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New Job Sows SEEDs of Opportunity for Richmond Residents

SEED LLC, the Independent Holiness Church and the Contra Costa Building and Construction Trades Council announced that they will host a job expo at Richmond’s Nicholl Park next month.

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Emmanuel Ikwuegbu/ Unsplash

SEED LLC, the Independent Holiness Church and the Contra Costa Building and Construction Trades Council announced that they will host a job expo at Richmond’s Nicholl Park next month.

Called the “SEED-Contra Costa Building and Construction Trades Council Job Expo,” the event will take place on August 28. The day before, August 27, SEED will conduct a community clean-up of Nicholl Park, which is located at 3230 Macdonald Ave.

SEED (Southside Economic Empowerment Development) is a Richmond-based company dedicated to engaging community-based entities, faith-based organizations, private businesses and public agencies in creating local economic, educational, entrepreneurial and non- profit development opportunities.

Activities and services will be provided for up to 1,000 family members of all ages, including back-to-school haircuts, school supplies and a play construction zone for children. Various building trade representatives will offer opportunities for enlistment and union construction company representatives will have opportunities for employment.

Public agencies can help community members get misdemeanor records expunged and faith-based organizations will provide encouragement and assistance with life’s challenges. 

Some stipends will be provided for attendees to pay initial fees to join. Current union members in attendance who have need will be eligible for assistance with FastTrak passes/parking tickets, PPE/tool support and housing rental or utility assistance. Such assistance is available until budgeted amounts are gone.

The event is set for Saturday, August 28, 2021, from 8:30 a.m. (set-up) to 5:00

p.m. (clean-up). The most current city, county, state and federal COVID-19 guidelines will be in place

Activities for the event are paid for by booth space fees ($1,000 for a 10’x10’ tent or $1,500 for a 10’x 20’ tent) and donations from local businesses and private citizens.

To rent a booth, please make checks payable to SEED LLC. For donations, make checks payable to Independent Holiness Church (IHC). IHC is a qualified 501©3 and all donations are tax deductible. Payments and/or donations can be mailed to 605 South 16th St., Richmond CA, 94804 or P.O. Box 1004 Richmond, CA, 94802.

Payments payable to SEED LLC for booth space may also be delivered to the managers Antwon Cloird or Brian Hancock. Donations supporting the event payable to Independent Holiness Church, may be delivered to Pastor Raymond Landry. Please do not write checks in the names of the pastor or managers.

To volunteer or for more information about the job expo or clean-up, please contact Antwon Cloird at (510) 776-9620 or Rev. Raymond Landry at (510) 685-0453.

Activism

2025 in Review: Seven Questions for Sen. Laura Richardson, Who Made Legislative History This Year

Before elected office, she served as a legislative staffer at the local, state, and federal levels and built a strong academic foundation, earning a political science degree from UCLA and an MBA from USC.

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Sen. Laura Richardson (D-San Pedro). File photo.
Sen. Laura Richardson (D-San Pedro). File photo.

By Edward Henderson, California Black Media 

Elected in November 2024 to represent California’s 35th Senate District, Sen. Laura Richardson (D-San Pedro) brings decades of experience to her role.

Before elected office, she served as a legislative staffer at the local, state, and federal levels and built a strong academic foundation, earning a political science degree from UCLA and an MBA from USC.

Richardson says she remains deeply committed to empowering residents, strengthening neighborhoods, and supporting the local economy.

For example, SB 748, a bill she authored that Gov. Newsom signed into law this year, allows cities to use existing homelessness funds to clear unsafe RV encampments, and another measure aimed at expanding provider access for Medi-Cal patients.

California Black Media (CBM) spoke with Richardson about her successes and disappointments over the past year and her plans for 2026.

What stands out as your most important achievement this year?

Being number one in getting the most bills signed by a freshman senator. Our team and staff were able to effectively move legislation through committees in both the Senate and Assembly and gain the governor’s support.

How did your leadership contribute to improving the lives of Black Californians?

Securing overall agency support from the governor to begin the work of understanding and documenting descendants of slavery. The discussion around “40 acres and a mule” will be ongoing for many years, but moving forward with creating an agency—although not fully funded—was significant. They were baby steps, but they were steps.

What frustrated you the most this year?

The administration. Even though federal and state roles differ, California has its own values and priorities. When the federal government makes cuts that impact Californians, the state legislature feels the need to backfill to protect people. It was challenging and frustrating.

What inspired you the most this year?

SB 237, which I was a joint principal author on, inspired me. It dealt with fuel stability. Two refineries closed, and several others are barely hanging on. Even as we work toward zero emissions, we still need a certain amount of fuel. SB 237 opened up some of the fuel potential in Kern County, and there’s a pipeline from Kern County down to my district.

What is one lesson you learned this year that will inform your decision-making next year?

Engage the governor’s staff earlier. I’m going to push to involve the governor’s legislative staff sooner.

In one word, what is the biggest challenge Black Californians are facing right now?

Affordability. No matter how much you make, everything is more expensive—gas, groceries, insurance, mortgages. Costs keep rising while salaries don’t.

What is the goal you want to achieve most in 2026?

Creating a process for dealing with abandoned cemeteries.

The last piece—not specific to this year but building toward the future—is figuring out how people and businesses in the district and in California can participate in major events like the Olympics, FIFA, and the Super Bowl, all of which are taking place here.

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Activism

2025 in Review: Seven Questions for Sen. Lola Smallwood-Cuevas – an Advocate for Jobs and Justice

I’m proud of how we fought back against the Trump Administration’s attacks, especially on the budget, and strengthened protections for workers while fortifying the cultural power of Black Los Angeles. Workers’ rights remained central in my bill package because my background in organizing taught me a simple truth: when workers do well, communities do well.

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Sen. Lola Smallwood-Cuevas (D-Los Angeles). File photo.
Sen. Lola Smallwood-Cuevas (D-Los Angeles). File photo.

By Edward Henderson, California Black Media

Representing the 28th Senate District, Sen. Lola Smallwood-Cuevas (D-Los Angeles) brings a lifelong commitment to working families.

After earning her communications degree from California State University Hayward (now known as CSU, East Bay), Smallwood-Cuevas began her career as a journalist telling the stories of working people—an experience that drew her into the labor movement.

Since being elected to the California State Senate, Smallwood-Cuevas has championed legislation that strengthens worker protections, expands access to justice, and uplifts historically marginalized communities.

California Black Media (CBM) spoke with Smallwood-Cuevas about her successes and disappointments this year, as well as her goals for 2026.

What stands out as your most important accomplishment this year?

I’m proud of how we fought back against the Trump Administration’s attacks, especially on the budget, and strengthened protections for workers while fortifying the cultural power of Black Los Angeles. Workers’ rights remained central in my bill package because my background in organizing taught me a simple truth: when workers do well, communities do well.

I also moved forward with the creation of California’s first Black cultural district in South LA. Amid gentrification, this district will protect cultural assets and bring resources as Los Angeles prepares for the FIFA World Cup and Olympic Games.

How did your leadership contribute to improving the lives of Black Californians this year?

We must name the disparities Black communities face—higher homelessness, incarceration, and health incidents. During the budget fight, when the governor proposed zero dollars for homelessness, I pushed hard. We secured $500 million for homelessness response, reinstated $1 billion for supportive programs, and added another $500 million for affordable housing.

What frustrated you most this year?

Our people are under attack. Racial profiling is creeping back into federal policy. Crime is being weaponized to justify disproportionate incarceration—even though crime rates are at historic lows.

But what frustrated me most was how quickly diversity, equity, and inclusion were rolled back through federal orders and preemptive action by corporations and foundations.

What has been your greatest inspiration this year?

Our resilience. California does not stay down. The movement around Proposition 50 was incredibly inspiring. I saw unity across Black California.

What is one lesson you’ve learned this year that will guide your decision-making next year?

Black California is resilient and brilliant. We are stronger than our opposition. And the lesson echoes Dr. King: “Organize, baby, organize.” We must build coalitions across local, county, and state levels.

In one word, what is the biggest challenge facing Black Californians?

Visibility. Visibility is power. We must be present—in rooms, on boards, in media, in headlines. We cannot retreat from Black identity.

What is the goal you most hope to achieve in 2026?

Economic stability. When California enters a recession, Black communities enter a depression. My goal is to advance policies that create real economic opportunity through safety-net protections, contract access, and targeted local hiring for quality jobs. crisis.

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Activism

Oakland Post: Week of December 24 – 30, 2025

The printed Weekly Edition of the Oakland Post: Week of – December 24 – 30, 2025

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