“The economic downturn has been double trouble for black Americans,” said the Rev. Jesse Jackson Sr., founder and president of the Rainbow PUSH Coalition. “They already were at the bottom of every category, such as access to capital and life expectancy. The consequences of the economy are serious for most Americans but disastrous for African Americans.”
The theme for this year’s summit is “Fallout From the Bailout: A New Day in Washington,†and to that end, organizers plan to take to task the U.S. Treasury Department for its $700 billion bail out of Wall Street.
The
conference, which runs Jan. 13-16 at the Sheraton New York Hotel and Towers, will include several panel discussions on the ongoing economic crisis, a breakfast discussion on access to capital, workshops offering solutions to the foreclosure crisis, and wealth building sessions for women and women-owned businesses. There will also be a regulatory roundtable and a job fair.The conference will also address workforce and supplier diversity, and discuss whether the opportunities for small businesses still exist.
The Wall Street Project seeks to “promote access to capital for minority businesses, better hiring and promotion practices, appointment of larger numbers of minorities to corporate boards, and increased business and cooperation between majority and minority-owned companies,†according to the Rainbow PUSH coalition. Jackson created the Wall Street Project on Martin Luther King Jr.’s birthday 12 years ago to promote racial equality and economic justice.