From: Councilmember Kenyan R.
McDuffie <
kmcduffie@dccouncil.us>
Sent: Thursday, June 25, 2020 6:59 PM
Subject: McDuffie's Racial Equity Agenda Advances in the Committee on
Business and Economic Development Budget Report
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The Committee on Business and Economic
Development Budget Report Advances Councilmember McDuffie's Racial
Equity Agenda
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Invests in Black entrepreneurs by providing access to capital.
Operationalizes racial equity by implementing the REACH Act.
Funds a disparity study so more District procurement supports
minority and women entrepreneurs.
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Today, the
Committee on Business and Economic Development, led by Chairman
Kenyan R. McDuffie, passed its budget report for Fiscal Year 2021.
The budget is the culmination of months of work including public
hearings, engagement with advocates and stakeholders. This budget
report is focused on advancing Councilmember McDuffie's Racial
Equity Agenda.
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With today’s vote in support of the budget report,
Councilmember McDuffie said:
"Developed
through the lens of racial equity and recognizing the disproportionate
impact the public health emergency is having on communities of
color, specifically black people, the Committee’s budget
significantly invests in District businesses and commercial
infrastructure including through capital and capacity building, access
to capital for small businesses and support for minority
businesses."
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- Enacts the Racial
Equity Achieves Results Act of 2019 (REACH Act)
to establish the Office of Racial Equity and require all
Council legislation undergo a racial equity assessment to
score it for its impact on racial equity goals.
- Funds a new disparity study
that will provide the data-driven evidence needed to establish
public policy goals that benefit Black and Brown people in
their quest for equitable contract procurement.
- Creates an Equity Impact Fund
to provide access to capital for minority and women owned
businesses, who often lack access to conventional financing
options. The Equity Impact Fund will be managed by a third-party
Fund Manager, outside the General Fund of the District of
Columbia.
- Establishes a new
Certified Business Enterprise designation, Equity Impact
Enterprises, to address structural impediments
to opportunities faced by many women and minority owned businesses.
- $2 million to establish a Go-Go
music archive and for Go-Go creative economy development and
support.
- Expands funding to equity
impact enterprises in Wards 5, 7, and 8, which
have the three highest death tolls in the District as a result
of COVID-19. Due to the disproportionate impact of the
COVID-19, disadvantaged businesses in these Wards need
additional support.
- Creates the Business Recovery
Task Force to provide recommendations
regarding the recovery of the District’s businesses following
the end of the COVID-19 emergency. With one of every four
businesses facing permanent closure, the District should
utilize all resources across the city, both public and
private, to facilitate in an equitable recovery.
- The Committee
transfers $250,000 to create
interim recreation space in Ivy City, annual
funding for recreational
programming and creation of a new Clean Team in Ivy City.
- Provides funding for the tax
abatement passed last year for legacy business, Sankofa Video
and Books, a Black-owned community store and
cafe that focuses on providing a space for Black authors,
filmmakers, activists, playwrights and artists to grow.
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The budget report now advances to
the full Council, where it is expected to pass the first of two
required votes on July 7, 2020.
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Phase Two Reopening Guidance
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With the
District entering Phase Two of the reopening after the pandemic, DC
Health has published specific health guidance for an array of
people and entities. Check Coronavirus.dc.gov under
"Phase Two" to read health guidance for:
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DC
residents, 6 year of age and older, experiencing any COVID-19
symptom (fever, cough, sore throat, shortness of breath or
difficulty breathing, congestion, body aches, chills, runny nose)
or with known exposure to COVID-19 should get a COVID-19 test. You
DO NOT need a doctor's note for any of the walk-in sites. There is free testing every day in DC or
you may be able to access a test through your health care provider,
should you have one.
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1 comment:
Has councilman McDuffie ever considered the effect of the HPRB on racial inequity? How it force elderly blacks to sell homes and family inheritance because they can't afford the required alterations on their homes due to the HPRB having complete and utter oversite on anything they do to their homes. There is some inequity there. Once they get to the point where they are overwhelmed by the repairs needed they sell, at a reduced price because house needs so many repairs. Then low and behold what happens, someone ends up living in the house that looks a little more like what the HPRB wants and was the purpose of in the first place
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