Kamala Harris to join Greater Washington Partnership to unveil


Vice President Kamala Harris on Wednesday will join a group that includes leaders of corporate giants to promote a $4.7 billion commitment to boosting minority-owned businesses and underrepresented communities in Washington, D.C., and surrounding areas.

Harris will speak at an event at Howard University where the Greater Washington Partnership, a nonprofit civic alliance, will unveil the five-year, multibillion-dollar pledge. The funds will go toward businesses and communities in the capital region, including to areas such as Washington D.C., Richmond and Baltimore.

Harris is an alumna of Howard, a prestigious historically Black university in Washington. Other Biden administration officials such as Commerce Secretary Gina Raimondo and Small Business Administrator Isabel Guzman will also appear at the event.

A White House official told CNBC in an email on Monday that Harris will “discuss how supporting community lenders will provide more access to capital for underserved entrepreneurs and build a more fair, efficient, and equitable economy.” A spokesperson for the SBA told CNBC that Guzman will be speaking at the Wednesday event.

The gathering marks a new step by both corporate leaders and the Biden administration to aid minority-owned companies. Businesses and public officials made a wave of pledges to help communities of color after a racial justice reckoning sparked by the 2020 murder of George Floyd, and followed through on them with varying degrees of success.

Peter Scher, a vice chair at banking giant JPMorgan Chase and the chair of the Greater Washington Partnership board, told CNBC that Floyd’s murder and the dislocation caused by the coronavirus pandemic led corporate and university members of the group to consider how to better help minority communities.

“Between Covid’s disproportionate impact on underserved communities and George Floyd becoming a reckoning for a lot of companies and communities about the need to do more to address inequities in regions, and the future of work, all of these factors became a powerful accelerator for our business partnership,” Scher said on Monday.

Rosie Allen-Herring, president and CEO of United Way of the National Capital Area, said members wanted to move ahead with a real commitment rather than talk about it.

“As a member of the inclusive growth counsel, the conversations were really about no longer lip service but how do we make a true commitment to moving the needle on this tough challenge for us, not only as a region, but as a country,” Allen-Herring, a member of the Greater Washington Partnership board, told CNBC in an interview.

Floyd, a Black man, was killed by former Minneapolis police officer Derek Chauvin nearly two years ago. Chauvin was sentenced to 22.5 years in prison after being found guilty of murder and manslaughter last year.

Floyd’s death at the hands of police led to months of discussions about racial inequities in the U.S. economy, justice system and schools — among other areas —…



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