Blog Posts Related to the African American Community

  • U.S. Surgeon General Regina Benjamin Will Headline White House Faith-Based Conference in New Orleans

    The White House and the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services' Offices of Faith-Based and Neighborhood Partnerships will host a “Connecting Communities for the Common Good” event in New Orleans, LA on Monday, June 6.  Faith and community leaders from across the Gulf Coast region will join Gulf Coast native Dr. Regina M. Benjamin, U.S. Surgeon General and Joshua DuBois, Executive Director of the White House Office of Faith-based and Neighborhood Partnerships, for a conversation on how government can partner with nonprofit organizations to provide adequate health care services, prevent youth violence and promote healthy communities.

    What:  
    Obama Administration Community Event: “Connecting Communities for the Common Good”

    Event Featuring:   
    Dr. Regina M. Benjamin, Surgeon General of the United States Public Health ServiceJoshua DuBois, Special Assistant to the President and Executive Director of the White House Office of Faith-based and Neighborhood Partnerships

    When:
    Monday, June 6, 2011
    8:30 a.m. to 12:30 p.m.

    Where:
    Ernest N. Morial Convention Center, New Orleans (MCCNO)
    Hall B Entrance, Rooms 353-355
    900 Convention Center Blvd.
    New Orleans, LA 70130-2226

  • Equal Access to Transportation: A Right for All Americans

    Transportation is about a lot more than just getting around.  Our roadways, runways, and railways connect people with all of the things that make life worth living: family, education, job opportunities, and recreation.  That’s why we here at DOT--and the entire Obama Administration--are laser-focused on improving access to transportation for all Americans.

    Last week, I joined the White House monthly disability call with the Special Assistant to President Obama on Disability Policy, Kareem Dale, to discuss with hundreds of stakeholders everything we’re doing at DOT to improve transportation access for people with disabilities.  In the twenty years since the passage of the Americans with Disabilities Act, there’s no doubt we’ve made significant strides forward.  But we won’t rest until everyone has equal access to all forms of transportation.

  • White House Urban Entrepreneurship Summit

    President Barack Obama has laid out a vision to win the future by out-innovating, out-educating and out-building the rest of the world. The President recognizes the critical role that entrepreneurship plays in creating jobs and economic opportunity for the American people. The Administration is committed to creating public-private partnerships to support current entrepreneurs and spark the next generation of urban entrepreneurs who will strengthen our economy, create sustainable economic opportunities, and compete globally. 

    On Monday, June 6, 2011, the White House Business Council and Startup America will kick off the Urban Entrepreneurship Summit at the Rutgers Business School in Newark, NJ. The purpose of the summit is to discuss best practices with urban entrepreneurs from across the country and hear their feedback on how the Administration and the private sector can best support their growth and success in the global economy. In addition to the White House Office of Public Engagement and Domestic Policy Council, the summit features a wide array of partners including Rutgers University's  Center for Urban Entrepreneurship & Economic Development, the Fund for Public Advocacy in the Office of the New York City Public Advocate, the Office of Russell Simmons, Operation HOPE, Minority Business Development Agency, Department of Housing and Urban Development, and the Small Business Administration. Participants will hear from leaders and innovators in the field in a series of breakout sessions and panel discussions.

    Learn more by downloading our summit agenda (115KB).

    Join the conversation on twitter #UrbanSummit

  • Winning the Future for the Next Generation of African American Leaders

    I recently had the privilege of speaking to this year's graduates at Florida A&M University, and was proud to join the class of 2011 in receiving my first honorary doctorate. This was a profound personal experience for me and one that I was very proud to share with so many incredible graduates and their families. It was a reminder of how opportunities have grown and expanded to reach so many new people – even in just the span of my lifetime.

    I grew up in a neighborhood of New Orleans called Pontchartrain Park where some of the very first post-war black homeowners in the area raised their families during the era of Jim Crow. After serving in the Navy during World War II, my Dad worked as a Postal Delivery Man. It was one of the better jobs an African American veteran in the South could get at the time. He and so many of our neighbors in Pontchartrain Park worked hard not just to support their families but to open the way for new opportunities for the next generation.

    I was fortunate enough to be part of that next generation. I started school not long after segregation ended, and though my parents never graduated from college, they always held the expectation that I would. And they worked hard so that I could. I was able to go to college at Tulane, where I started off studying to become a doctor. I wanted to help people when they got sick and work to protect and promote health. After taking a few chemical engineering classes, I realized that if I worked in environmental protection, I could help prevent people from getting sick in the first place. I started at the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) after getting my masters in chemical engineering from Princeton and have worked in environmental protection ever since.

    As the first African-American to lead the EPA, serving under the first African-American President, I’ve had the opportunity to help change the face of environmentalism. Expanding the conversation on environmentalism is an important priority in my work – which is why I was so proud to be at FAMU and see how many new voices are now a part of this conversation. FAMU is on the cutting-edge of environmental research and stewardship and recently was named one of Princeton Review’s Green Colleges for 2011.

    Seeing the progress being made there reminded me of the dream my parents had worked so hard to achieve. It's the same thing I want to achieve for my own two teenage boys – the opening of new opportunities for their generation. Looking out at the FAMU graduates that day, I have great confidence that the next generation of African American leaders will blaze a bright path for all of those to come.

  • Spotlight on Amazing Community Leaders and the 2011 Presidential Citizens Medal

    Last year, President Obama honored several amazing individuals from the African American Community, including Cynthia Church, for their extraordinary service. As a breast cancer survivor, Cynthia founded Sisters on a Mission, a breast cancer support network for African American women in Delaware. Learn more about Cynthia by watching her inspiring story.

    To learn more about Citizen Medal recipients from the African American Community, check out the remarkable individuals below:

    • Daisy Brooks has committed her life to North Chicago young mothers and their infants through Daisy’s Resource and Development Center.

    • Myrtle Faye Rumph has worked tirelessly to reduce gun and gang violence in her community and to change the lives of at-risk youth.

    For the 2011 Presidential Citizens Medal we are asking you to look into your community and nominate those everyday heroes who have performed exemplary deeds of service, including those who have demonstrated commitment to work in their own communities or in communities farther from home, who have helped their country or their fellow citizens through one or more extraordinary act, whose service relates to solving a long-term problem, or whose efforts have had a sustained impact on others’ lives and provided inspiration for others to serve. Last year, over 6,000 incredible leaders were nominated for their commitment to bettering the community. The Presidential Citizens Medal offers a chance to thank those extraordinary stewards of service from across the United States, whose work often goes unrecognized.

    To find out more about the qualifications for the 2011 Citizens Medal, please review the criteria for this year’s medal.

    For more information on the Citizens Medal, as well as how to nominate an outstanding citizen, watch the announcement video

  • Weekly Wrap Up: A Moment of Opportunity

     Your quick look at the week of May 16th to May 20th on WhiteHouse.gov:

    President Obama Surprises Students at Booker T. Washington

    President Barack Obama surprises Booker T. Washington students before their commencement ceremony at Cook Convention Center in Memphis, Tenn., May 16, 2011. (Official White House Photo by Pete Souza)

    Graduation Season: This week, the President and First Lady spoke at commencements around the country. President Obama addressed graduating seniors at Booker T. Washington High School in Memphis, TN -- the winners of the 2011 Commencement Challenge. The First Lady spoke at Spelman College in Atlanta and delivered a historic address to graduating Cadets at the United States Military Academy at West Point.

    Moment of Opportunity: President Obama laid out his vision for a new chapter in American diplomacy as calls for reform and democracy spread across the Middle East and North Africa. After the speech, Deputy National Security Advisor Ben Rhodes answered questions from all over the world via Twitter.

    Do You Know Someone Like This?: Nominate an everyday hero for the 2011 Presidential Citizens Medal. 

    Huskies at the White House: President Obama honored the NCAA champions the UConn Huskies in a ceremony at the White House. Watch a video of the team's basketball clinic with local kids.