The Legacy Incubator

Reklaim Trust’s Legacy Incubator™ is our long-game blueprint: building leaders, businesses, and community stability over the next generation.

Our Legacy is People, Not Just Programs

We don’t just respond to crisis. We raise up the next wave of providers, entrepreneurs, and leaders who will restore Tulare County from the inside out. The Legacy Incubator has two tracks: Youth Legacy and Service Legacy.

🌱 Youth Legacy (Ages 16.5–20)

For teens and young adults who’ve grown up fast but still dream big. Our 4-phase model takes participants from survival to stewardship:

  • Seed: Faith, identity, trauma-informed healing
  • Root: Life skills, budgeting, confidence, boundaries
  • Rise: Microbusiness training, mock interviews, mentorship
  • Reign: Paid fellowships, leadership roles, sponsor-backed independence

Graduates leave with a portfolio, business plan, and lifelong mentor support.

Youth Incubator
Service Incubator

🛠 Service Legacy — Reklaim & Rebuild

This workforce wing creates second chances for women and trauma survivors ready to step into work that heals communities:

  • Move-out & hoarding cleanouts
  • Senior support & decluttering
  • Creative companionship & grief care
  • Admin & advocacy roles
  • Mobile notary, virtual assistant, or grant services

Participants are supported with startup tools, flexible contracts, and client matching through Reklaim’s partner network.

Building Toward the Future

Each year, the Legacy Incubator will host an Annual Business Fair — showcasing startups, youth-led ventures, and service-based enterprises that prove recovery and leadership are possible. Income earned is split fairly: 45% savings under trust, 25% reinvested into the business, and 30% for milestone-based use. Upon graduation, students may take full ownership, buy back trust equity, or donate forward to the next generation.

Want to Support the Legacy?

Sponsor a youth, fund a training cycle, or partner with us to expand the incubator house. Together, we’re raising leaders who rebuild Tulare County with faith and courage.