September 18, 2010
Contact: Jackie Wright / Mikael Wagner
415.255.0800
BAY AREA BLACKS IN PHILANTHROPY SETS STAGE FOR NATIONAL DISCOURSE WITH "STATE OF THE RACE: INVESTING IN BLACK COMMUNITIES”
The fall conference in Oakland is framed to be
solution-based to bring substantive changes for Black communities in the
Bay Area and serve as a national model for such conversations.
Oakland, CA-National thought leaders join Bay Area Blacks in Philanthropy (BABIP) to celebrate Black Philanthropy and confer on "The STATE OF THE RACE: Investing in Black Communities,” September 29th and September 30th.
"We using our unique position as professionals in philanthropy to salute people who are getting the work done and to highlight potential solutions for change through investments in black communities,” said Cedric Brown, Board Chair of Bay Area Blacks in Philanthropy. "The gala reception, Celebrating Black Philanthropy, will recognize the generous giving of unsung African Americans who contribute significant resources to the our communities. The next day we have national thought-leaders joining us to take a closer look at the status and demographic changes impacting Blacks in the San Francisco Bay Area. This is a fantastic opportunity to learn and mobilize.”
Junious Williams, Jr., CEO, Urban Strategies Council, a community building support and advocacy organization creating healthy communities, said, "As a co-sponsor of the conference, I am pleased to be included in this very important discourse. Although there have been many strides made and we have a President with African heritage in the White House, there is still much that has to be said concerning the state of Blacks in the U.S. and we are starting right here at home in the Bay Area, which has provided many models for social change.”
The public is invited to attend the Celebrating Black Philanthropy Gala Reception on Wednesday, September 29th, 6:30 p.m. at the African American Museum (659 14th Street in Oakland), and the STATE OF THE RACE: Investing in Black Communities Conference on Thursday, September 30th, 8:30 a.m. at the Oakland Conference Center at the California Endowment (1111 Broadway in Oakland).
The Gala Reception will be emceed by Dave Clark, KTVU’s Morning News Anchor, and will celebrate the spirit of philanthropy by and for Blacks in the Bay Area community as it presents the 2010 BABIP Community Impact Awards. Community Impact honorees will receive the following awards:
Legacy: Warren Wilson, Barrios Trust; Private Foundation: Akonadi Foundation, Catalyst: Deborah Santana; Inspiring Entrepreneur: Michael Le Blanc, Pican Restaurant; Community Service Organizations: 100 Black Men Chapter of the Bay Area, 100 Black Women Bay Area Chapter, Links, Inc.-Alameda/Contra Costa Chapter; Scholarships: Vintage Foster, Bay Area Leadership Foundation; Sports Role Models: Vida Blue, Major League Base Ball All Star, Thomas Howard and Nnamdi Asomugha, Oakland Raiders; Visionaries: Ken & Caretha Coleman; and Trustee: Hugh Burroughs.
The STATE OF THE RACE Conference will present practical, research-based information for professionals, activists, and decision-makers in the nonprofit, foundation, and public sectors. This is a comprehensive look at trends and dynamics affecting black people in Bay Area communities, which can be directly applied to many kinds of advocacy, direct service, and organizing efforts to improve quality of life issues for African Americans. Utilizing research generated by the Urban Strategies Council, it will address some of the major issues facing these communities including changes in demographic patterns, economic development, incarceration and re-entry, health and environment. The goal of the conference is to provide a platform for developing investment approaches that can improve outcomes for Blacks and their communities and serve as a national model.
Confirmed session leaders and participants include: Dr. Emmett Carson, President and CEO, Silicon Valley Community Foundation; James Head, Vice President for Programs, The San Francisco Foundation; Dr. Malo Hutson, Professor, UC Berkeley, Department of City and Regional Planning; Eric McDonnell, Vice President, United Way of the Bay Area; Arnold Perkins, Alameda County Health and Human Services, Retired; Dr. Steven Pitts, Labor Policy Specialist, UC Berkeley Labor Center; Nicole Taylor, President and CEO, East Bay Community Foundation; Tangerine Brigham, San Francisco Department of Public Health, Healthy San Francisco; and Junious Williams, Jr., Chief Executive Officer, Urban Strategies Council.
Registration fees for the conference are $50 for general admission, $35 for paid BABIP members/associates, and $35 for non-profit agency affiliates. Students are admitted free with registration and a valid school ID. The gala reception tickets are $50 each. For more information, call 415 362.4808 or visit http://www.babip.org.
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ABOUT BAY AREA BLACKS IN PHILANTHROPY
BABIP is a regional, nonprofit membership organization that works to advance the interests of African Americans in philanthropy and address the impact of racial disparity within philanthropic institutions and African American communities in the San Francisco Bay Area. Utilizing research and national Bay Area thought-leaders, the organization sets philanthropic precedents that can be replicated nationwide.