ReMarcs Newsletter - October 3, 2020

Check the deadlines! Do you know when the last day to register to vote in your state is? Find out here. | Every vote counts. Efforts to keep Black Americans from voting are nothing new and have once again come to the fore. Here is how you can fight back. | Tech and biz summit. Did you miss the Tech and the New Normal virtual summit? Catch the replay here! | Census news. A victory in our lawsuit against the Trump administration means the Census Bureau must continue counting until Oct. 31. Fill out your form now! | New jobs report. Dr. Bernard Anderson, our Senior Economic Advisor, shares an in-depth look at the state of the economy. Here’s what the numbers tell us. | Equal Opportunity Dinner. You don’t want to miss a captivating evening of live art, dance, and special guests on October 14th! Save your spot. | New episode! Listen as Shannon Curie discusses ethnographic studies mapping the Black American experience during the pandemic, 2020 election, and more.

Submitted byrwilliams@nul.org onSat, 10/03/2020 - 09:27

September Jobs Report: Recovery Likely to Stall Without Federal Stimulus

By Dr. Bernard E. Anderson, Professor Emeritus, Wharton School, University of Pennsylvania and National Urban League Senior Economic Advisor

In September, private sector employment grew by 877,000, state and local employment declined 231,000 and the unemployment rate fell to 7.9%.  The leisure hospitality industry gained 318 thousand jobs, two-thirds of the total job growth. Most industries showed some job growth.

Submitted byiamempowered onFri, 10/02/2020 - 17:36

NUL and TIAA Institute Discuss Building Financial Resilience Post-COVID-19

Join us for a powerful discussion about the financial literacy of Alack Americans and weathering the current crises to build financial resilience, including an overview of the data and insights covered in the TIAA Institute-GFLEC Personal Finance Index report.

To register, click here.

Submitted byihall_11 onFri, 10/02/2020 - 16:50

Civil rights leaders at the head of the NAACP and the National Urban League say Americans get 2 things wrong about the racial wealth gap (Business Insider)

If you want to get a heated debate going, start talking about the reasons for the wealth gap between Black and white Americans. Everybody has an opinion.

Numbers tell a story. According to the Brookings Institution, in 2016, at $171,000, the net worth of a typical white family was nearly 10 times greater than that of a Black family, $17,150. 

Submitted bymtomlin-crutch… onWed, 09/30/2020 - 16:11

Black-owned gay bars are dwindling. Can they survive Covid? (NBC News)

For more than two decades, gay bars, especially those owned by people of color, have been disappearing. Historically, these spaces were where the LGBTQ community gathered to find romance, make long-lasting friendships and engage in community activism. Throughout the 1980s, there were more than 1,500 such bars, a number that has declined steeply since the late ‘90s, with fewer than 1,000 existing today, according to a study published last year by Oberlin College and Conservatory professor Greggor Mattson.

Submitted bymtomlin-crutch… onWed, 09/30/2020 - 16:03

We should call out ‘the absolute hypocrisy of the senate majority’: Marc Morial

President Trump plans to announce is Supreme Court pick on Saturday to replace the late Ruth Bader Ginsburg. Marc Morial, National Urban League President & CEO, joins The Final Round to discuss the impact of the Supreme Court, its legacy with civil unrest in the United States, and what steps have been taken to actively solve some of the problems through the U.S. legal system.

Joining us now is Marc Morial. He's the President and CEO of the National Urban League. Marc, are you worried about having a conservative woman on the Supreme Court? And what impact do you think that would have on the country's legal system?

Watch the video here.

Submitted bymtomlin-crutch… onWed, 09/30/2020 - 15:50

Biden faces growing pressure to pick diverse economic team (Politico)

Civil rights advocates and minority finance professionals are calling on Joe Biden to consider naming people of color to economic posts in his administration — and to reject demands by progressives to eliminate candidates from Wall Street.

In a new letter, the heads of organizations including the National Association of Securities Professionals and the National Urban League asked Biden to agree to appoint African Americans, Latinx, Asian Pacific Islanders and Native Americans to top economic policy roles in White House, Cabinet and regulatory leadership positions. The coalition is planning to develop a short list of potential candidates. Full story Politico.

Photo: Drew Angerer/Getty Images

Submitted bymtomlin-crutch… onWed, 09/30/2020 - 15:21

Census End Remains Uncertain After Judge Calls New Schedule 'A Violation' (NPR)

A day after the Census Bureau fired off a one-sentence tweet announcing Oct. 5 as its new "target date" for ending all efforts to tally the country's residents, a federal judge said she thinks the new schedule is "a violation" of her court order.

"The Oct. 5 date is doing exactly what I enjoined the defendants from doing," said U.S. District Judge Lucy Koh in Northern California Tuesday during a virtual court conference for a lawsuit over the Trump administration's abrupt decision to shorten the census schedule.

Submitted bymtomlin-crutch… onWed, 09/30/2020 - 15:18

Spectrum Invests $45k in Digital Education Grants in Madison

Spectrum today announced two Madison-area nonprofits, Urban League of Greater Madison (Madison, WI) and 100 Black Men, will receive a cumulative total of $45,000 in Spectrum Digital Education Grants. Spectrum’s grants aim to further digital literacy in underserved populations within the Madison area. These grants are part of the company’s multi-year, $6 million cash and in-kind national commitment to digital education in Spectrum communities across the country.

“We thank Urban League of Greater Madison and 100 Black Men for being instrumental in helping us provide support for digital education in the Madison community,” said Rahman Khan, Vice President of Community Impact for Charter Communications, Inc., which operates the Spectrum brand of TV, Internet, Voice and Mobile products. “Through these organizations, we can continue to provide those in need with the resources to navigate the challenges of the digital age.”

Submitted byihall_11 onMon, 09/28/2020 - 15:43