See below for 65 more black-owned businesses grouped by categories like finance and haircare.
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I edit Forbes' Business section to highlight stories about top innovators and disruptive technologies. Follow me on Twitter @ElisabethAnne15.
While you're here, how about this:
Top Netflix, streaming shows this week: 'Lucifer,' 'Defending Jacob' -
Every week, Parrot Analytics provides Business Insider with a list of the nine most in-demand TV shows on streaming services in the US.
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Disclosure: Mathias Döpfner, CEO of Business Insider's parent company, Axel Springer, is a Netflix board member.
Glens Falls is open, and business has been good | Local | poststar.com
People walk through Exchange Street and past restaurant patrons sitting on the second day of outdoor dining in downtown Glens Falls. The governor is allowing restaurants to serve outside as part of Phase 2.
People sit on the sidewalk outside of the Bullpen Tavern on Friday afternoon in downtown Glens Falls.
Retailers and restaurants throughout the city have been eager to open their doors since being forced to close at the end of March because of the COVID-19 pandemic, and customers, it seems, have been just as anxious to be let in.
Interactive Business Reopening Status Map Available for Sussex County | TAPinto
SUSSEX COUNTY, NJ -Businesses in the county are working hard to open to patrons. While some have been open with a modified experience; phone or internet orders, curbside pick up or delivery, the governor’s most recent executive order will allow a further opening.
The Sussex County Chamber of Commerce together with the Sussex County Economic Development Partnership have created an interactive map to be used by businesses and customers. According to an announcement of the project the Sussex County Department of Engineering and Planning’s Bill Koppenaal was also involved in creating the map.
Quite a lot has been going on:
Panel: Black business people in Detroit must 'control our own' neighborhoods
Detroit — Panelists in a webinar hosted by the Detroit chapter of the National Association of Black Journalists agreed Saturday that black people have too little equity and too little ownership in Detroit, a city that's 80% black.
"Equity is about what we do for ourselves," said panelist Moses Shepherd, CEO of Ace Petroleum. "We are not going to get the help."
Rudy Harper, a reporter for WXYZ-TV, moderated the hour-long discussion with the men, who represented the world of business, real estate and media. The webinar was part of the association's Black Male Media Project.
Phoenix-area black business owners discuss challenges, opportunities
About 50 mostly black business owners and supporters from across metro Phoenix met Friday in what organizers say they hope is the first of many gatherings to strengthen and promote their businesses through networking.
The meeting was quickly put together this week by friends and associates of Adrienne Bryant, who runs a Phoenix commercial real-estate firm.
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Several business owners spoke about the challenges they have faced in the business community as minorities, but the nearly three-hour meeting shifted to a forum where business leaders offered what advice they thought was most helpful for entrepreneurs launching companies in Arizona.
Major Attractions in Glenwood Springs Re-open for Business on June 8
Glenwood Springs, Colorado, June 06, 2020 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- On Friday afternoon, June 5, tourism businesses in Glenwood Springs received the much-anticipated news from state and local governments that they would be permitted to reopen to the public on Monday, June 8.
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The mountain town's major attractions including Glenwood Hot Springs Resort, Glenwood Caverns Adventure Park and Iron Mountain Hot Springs have made significant alterations to reduce capacity, facilitate social distancing, enhance hygiene and limit the number of touchpoints throughout the visitor experience.
Back in Business | News, Sports, Jobs - Leader Herald
Dane Dillenback gets a haircut Friday from Mike Medina, owner of the Fulton County Barbershop, at the Downtown Gloversville facility. (The Leader-Herald/James A. Ellis)
Editor’s note: This is the first in a two-part series on the reopening of local businesses from the state stay-at-home order to slow the spread of the coronavirus.
MOHAWK VALLEY — Many businesses are slowly reopening their doors after being forced to shut down physical locations in March due to the threat of the coronavirus. Although the state ordered shut down has been hard on most local businesses, according to Fulton Montgomery Regional Chamber of Commerce President and CEO Mark Kilmer, business owners are tempering their eagerness to reopen while taking precautions to avoid hiccups.
Happening on Twitter
Here are 75 black-owned businesses to support: https://t.co/vlUuqcCSa2 https://t.co/GN8o5vgp54 Forbes (from New York, NY) Fri Jun 05 22:51:37 +0000 2020
#ForbesUnder30 social entrepreneurs, Abbey Wemimo and his business partner Samir Goel co-founded Esusu in 2019. The… https://t.co/iC1yhMMyNg Forbes (from New York, NY) Sat Jun 06 12:58:42 +0000 2020
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