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| 1 | HOUSE RESOLUTION
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| 2 | WHEREAS, African American communities have demonstrated a | ||||||
| 3 | history of perseverance in the face of adversity, rising from | ||||||
| 4 | chattel slavery to form thousands of successful businesses in | ||||||
| 5 | the years after abolition; and
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| 6 | WHEREAS, White supremacy manifested through individual and | ||||||
| 7 | institutional racism has historically targeted Black Americans | ||||||
| 8 | and Black businesses through government policy and | ||||||
| 9 | extrajudicial means, resulting in stolen land, destroyed | ||||||
| 10 | property, the loss of capital, and the loss of life, | ||||||
| 11 | eliminating wealth building opportunities for Black | ||||||
| 12 | businessmen and businesswomen and damaging the potential to | ||||||
| 13 | pass wealth to future generations; and
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| 14 | WHEREAS, Black communities have continually responded to | ||||||
| 15 | these setbacks with renewed vigor to fight not only for civil | ||||||
| 16 | rights and political freedom but also economic empowerment, | ||||||
| 17 | equity, and economic justice; and
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| 18 | WHEREAS, The spirit of entrepreneurship displayed by the | ||||||
| 19 | freedmen and freedwomen in the wake of abolition has continued | ||||||
| 20 | through African American communities today, leading to the | ||||||
| 21 | existence of over two million Black-owned businesses in the | ||||||
| 22 | United States; and | ||||||
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| 1 | WHEREAS, The spirit of enterprise is demonstrated by | ||||||
| 2 | African American business owners who create businesses to | ||||||
| 3 | pursue their passions and manage their future, manifested | ||||||
| 4 | through the two-thirds of African American-owned businesses | ||||||
| 5 | operated by members of Generation X and millennials and the | ||||||
| 6 | over one-third of African American-owned businesses operated | ||||||
| 7 | by Black women, who are the fastest-growing segment of | ||||||
| 8 | entrepreneurs in the United States; and
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| 9 | WHEREAS, Immense challenges still exist for African | ||||||
| 10 | American entrepreneurs as they face a general lack of access to | ||||||
| 11 | capital sources available to other groups, steering by | ||||||
| 12 | financial institutions into less desirable capital sources, a | ||||||
| 13 | nearly total lockout from venture capital, and unequal access | ||||||
| 14 | to amounts of capital provided to other people in similar | ||||||
| 15 | circumstances, and the COVID-19 pandemic has exacerbated | ||||||
| 16 | challenges for Black-owned businesses; and
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| 17 | WHEREAS, With the same spirit of enterprise and | ||||||
| 18 | entrepreneurship demonstrated throughout African American | ||||||
| 19 | history, Black businesses will recover and will thrive in a | ||||||
| 20 | post-pandemic world; therefore, be it
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| 21 | RESOLVED, BY THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES OF THE ONE | ||||||
| 22 | HUNDRED FIRST GENERAL ASSEMBLY OF THE STATE OF ILLINOIS, that | ||||||
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| 1 | we declare August 2020 as Black Business Month in the State of | ||||||
| 2 | Illinois; and be it further
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| 3 | RESOLVED, That we are committed to providing equal | ||||||
| 4 | opportunity for Black entrepreneurs and African American-owned | ||||||
| 5 | businesses and to the elimination of business redlining | ||||||
| 6 | targeting Black American entrepreneurs, and we will dedicate | ||||||
| 7 | ourselves to developing and implementing laws and policies to | ||||||
| 8 | achieve these goals.
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