A group of community stakeholders has organized to help grow Black business in Staunton.
The Staunton Black Business Collective was created to support current Black business owners and encourage entrepreneurship in the Black community. The collective hopes to fill a similar role for founders and aspiring entrepreneurs as the B-Cubed Program in Harrisonburg, The RISE Foundation in Waynesboro, and The Walker Program in Lexington. “There’s a lot of Black and Brown businesses that are under-represented,” said Sabrina Burress, chair of the Staunton Black Business Collective. “There are a lot of folks who are looking for help, looking just to promote who they are and what they have to offer. I think that there’s something to be said about our ability to support one another in what we are doing. That feels really important to the collective.” As the founder of The ARROW Project – an organization that exists to raise mental health awareness and support in the community - Burress understands what it takes to get an organization off the ground. “We want to help businesses find the capacity to thrive,” Burress said. “Not to just survive. Not to just pay the bills, but to actually thrive in this work.”
Photo by Chris Lassiter
For the past year, a group of four friends would discuss Black business in Staunton over a monthly lunch. It would eventually lead to a much larger community conversation.
“It was just a safe space,” said Dr. Resche Hines, founder of Trivium BI data analytics firm. “We created an environment where we could talk business, be vulnerable, talk creatively, and break bread together.” The quartet of entrepreneurs and aspiring founders desired for everyone in the community to experience something similar to the lunch conversations. "Resche would walk us through every step of what we needed to do to generate income from our business ideas," said Chris Lassiter, director of community engagement and inclusion at the Community Foundation of the Central Blue Ridge. "I learned so much, and at the same time I was always thinking about how many other people I knew that needed to hear this."
That desire started an 18-month process of figuring out how to emulate what was happening in Harrisonburg, Waynesboro, and Lexington. After meeting individually with community stakeholders for over a year, a meeting was called to gather everyone in the same room. The Staunton Black Business Collective was eventually birthed out of those meetings.
Photo by Chris Lassiter
After two soft launch events in the spring, the Staunton Black Business Collective is currently hosting a series of weekly meet-ups called Coffee on Mondays, a safe space for Black and Brown entrepreneurs to share successes and struggles. “I think some of our major goals,” Burress said, “are to create a network and a community – some place where folks that own Black and Brown businesses – can come say, ‘Here’s my idea. Can I bounce it off you? Can we talk about strategic plans? Can we talk about support? Can we talk about funding?’ We need someplace that feels safe for us to have that conversation. That’s one of the most important things we hope to create.”
The Staunton Black Business Collective is comprised of ethnically diverse group community members. Donations can be made to the Greater Augusta Regional Chamber of Commerce Foundation, a 501c3 support arm of the Chamber. Donations must specify Staunton Black Business Collective. Burress believes there are a myriad of ways that interested community members can help. “If you have expertise that you can offer to the collective, let us know that,” Burress said. “Come to our meetings. Learn what we’re doing. Sharing what you have to offer feels very important, and spreading the word so that folks know. Word of mouth feels feels really important, too.”
To learn more about this initiative, or get involved, contact Sabrina Burress.
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