The article covers President Obama’s visit to Flint and discusses the various government efforts to replace the city’s water pipes, but Maya Rockeymoore, CGPS President and CEO, makes the point that that is not sufficient. “People of color were disproportionately harmed, because they had an infrastructure that was older and more decrepit, because the water caused more […]
Share Your Social Security Story with Us!
The Center for Global Policy Solutions seeks volunteers to share their experiences with receiving Social Security benefits as a child or youth. Many Americans are unaware that children and youths receive Social Security as survivors of a parent who has died, dependents of a parent who is disabled and/or dependents of an older adult who […]
KSNW: Summit to address neighborhood safety concerns and highlight progress
Our Community Engagement Initiative organized a summit in Kansas on neighborhood health and safety, which KSNW covered. Organizers are working through a grant managed by the Center for Global Policy Solutions to increase the health and safety of the community. “That grant is a wonderful asset to the community there just south of WSU and […]
The Nation: Lead Poisoning in Flint Is More Than a Health Crisis
Zoë Carpenter talked to Maya Rockeymoore about the devastating implications of the Flint water crisis: Even more devastating may be what the water crisis has done to residents’ wealth. Flint’s population, which is 57 percent black, is particularly vulnerable to downward swings in the housing market. Nationally, home equity accounts for a staggering 92 percent of black Americans’ […]
The American Prospect: Warren Calls on Banks to Invest in Minority Neighborhoods, Businesses
Isaac Park discusses Senator Elizabeth Warren’s keynote speech at the 2016 Color of Wealth Summit. Senator Warren discussed the need for government to make real investments in communities of color, which were deeply affected by the housing collapse. It’s this low family wealth that prevents entrepreneurs of color from succeeding as business owners. “The housing collapse destroyed […]
The Hill Op-Ed on The Color of Entrepreneurship
Senior Research Fellow Algernon Austin highlights findings from his report, “The Color of Entrepreneurship“: People of color are indeed interested in being entrepreneurs. In fact, when one looks only at businesses without employees, women of color are more likely to be entrepreneurs than white women. The problem for people of color is growing their businesses […]
Media Coverage of “The Color of Entrepreneurship” Report
Report: The Color of Entrepreneurship: Why the Racial Gap Among Firms Costs the U.S. Billions Coverage: Inc.com: These Black CEOs Couldn’t Get a Loan (Now They Run Some of the Fast-Growing Companies in America) Black Enterprise: #BlackBizMatters: Spending $1.2 Trillion Black Buying Power With Black Businesses Fast Company: One Of The Biggest Challenges Of Getting Funding For Minority-Owned […]
Color of Entrepreneurship Infographic
Although the number of minority-owned businesses is increasing dramatically, America is currently forgoing an estimated 1.1 million businesses owned by people of color because of past and present discrimination in American society. These missing businesses could produce an estimated 9 million more jobs and boost our national income by $300 billion. Thus, expanding entrepreneurship among […]
C-SPAN: Boosting Minority Entrepreneurship
Dr. Maya Rockeymoore, CGPS President and CEO, discussed our report, “The Color of Entrepreneurship,” on C-SPAN’s Washington Journal. The country is missing a stunning number of businesses, jobs, and workers’ income because people of color are underrepresented as business owners with employees. She talked about the importance of microlending and access to capital, which can help […]
2016 Color of Wealth Summit: Equity-Centered Development panel
Gentrification, a form of economic development that results in high-income residents moving to low-income areas and displacing existing residents in the process, has been widespread in urban communities across the United States. Given the trend, is it possible to implement economic development strategies that benefit existing residents and allow them to remain connected to place? […]
