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December 
13th

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Clear your calendar - It's going down! Splash Blocks kicks off on April 20th, and you're invited to take part in the festivities. Splash HQ (122 W 26th St) is our meeting spot for a night of fun and excitement. Come one, come all, bring a guest, and hang loose. This is going to be epic!

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Clear your calendar - It's going down! Splash Blocks kicks off on April 20th, and you're invited to take part in the festivities. Splash HQ (122 W 26th St) is our meeting spot for a night of fun and excitement. Come one, come all, bring a guest, and hang loose. This is going to be epic!

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December 
13th
 at 
7:00pm
The Action Series: The Time Is Now: Health Equity

Join us for a night of adventure as we escape into existence.

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ABOUT EPU

E Pluribus Unum is an initiative created to fulfill America's promise of justice and opportunity for all by breaking down the barriers that divide us by race and class. In its first year, the E Pluribus Unum team traveled extensively across the American South to uncover and confront the challenges we face, to learn from people about what separates us and what can bring us together, and to find bold and effective solutions to tackle the modern legacy of Jim Crow so that an inclusive new South may be born. . 


Incubated at Emerson Collective and led by former New Orleans Mayor Mitch Landrieu, the E Pluribus Unum team is building a series of programs and initiatives to cultivate courageous leaders who are committed to realizing an inclusive vision a new South, champion transformative policies to reverse the enduring harms of America’s Jim Crow era past for those who continue to experience them today, and change narratives that perpetuate systemic and interpersonal racism in order to shift people’s attitudes and behaviors.

 

   JOIN US July 9, 2020

Join us for the first in a multi-part series of virtual conversations that bring together our country’s greatest thinkers, activists and leaders on race and equity. We seek to use this moment to confront the systems that have divided us for generations. 

 

We will explore how to leverage this moment in history to make lasting change. 

 

In this first conversation, historians and experts will explore the “truth” in our history. They will discuss some of the periods and events in our history that have laid the foundation for the systems that continue to perpetuate racism and oppress people of color in the U.S, including the Civil War, Reconstruction and the Jim Crow era. 


The focus of the series will be truth, action and reconciliation--ultimately, putting forward a vision for essential systemic reforms to shape long-term change, with the value of racial and economic equity at its core.  


For more information on the series, visit unumfund.org/conversations. 


THE TRUTH SERIES: How We Got Here

The Price We Paid

Thursday, July 9 

2:30 pm ET/1:30 pm CT



ABOUT THE EVENT

Wednesday
, 
December 
13th
7:00pm
 to 
10:00pm

Happy Hour

6:00pm

Unwind the week on our main stage among old friends and new. Help yourself to some refreshing beverages and roaming snacks.

Meet & Greet

6:30pm

Now is the opportunity to make that lasting connection. Strike up a conversation with some of the most talented people in tech.

Special Guest

7:15pm

The whole night leads up thrilling presentation from our founder covering early success and amplified goals for the coming year.

ALL THE DETAILS 

The wilderness is healing, a therapy for the soul.

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"

We look forward to you joining us.

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The Event
The Details
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REGISTER HERE
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The Action Series: The Time Is Now: Health Equity

Join us for a night of adventure as we escape into existence.

REGISTER HERE
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REGISTER HERE
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The Action Series: The Time Is Now: Health Equity

Join us for a night of adventure as we escape into existence.

REGISTER HERE
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Register Here
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ABOUT EPU

E Pluribus Unum was formed in 2018 with the premise that we must confront the issue of race head on if we are to move forward. We believe our cities and towns will only thrive if they find a way to unite around common purpose. To better understand the ways in which systemic racism and economic inequality impacts southerners, the E Pluribus Unum team traveled the south extensively, visiting 28 communities across 13 states. Our first report, Divided by Design: Findings from the American South, focuses on how residents experience issues of race and class in their communities. The report also identifies 15 key insights that will be used to build a more inclusive South.  


Today, E Pluribus Unum is building programs and initiatives focused on cultivating and empowering courageous leaders who are advancing racial equity, changing the divisive narratives that perpetuate systemic, and interpersonal racism, and championing transformative policy change. Through this work, we will create a vision for a more just, equitable and inclusive South, setting an example for the rest of the nation. Together, we can chart a new course for the South- one that centers racial equity and moves towards reconciliation.

 

 

   VIEW HERE: unumfund.org/livestream

 

THE ACTION SERIES: The Time Is Now

Health Equity

October 1, 2020 

2:30 pm ET/1:30 pm CT


Join us for the third conversation in the "Action" segment of our Truth. Action. Reconciliation. series as we explore how the health care system in America can serve all, equitably--especially the people who are currently not covered.

 

Now that we’ve established the lasting impacts of medical racism in the U.S. health care system, we will discuss how to redress them within the health system in the U.S. 

 

In this conversation, our panelists will explore the restoration of trust between Black patients and those who provide their health care. They will explore systems of medical education that train providers to offer care that works for and serves everyone. 

 

How can we ensure that Black patients and other patients of color receive respectful, highest-quality care? What kind of work do we have to do to make the system one that Black people can trust with their health?


For more information on the series, visit unumfund.org/conversations.


 

 



Program - subject to change

1:30 PM CT

Welcome

Mitch Landrieu
Founder & President, E Pluribus Unum and Former Mayor, New Orleans, LA

1:40 PM CT

Panel Conversation

Moderated by  Dr. Corey  Hébert

Chief Medical Editor/Correspondent, Black News Channel 

Chief Executive Officer, Community Health TV and College Health TV

 

Dr. Michelle Morse

Assistant Professor, Harvard Medical School

Co-Founder, EqualHealth


Dr. Takeisha Davis

CEO, New Orleans East Hospital

 

Daniel E. Dawes, J.D.

Director, Satcher Health Leadership Institute at Morehouse School of Medicine 

Professor of Health Law, Policy and Management

Co-founder, Health Equity Leadership and Exchange Network (HELEN)

  

2:15 PM CT

Q&A


2:25 PM CT

Closing 

Mitch Landrieu

Founder & President, E Pluribus Unum and Former Mayor, New Orleans, LA

Speakers

Dr. Corey Hébert

Chief Medical Editor/Correspondent, Black News Channel 

Chief Executive Officer, Community Health TV and College

Health TV


Dr. Michelle Morse

 

Assistant Professor, Harvard Medical School

Co-Founder, EqualHealth


Dr. Takeisha Davis

 CEO, New Orleans East Hospital

Daniel E. Dawes, J.D.

Director, Satcher Health Leadership Institute at Morehouse School of Medicine 

Professor of Health Law, Policy and Management

Co-founder, Health Equity Leadership and Exchange Network (HELEN)



CONTACT

 Questions? Contact us at info@unumfund.org


For more information on the series visit unumfund.org/conversations

Join us for a night of adventure as we escape into existence.

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Angela Glover Blackwell

Angela Glover Blackwell is Founder in Residence at PolicyLink, the organization she started in 1999 to advance racial and economic equity for all. Under Angela’s leadership, PolicyLink gained national prominence in the movement to use public policy to improve access and opportunity for all low-income people and communities of color, particularly in the areas of health, housing, transportation, and infrastructure. Her Radical Imagination podcast debuted in September 2019, and introduces listeners to a world of talented, creative, progressive thinkers whose vision and determination are challenging the status quo to create the change we need.

 

Prior to founding PolicyLink, Angela served as Senior Vice President at The Rockefeller Foundation. A lawyer by training, she gained national recognition as founder of the UrbanStrategies Council. From 1977 to 1987, Angela was a partner at Public Advocates. Angela is the co-author of Uncommon Common Ground: Race and America’s Future, and she authoredThe Curb Cut Effect, published in the Stanford Social Innovation Review in 2017.

 

As a leading voice in the movement for equity in America, Angela serves on numerous boards. She advised the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve as one of 15 members of its inaugural Community Advisory Council, and in 2020 was appointed by California Governor Gavin Newsom to the state Task Force on Business and Jobs Recovery. She is the 2018 recipient of the John W. GardnerLeadership Award, presented by the Independent Sector, and in 2017, she received the Peter E. Haas Public Service Award from the University of California, Berkeley.

 Andre M. Perry

Andre M. Perry is a fellow in the Metropolitan Policy Program at Brookings, a scholar-in-residence at American University, and a columnist for the Hechinger Report. He is the author of the new book Know Your Price: Valuing Black Lives and Property in America’s Black Cities, which is currently available wherever books are sold. A nationally known and respected commentator on race, structural inequality, and education, Perry is a regular contributor to MSNBC and has been published by The New York Times, The Nation, The Washington Post, TheRoot.com and CNN.com. Perry has also made appearances on CNN, PBS, National Public Radio, NBC, and ABC. His research focuses on race and structural inequality, education, and economic inclusion. Perry’s recent scholarship at Brookings has analyzed Black-majority cities and institutions in America, focusing on valuable assets worthy of increased investment. 


Since the COVID-19 pandemic began, Perry has documented the underlying causes for the outsized number of coronavirus-related deaths in Black communities. His Brookings research has illuminated how certain forms of social distancing historically accelerated economic and social disparities between Black people and the rest of the country. Perry also mapped racial inequities in housing, income, and health to underscore how policy discrimination makes Black Americans more vulnerable to COVID-19. 


His research has spotlighted the struggles of Black businesses—including artists and art institutions, restaurants, and barbershops and beauty salons—as they await federal relief from COVID-19’s economic impact. In education, he explained how college campus closings put housing-insecure students at risk during the pandemic. He's also written on the unrealized value of teachers’ work that’s been made apparent by COVID-19, and has commented on the potential loss of Black teachers as a result of an impending recession. 


Prior to his work at Brookings, Perry has been a founding dean, professor, award-winning journalist, and activist in the field of education. In 2015, Perry served on Louisiana Governor-elect John Bel Edwards’ K-12 education transition committee, as well as on New Orleans Mayor-elect Mitch Landrieu’s transition team as its co-chair for education in 2010. In 2013, Perry founded the College of Urban Education at Davenport University in Grand Rapids, Mich. Preceding his stint in Michigan, he was an associate professor of educational leadership at the University of New Orleans and served as CEO of the Capital One-University of New Orleans Charter Network. 


Perry’s academic writings have concentrated on race, structural inequality, and urban schools. Perry co-authored the Brookings Institution report “The Devaluation of Assets in Black Neighborhoods” and has presented its findings across the country, including to the U.S. House Financial Services Committee. For the tenth anniversary of Hurricane Katrina, Perry co-authored “School by School: The Transformation of New Orleans Public Education” in Resilience and Opportunity: Lessons from the U.S. Gulf Coast after Katrina and Rita, published by Brookings Institution Press. Perry also co-authored "The Transformation of New Orleans Public Schools: Addressing System-Level Problems Without a System," published by the Data Center of New Orleans. He also co-authored a chapter in Between Public and Private: Politics, Governance, and the New Portfolio Models for Urban School Reform published by Harvard Education Press. Along with the Joint Center for Political and Economic Studies, Perry co-authored the report “Place Matters for Health in Orleans Parish: Ensuring Opportunities for Good Health for All.” 


A native of Pittsburgh, Pa., Perry earned his Ph.D. in education policy and leadership from the University of Maryland College Park. 
 
 

 

Danyelle Solomon

Danyelle Solomon is the vice president of Race and Ethnicity Policy at American Progress where she leads the organizations racial justice policy work. More specifically, her team focuses on closing the racial wealth gap, ensuring core civil rights protections and moving the policy conversations beyond diversity and instead focused on equity and inclusion. Prior to joining CAP, she served as policy counsel at the Brennan Center for Justice’s Washington, D.C., office, where she focused primarily on criminal justice issues, including sentencing reform, policing reform, and racial disparities in the justice system. Prior to joining the Brennan Center, Solomon served as legislative counsel at the White House Office of National Drug Control Policy within the Office of Legislative Affairs, where she focused on federal drug policy. Solomon also served as counsel to Sen. Benjamin L. Cardin (D-MD), then the chairman of the Senate Judiciary Terrorism and Homeland Security Subcommittee, where she was responsible for a wide array of policy issues, including sentencing reform, juvenile justice reform, and executive branch nominations. She served as the principal counsel to Sen. Cardin during the U.S. Supreme Court confirmation hearings of Justices Sonia Sotomayor and Elena Kagan. Danyelle’s work has been published in The NY times, Time Magazine, Washington Post and many other outlets. Solomon obtained her J.D. from the Pennsylvania State University and graduated from the University of Miami with a B.A. in political science.

Nathaniel Smith

Nathaniel Smith serves as Founder and Chief Equity Officer of the Partnership for Southern Equity (PSE), which advances policies and institutional actions that promote racial equity and shared prosperity for all in the growth of metropolitan Atlanta and the American South. Among PSE’s notable accomplishments was the creation the American South’s first equity mapping and framing tool, the Metro Atlanta Equity Atlas, and co-authoring numerous reports including: “Growing the Future: The Case for Economic Inclusion in Metropolitan Atlanta”, and “Employment Equity: Putting Georgia on the Path to Inclusive Prosperity”. PSE also led a coalition of diverse stakeholders to support a $13 million transit referendum that expanded Atlanta’s metropolitan transit system into a new county for the first time in 45 years. 
Smith’s advocacy activities were instrumental in the ratification of a 15 percent set aside of Atlanta Beltline Tax Allocation District (TAD) dollars for the development and maintenance of affordable workforce housing within the Atlanta BeltLine Planning Area - $250 million dollars over the 25-year lifespan of the Atlanta BeltLine TAD. 
A child of Civil Rights Movement and Atlanta native, Smith holds a Bachelor of Arts in Urban Studies from Morehouse College and a Master of Science from the New School.   
Among his many accomplishments, The Huffington Post honored Nathaniel as one of the eight “Up and Coming Black Leaders in the Climate Movement” in 2017. Nathaniel was also named to the Grist 50 by Grist Magazine in 2018 and the Atlanta 500 by Atlanta Magazine in 2019 and 2020, and designated one of the 100 “Most Influential Georgians” by Georgia Trend magazine in 2018, 2019 and 2020. His work was also featured in the U.S. News and World Report, Chronicle of Philanthropy, Nonprofit Quarterly, Atlanta Journal-Constitution, Atlanta Voice and others. 

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