There are also state and federal set-aside programs for social enterprise community rehabilitation programs that primarily employ people with disabilities. Twenty-seven states set aside funds to buy state supplies and services from such rehabilitation programs. For example, Washington’s rehabilitation programs sell about $3 million in goods and services to the state. A similar program exists on the federal level established by the Javits-Wagner- O’Day Act (JWOD). The mandatory federal purchasing program “provides employment opportunities for over 36,000 Americans who are blind or have other severe disabilities by orchestrating government purchases of products and services provided by nonprofit agencies employing such individuals throughout the country” (Pomerantz, 2003).