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Now Available: D CEO’s June/July Digital Edition The issue features a look into the working mom s labor crisis and how companies can help and LTK s Amber Venz Box s journey to success. By Kelsey Vanderschoot Published in Business & Economy July 1, 2021 4:00 pm D CEO’s 92-page June/July 2021 edition is now available online. Read LTK’s Amber Venz Box’s journey to success, learn about the big changes that Jean Savage has made as Trinity Industry’s first non-family member CEO, and see how companies can help working moms maintain work-life balance, as told by D CEO’s own working dad and managing editor, Will Maddox. ....
This Dallas-based Clothing Line Is Fighting Period Poverty Locally and Beyond For every pair of breezy, comfy pants sold, Oluna donates a year s worth of menstrual products to people in need. By Emily Heft Published in Living April 9, 2021 2:46 pm Dallas native Emmy Hancock has been invested in women’s rights since her days as a Hockaday student. Last May, as the pandemic raged on, she left her corporate job in New York City and returned to North Texas, determined to use her time and resources to start a business with a deeper purpose. Hancock, who majored in criminology and minored in film at the University of Pennsylvania, credits the movie ....
Each Pair of These Pants Benefits Women Experiencing Homelessness and Period Poverty in Texas Emmy Hancock launched Oluna from her parents’ home during the COVID-19 pandemic. Why Global Citizens Should Care The United Nations’ Global Goals aim to achieve gender equality and provide everyone with access to water and sanitation. Ensuring people who menstruate can manage their periods is essential to eradicating extreme poverty. You can join us and take action on this issue . Growing up in Dallas, Texas, Emmy Hancock, the founder of clothing brand Oluna, didn t have to think about period poverty. “I had never realized menstruation as an obstacle,” Hancock told Global Citizen. ....
Three North Texas businesses that give back when ‘purpose-based’ shoppers buy gifts Meet the women who run Oluna, OuiPlease and Soap Hope. OuiPlease is a luxury subscription service that encourages customers to reuse their boxes to send needed supplies to Genesis Women s Shelter.(Nitashia Johnson / Nitashia Johnson/Special Contrib) Shoppers are increasingly looking for more from their gift-buying than simply finding the best deal. They want their purchases to stand for something. The National Retail Federation calls them “purpose-based consumers” because they buy products that align with their personal values. NRF and the IBM Institute for Business Value surveyed 18,980 consumers in 29 countries and found that 40% of shoppers are purpose-based. ....