Economy

Business to Business Mixer

Date and Time: 
Thu, 11/19/2009 - 6:00pm - 8:00pm
Location: 
Seven
555 W. 7th Street
Los Angeles , CA, 90014
See map: Google Maps, Yahoo! Maps, MapQuest
Contact Name: 
Bobbi Smith or Elainea Robbins
Phone: 
(323) 600-1106

Don't miss the League's Business Mixer sponsored by the Los Angeles Urban League's West Adams/Baldwin Hills and Avalon WorkSource Centers: Where like-minded business professionals network and find new opportunities to flourish in a challenging economy.

Bring canned boxed and/or bagged food

Parking $3.00 on Grand South of 7th Street

LA Urban League Challenges Starbucks for Closing Neighborhood Store

starbucks leimert
Chris Strudwick-Turner, VP of Marketing for the LA Urban League talks to CBS2 about the planned closing of the Starbucks located at Crenshaw & Vernon and the loss it will be to the community.

Kuliema Blueford speaks about employment on KJLH radio.

Kuliema Blueford is the Deputy Neighborhood Officer of the Employment discipline for the Los Angeles Urban League Neighborhoods@Works Initiative. She and her team are on the front lines of gaining and maintaining employment opportunities and training job seekers on staying competitive in this economy. Kuliema will inform you on the latest Saturday March 7th on “L.A. Speaks Out” 8am-9am, hosted by Jacquie Stephens.

Mr. Paulson, Tear Down That Wall!

Originally featured in the Los Angeles Sentinel on November 16, 2008.

With the enormous bailouts that the federal government provided over the past several months to myriad sectors of our economy, here's a new twist: How about some relief for the nation's not for profit and social service sector? Now, perhaps the idea sounds spurious or even facetious at first, that is until we realize that as our economy has increasingly failed the middle and lower class over the past two decades it is the nation's social sector that has essentially served as the "safety net" for our country's most disenfranchised people and communities. This sector has been servicing millions of our country's neediest people for decades. Yet today, as a result of our nation's economy, more and more of our nation's most prominent social, civil and community organizations are in serious financial trouble. And as the economy continues to contract more rapidly, far too many of our most valuable and venerable not for profits--organizations that tirelessly service America's most disenfranchised--will likely fold under the pressure.

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