Vox: The first year every state sent a women to Congress, in one map
Vermont still hasn’t.
Vox: The first year every state sent a women to Congress, in one map Read More »
Ballet dancers of color have long painted, dyed or covered point shoes in makeup to match their skin. Could this small barrier to inclusion finally be disappearing?
The New York Times: Brown point shoes arrive, 200 years after white ones Read More »
“Everyone wants a representative from their community to stand up for their issues,” Barreto said. For the House, he said, “It’s the entire point: They’re representatives.”
The Washington Post: America’s gender, racial divides on display in House races Read More »
John Taylor, president and founder of the National Community Reinvestment Coalition, said his organization is “eager” to continue its collaboration with the $142 billion-asset Fifth Third.
American Banker: Fifth Third ups CRA pledge by $2 billion amid Chicago expansion Read More »
John Taylor, of the National Community Reinvestment Coalition, said the increase in lending is especially unique because “It’s tailored to people who need it most.”
Sugarcane farmers can’t survive without large crop loans. For the Provosts, who say they suffered decades of discrimination, this could be the end of the line
The Guardian: ‘It’s not fair, not right’: how America treats its black farmers Read More »
While there are ways to improve the Community Reinvestment Act for the modern era, steps must be taken to ensure the law is not weakened in the process.
American Banker: Dear regulators: Don’t take CRA’s revamp too far Read More »
Reveal, October 25, 2018: We exposed modern-day redlining in 61 cities. Find out what’s happened since Across the country, officials have picked up the torch at the state and local levels. The response has been greatest in Philadelphia, the city most prominently featured in the Reveal report, where lawmakers, community activists and lenders have all responded. On
Reveal: We exposed modern-day redlining in 61 cities. Find out what’s happened since Read More »
“It’s always been a surprise to me that housing doesn’t receive more attention in federal elections, and I think this is the year that changes that,” said National Community Reinvestment Coalition CEO, Jesse Van Tol.
NH Business Review: Affordable Housing seen as 2020 campaign issue Read More »
“There was nothing ‘happy’ about the tragedy inflicted upon our country on Saturday and no permission was granted for your use of this song for this purpose,” states the letter.
America’s public schools are still promoting devices with screens — even offering digital-only preschools. The rich are banning screens from class altogether.
The New York Times: The digital gap between rich and poor kids is not what we expected Read More »
An array of recent books have studied what happens when AI is entrusted with more serious problems than what to watch on Saturday night: how to hire the best employees; how to ensure robust public debate online; where to dispatch the police; whom to jail and whom to free.
Wired: Algorithms can be a tool for justice- if used the right way Read More »
“Equalizing turnout across the population would be the single best thing we could do for our democracy, and probably for our country in the near term,” said Adam Bonica, a political scientist at Stanford.
The New York Times: What if everyone voted? Read More »
Obama administration prevented the bank from expanding as punishment for violating banking rules.
Bloomberg: The U.S. secretly halted JPMorgan’s growth for years Read More »
Our government is run by rich people — and it benefits them the most.
Vox: Working-class people are underrepresented in politics. The problem isn’t voters. Read More »