National Urban League President Congratulates New Chairwoman of the Federal Communications Commission
National Urban League President Congratulates New Chairwoman of the Federal Communications Commission
National Urban League President Congratulates New Chairwoman of the Federal Communications Commission
Birmingham Urban League (Birmingham, AL), a community based organization, is stepping up to fill a void once handled by the Jefferson County Committee for Economic Opportunity (JCCEO).
JCCEO had to relinquish all grants and stop all programs due to financial struggles. Now the Birmingham Urban League is seeing more clients come in for utility assistance.
Since JCCEO is no longer able to offer it’s programs, some residents say they were worried they wouldn’t have anywhere to turn to.
“I put it like this, there’s a lot of folks drowning, a lot of people need help, not only just me, a lot of people need something, they ain’t got nowhere to go," said Birmingham resident Glenn Hampton.
Birmingham Urban League is seeing a 30% increase in clients coming through their door just this week.
“We are having conversations about how we can best stand up and fill in the hole," said Birmingham Urban League President/CEO William Barnes.
At 91 years old, Civil Rights leader Xernona Clayton said she isn't resting.
"Our fight always is to encourage everybody to join the fight. That's how you win," Clayton said.
She said the battle isn't over yet. Clayton was an aid to Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., and had her start in civil rights with the Urban League in Chicago.
"What's really disconcerting to those of us who were on the fight every day is that the victories we thought we had won, we're looking at it now as maybe it wasn't a real victory because it didn't last long," Clayton said.
Louisville Urban League (Louisville, KY) hosted the Annual IMPACT Report Luncheon at Norton Healthcare Sports and Learning Center on West Muhammad Ali Boulevard.
Clayton was a speaker at the event. Urban League President and CEO Sadiqa Reynolds reflected on the past and made plans for the future.
Madison's gener8tor has joined a seemingly growing roster of companies looking to support or take up space inside what could soon be a business hub for Black entrepreneurs on the city’s South Side.
A Downtown-based startup founded in 2012, gener8tor now has more than 40 accelerator programs available to early-stage companies across the United States and in the small European country Luxembourg. The programs also support musicians, artists, investors and universities.
The Black Business Hub, a $25.3 million construction project recently put forth by the Urban League of Greater Madison (Madison, WI), would be the city’s first Black-led enterprise center — an 81,000-square-foot, four-story building at the corner of Park Street and Hughes Place.
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Montgomery Bus Boycott. This week marks 66 years since the Mass Meeting that ignited the nation to demand equal rights. Read more. | COVID-19 facts. There's a new variant in town, but there is no need to panic. Here’s what you need to know to stay safe. | Ready to elevate your business? Join us for multiple FREE digital sessions this month curated for business owners hosted by our affiliates. | It’s time for a change. Here’s how President Biden plans to grow our economy from the bottom up through the Build Back Better Framework. | New jobs report. Dr. Bernard Anderson, our Chief Economics Adviser, shares an in-depth look at the state of the economy. Here’s what the numbers tell us.
Dr. Bernard E. Anderson
Whitney M Young, Jr. Professor Emeritus, The Wharton School, University of Pennsylvania
Senior Economic Advisor, National Urban League
In November, private payroll employment increased 250,000, while government employment declined by 25,000. The unemployment rate declined 0.4 points to 4.2%. In contrast to the payroll report, the household survey showed an increase in employment 1.14 million, the sharpest gap ever between the two surveys.
The numbers suggest that employment growth is adjusting to the labor market distortions generated by Covid 19 and is reverting to the mean. The average monthly growth over the last three months was 275,000, close to the average monthly job growth reported in the two years before the pandemic of 250,000 to 300,000 jobs.
Marc H. Morial
President and CEO
National Urban League
“There comes a time when people get tired of being trampled over by the iron feet of oppression. There comes a time, my friends, when people get tired of being plunged across the abyss of humiliation, where they experience the bleakness of nagging despair. There comes a time when people get tired of being pushed out of the glittering sunlight of life's July and left standing amid the piercing chill of an alpine November. There comes a time.” – Martin Luther King, Jr., December 5 1955, Address to the first Montgomery Improvement Association Mass Meeting
This week marks the anniversary of the first of the Mass Meetings that drove the strategy and spirit of the Montgomery Bus Boycott, a foundational event in the Civil Rights Movement.
NEW YORK (November 29, 2021) – The nation has lost one of its greatest champions for racial justice and equal opportunity with the passing of former Congresswoman Carrie Meek of Florida, National Urban League President Marc H. Morial said today.
“The daughter of a sharecropper and granddaughter of a slave who was denied admission to graduate school in her home state because of her race, Congresswoman Meek dedicated her career to creating a just and equitable society and expanding opportunity for every American,” Morial said. “Spurred by her early experiences with segregation, which she called a ‘shadow’ on her life, she led the integration of Miami-Dade Community College, where she spent three decades as an educator and administrator.