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It’s a rare feat to score a spot on the New York Times’ bestseller list with your first book—and even rarer to have your finger on the pulse of a national moment with your second. Michael Arceneaux, author, 2018 Root 100 honoree and occasional contributor to The Root has managed to do both; following the success of…
Computer and technology giant Apple announced in a video Sunday it’s designing and producing face masks for medical workers and plans to produce 1 million masks per week.
According to CNBC, Apple CEO Tim Cook made the announcement on Twitter. Cook added the masks fit 100 in a box, takes two minutes to assemble, and are fully adjustable.
“We’ve launched a company-wide effort, bringing together product designers, engineering, operations and packaging teams, and our suppliers to design, produce, and ship face shields for health workers,” Cook said. “Our first shipment was delivered to Kaiser hospital facilities in the Santa Clara Valley this past week and the feedback from doctors was very positive.”
Medical professionals across the country are dealing with a shortage of medical supplies including face shields and masks, putting them at risk while they save lives. Cook added Apple has donated 20 million N95 masks to organizations that need them.
In some states, governors are asking citizens with sewing skills to make and donate masks for medical workers. Some hospitals are threatening to fire doctors and nurses who speak out on the lack of medical equipment.
Apple has already donated 20 million N95 masks and is working with medical professionals and government officials to determine where the shields are most needed. Cook said the company is also looking to expand distribution beyond the United States soon.
Other technology giants are also pitching in. Google announced it will release location data in more than 100 countries to help health officials and governments make informed decisions on the virus.
“For Apple this is a labor of love and gratitude, and we’ll share more of our efforts over time,” Cook continued. “In the meantime each of us can stop the spread of the virus by following expert advice to stay home, and practice social distancing.”
The coronavirus outbreak has infected more than 350,000 and killed more than 10,000 in the US alone.
Today, Fair Count and Comcast NBCUniversal announced a million-dollar national partnership to encourage people of color to participate in the 2020 Census. Historically, black and brown people have been undercounted in the census. In 2010, 1.5 million black, Latinos, and Native Americans were undercounted. Part of that is due to the lack of access to the Census as well as mistrust and disinformation campaigns in communities of color.
With federal funding for communities at stake, Fair Count and Comcast NBCUniversal want to ensure that people understand the importance of being represented this time around.
As a part of the partnership, Fair Count’s “Piece of the Pie” ad began airing during Comcast NBCUniversal’s Public Service Announcement time across the nation this week. It will be followed by another ad, called “Sisters for the Census,” that will run through the end of the census response period on Aug. 15.
In a joint statement released by Fair Act and Comcast NBCUniversal, Dr. Jeanine Abrams McLean, vice president of Fair Count said, “Comcast is a trusted voice in households across the nation, and we are grateful to them for allowing us to utilize this platform. This partnership will allow us to reach people across the country—from urban to rural communities — letting them know how participation in the 2020 Census will benefit their families, friends, and communities for the next ten years.”
American’s response to the Census helps direct billions of dollars in federal funds to local communities for schools, roads, and other public services.
On the heels of the announcement, McLean of Fair Count joined Sheila Hyland to talk about how Fair Act is working to achieve a fair and accurate count of America’s population in Census 2020.
With the Census now being offered digitally and over the phone, people have more access to the form.
“As we embark on the first digital census, Comcast is proud to extend our platform and support the outreach efforts of Fair Count, an organization that shares our commitment to encouraging census participation across hard to count communities, particularly communities of color,” said Dalila Wilson-Scott, senior vice president for Community Investment at Comcast Corp. and President of the Comcast NBCUniversal Foundation.
Communities are reliant on every member to be counted to receive the support they need to advance over time
To be counted in the Census, click here.
The Black travel movement began almost ten years ago with an emphasis on going abroad to places that see few Black visitors. Mainstream travel marketing seemed to suggest that Black Americans would only book trips to Miami or Las Vegas, so the movement stepped in to show Black travelers in places like Japan and India.
Now the movement is well established and it’s also celebrating majority-Black spaces, both internationally and domestically. A big part of that is connecting travelers with Black-owned businesses.
READ MORE: I’m a Black American stuck in Ghana during the COVID-19 pandemic
Buoyant, which offers group trips and travel planning services, rebranded at the beginning of 2020 to stress its commitment to Black-owned businesses. Founder Briona Lamback automatically includes a Black-owned business in all itineraries, whether that be a hotel, restaurant, tour guide, or other services.
“People are really receptive to it. I think it has a lot to do with why people book with us in the first place,” Lamback tells theGrio, adding that circulating money back into the community is critical to the company ethos.
Last year, Buoyant took a group of 13 travelers to Ghana during its Year of Return, in which the country’s tourism board welcomed members of the diaspora. Ghana has a long history of receiving Black Americans, dating back to Maya Angelou, Malcolm X, and many others in the 1960s.
“This felt so different than traveling around Europe,” said Lamback of the trip. “We can walk into restaurants, we can get on public transportation without people double-taking and looking at you. There was definitely a sense of freedom.”
READ MORE: Black Travel Diary: Inside Antigua’s hottest late-night music competition
For Lamback, the Year of Return was not a one-time occurrence, and she plans to increase her offerings to the continent, starting with a 2020 trip called Beyond the Return, based on Visit Ghana’s decade of African renaissance between 2020 and 2030.
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Buoyant also offers a trip to the Essence Festival in New Orleans. “It’s a place that’s very Black and proud of being very Black. It has preserved that culture,” she said of New Orleans, adding that it’s easy to patronize Black-owned businesses there because they’re plentiful.
Nomadness Travel Tribe, which essentially started the Black travel movement in 2011 and now has over 20,000 members, has a history of hosting trips to South Africa since 2014.
“Many folks experienced hearing ‘welcome home’ at the airport upon arrival. It stuck with them,” said founder Evita Robinson. “South Africa quickly became a second home for Nomadness, and it’s our second most frequented trip.”
Nomadness also hosts domestic events in cities that are home to many Tribe members, and also have deep wells of Black history. Recent Tribe Barbecues have been held in Richmond, which was a major center of the domestic slave trade, and Detroit, America’s Blackest large city by percentage according to the census, with a priority to connect with local Black-owned businesses.
The company’s inaugural Audacity Fest was held in 2018 in Oakland, the birthplace of the Black Panther Party, followed by Memphis, home of the National Civil Rights Museum at the Lorraine Motel. The next one is scheduled for New York in August along with a barbecue, pending fallout from the coronavirus, which may result in a new digital component.
Robinson said that Audacity Fest’s attendance more than doubled from the first year to the second. “They’re coming for the love of the movement and what it represents, and then there are other people who come because they actually want to get into the industry of travel,” she said.
Black & Abroad now hosts most of its trips on the African continent. Its founders, Eric Martin and Kent Johnson, also said they’re interested in the possibility of leading personalized trips based on participants’ DNA tests, which have become more affordable and accurate in recent years.
The company released a viral Go Back to Africa campaign last year, in order to displace a hateful phrase and encourage black Americans to connect with their roots on the continent. To that end, Black & Abroad took 20 travelers to Ghana last year. Experiences included seeing the Door of No Return, receiving a Ghanaian name, attending Afrochella, and simply discussing what this homecoming meant for people’s identities.
“We had to pry them away from the hotel because they did not want to leave,” said Martin. “We’re here to not only connect with our spiritual sides, but with our humanity.”
The post As Black travel grows, Black destinations are now front and center appeared first on TheGrio.
In the rich tapestry of history, the threads of Black LGBTQ+ narratives have often been overlooked. This journey into their stories is an ...