Press Release
FOR
IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Contact:
Daniella Masterson
(323) 791-9227
Mastersonpr1@AOL.COM
Recycling
Black Dollars Creates
Boulevard Of Pride For Black Business Month
Los
Angeles, Ca - During the month of April, African Americans throughout
the nation will focus their collective hopes and efforts on Economic
Empowerment, one of the most important issues facing their communities,
to celebrate Black Business Month.
To kick off the ninth year of the hallmark month, Recycling Black
Dollars (RBD) will hold a still parade (a line of none moving vehicles)
and vendors displaying their products and services from 9:00 am -
2 pm, Friday, April 1 in front of the Los Angeles Sentinel Newspaper
located at 3800 Crenshaw Blvd. in Los Angeles.
In addition, RBD will have a Boulevard Of Pride, a beautiful array
of 8'x3' banners displaying the inspiring message: "April is
Black Business Month" in addition to the name of a Black business
hanging along Crenshaw Blvd.. The Boulevard Of Pride will begin at
Jefferson Boulevard and end at Slauson Avenue. This is the fourth
year of this grand tradition that summons pride much like Central
Park's "The Gates" installation last month.
RBD is especially proud to have supporters such as Janice Bryant-Howroyd
(ACT-1 Group of Companies), Danny Bakewell (Los Angeles Sentinel /Brotherhood
Crusade), Bernard and Shirley Kinsey (KBK Enterprises), Frank Denkins
(Office Furniture Outlet), Lenny Woods (Chino Hills Ford), Dr. Frederick
K.C. Price (Crenshaw Christian Center), Leon Garr (Garr Construction)
and Shelton Johnson (ADDCO Party Rentals) along with many others.
These companies have blazed trails in business while also providing
the next generation with exemplary models.
During this month, consumers will be encouraged to patronize an African
American-owned business each day. By doing so, they will be helping
to remove Black-owned businesses from the "blind spot" of
the consumer eye.
"Los Angeles has 28,000 Black businesses," said Muhammad
Nassardeen, CEO of RBD. "The only state to have nearly that many
Black businesses is Cook County, Chicago, and they have 5,000 less."
Nassardeen went further to explain that "Since we probably have
about a dozen Black Fortune 500 companies and businesses on the New
York Stock Exchange combined, the community has a big responsibility
to rally behind Black businesses to create their own success."
Black Business Month was intended to help Black businesses to create
more viable ways to change the economic status of Black Americans.
By doing so, the Black community is lifting a tremendous burden off
of state and local governments.
RBD is a 16-year-old nonprofit organization created to support the
success of minority-owned businesses. One of RBD's primary goals is
to publicize self-empowerment through effective business strategies,
such as supporting existing businesses and forming larger companies
that employ residents in their own communities.
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