperwork.”

Lancia's Wholly Waffle has not made it past the concept stage -- despite much fanfare in 2014.
“When I was asked to run a few years ago, I was told it would raise visibility for the organization, but the reality is I got elected to the General Assembly and it got pushed to the back burner,” said Lancia of his efforts for the Wholly Waffle. 

Lancia said he has been occupied advocating for veterans — at the State House 

‘We’ve been focusing on advocating on behalf of veterans, so we haven’t had as much time to focus on the Bob Lancia Ministries. It's six of one, half dozen of another,” said Lancia. “There's a lot at play. I have the shattered shoulder, I've had a number of knee surgeries and some health issues.  And honestly, the General Assembly has been 24/7. Our focus has been for veterans and getting the vets package through -- the $1 million in funding to start businesses themselves, the license plates, the contracting — we’ve been active for veterans in a different capacity.”

Disability Status

Lancia said that is his capacity as a “100% disabled veteran” that he hopes to get funding for the Wholly Waffle from the federal government. 

“I was, in 2002, preparing for a tour in Iraq with the Marines when I shattered my shoulder and became 100% disabled,” wrote Lancia on the Wholly Waffle page. 

“I was at a food camp for veterans with disabilities when I came up with this,” continued Lancia. “It took about a year to get the Category 1 status, which opened things. If had been [category] two or lower, the potential [for federal] funding wouldn’t be there.”


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