What the hell is Juneteenth?
SAN FRANCISCO—That’s the question John William Templeton asked when the late Mary Helen Rogers asked
SAN FRANCISCO—That’s the question John William Templeton asked when the late Mary Helen Rogers asked
Five million of the 22 million employed are working at Black-owned businesses, according to VOTEBLACKBUSINESS: State of Black Business, 21st edition. Our spending should reflect that significance
CEO Lenwood Long In recognition of National Homeownership Month, the African American Alliance of CDFI
NEW YORK – New York Attorney General Letitia James, the U.S. Department of Justice, and a multistate coalition of 10 attorneys general today announced that the National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) has agreed to permanently end its transfer eligibility rule, which prohibited Division I college athletes from competing for one year if they transferred schools twice. The NCAA’s transfer eligibility rule forced college athletes to either stay in colleges they wanted to leave or miss out on athletic opportunities, limiting their career potential. The settlement resolves the lawsuit filed by Attorney General James and the multistate coalition, and requires the NCAA to stop enforcing its transfer eligibility rule.
A focus on health equity in policy and administration caused a 52 percent jump in the number of Black nurses from 2018 to 2022. The National Black Nurses Association meets in San Francisco in July after having moved from Florida because of anit-black policies.