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Brevard companies push to increase racial, gender diversity in engineering ranks

Brevard companies push to increase racial, gender diversity in engineering ranks Dave Berman, Florida Today © MALCOLM DENEMARK/FLORIDA TODAY Justin Cloud Brevard County home to Fortune 500 defense manufacturers, NASA s Kennedy Space Center and decades of groundbreaking innovations today lags behind the national average for diversity among top technical workers. Popular Searches According to CareerSource Brevard, 86.2% of engineers in Brevard were white in 2020, compared with 78.0% of all engineers nationwide in the same period. And the divide between men and women in the field locally is 60% of engineers were men and 40% were women in 2020, a breakdown unchanged since 2015. But there is a significant corporate push going on to address the workforce imbalance, with companies like L3Harris Technologies Inc. and Northrop Grumman placing a high priority on diversifying their engineering staff, including dedication to achieving a greater mix of gen

Brevard companies push to increase diversity in engineering

Also helping lead the drive for more diversity in engineering is Cloud, a director of project engineering at Melbourne-based L3Harris Technologies Inc. and the chair of the L3Harris Employees of African Descent employee resource group, which has more than 1,300 members. We need to understand that diversity is a plus, not a negative, said Cloud, who worked at Lockheed Martin Corp. for 18 years before joining L3Harris 2½ years ago. He said, in engineering at one time a profession dominated by white males  diversity of gender, race, ethnicity and sexual orientation is crucial, and helps create diversity of thought that helps the creative process of engineering.

61 Years Later: N C A&T State University holds virtual program to honor A&T Four sit-in movement

61 Years Later: N.C. A&T State University holds virtual program to honor A&T Four sit-in movement Kandace Redd © Provided by WFMY-TV Greensboro On February 1, 1960, four Black North Carolina Agricultural and Technical State University students took a bold and non-violent step against segregation. Jibreel Khazan (Ezell Blair Jr.), Franklin McCain, Joseph McNeil and David Richmond, better known collectively as the A&T Four, staged a sit-in at a whites-only Woolworth’s lunch Counter in downtown Greensboro. Even though the students were denied service, they remained strong and refused to give up their seats. The courageous sit-in movement quickly spread to other college towns throughout the South. By the end of March, the movement had spread to 55 cities in 13 states.

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