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Latino Equity Fund names Evelyn Barahona as first director

The Latino Equity Fund Takes On Inequities In Wealth And Health

Covid prompts a new name, and new focus, for Latino fund

By State House News Service May 13, 2021 State House News Service The state’s first philanthropic fund focused on the Latino community announced a new name last Friday and said it will seek to strengthen health equity and economic opportunity for a population that has faced a disproportionate toll from the pandemic. The Latino Equity Fund, formerly the Latino Legacy Fund, is a partnership among local Latino leaders, The Boston Foundation, and Hispanics in Philanthropy. It will focus on two priority areas addressing well-being and health disparities exacerbated by the pandemic, and achieving economic prosperity via “policies, programs, and initiatives that promote sustainable economic growth for Latinos.”

Boston business leaders launch campaign to raise $10 million for Latino Equity Fund

Boston business leaders launch campaign to raise $10 million for Latino Equity Fund Eastern Bank and State Street commit $1 million to help relaunch and rebrand the fund By Jon Chesto Globe Staff,Updated May 6, 2021, 7:40 p.m. Email to a Friend Jasmine Lopez, a vaccine ambassador with Archipelago Strategies Group, answers questions for vaccine recipients at a mobile vaccine site in East Boston organized by Tufts Health Plan and Harvard Pilgrim Health Care.Nathan Klima for The Boston Globe/The Boston Globe The twin pandemics of COVID-19 and racial inequity have drawn millions of corporate dollars to underserved communities during the past year.

Without Latino population, New England could have lost seats in House

Without Latino population, New England could have lost seats in House Updated May 7, 2021, 7:15 a.m. Email to a Friend A playground map at Emma G. Whiteknact Elementary in East Providence, R.I.DAVID DEGNER/NYT Re “Population up, state keeps House seats: Mass. leads New England in growth, census figures reveal” (Page A1, April 27): It’s good news that, for now, New England will maintain its 21 seats in the House of Representatives. But the fact is that without Latinos, that wouldn’t be the case. From 2010 to 2017, the Latino population of Massachusetts increased by 28 percent. This represented about 60 percent of all population growth in the Commonwealth, according to the Gastón Institute for Latino Community Development and Public Policy at the University of Massachusetts Boston. Across the border in Rhode Island, data show that that state’s population would have declined without Latino growth, which could have led to the loss of a congressional seat.

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