Allyson Felix Receives $20M Grant From Melinda Gates, Invests In Advocacy For Black Maternal Health

Allyson Felix Receives $20M Grant From Melinda Gates, Invests In Advocacy For Black Maternal Health

Felix is among 12 grant recipients of Melinda Gates' initiative, which she will use to fuel her advocacy for Black maternal health.


Allyson Felix, the renowned Olympic track star and Black maternal health advocate, was awarded a substantial $20 million grant from Melinda Gates’ $1 billion investment initiative that Gates announced in May.

This grant honors Felix’s relentless dedication to advancing Black maternal health in the United States, reflecting Gates’ commitment to supporting organizations that champion women’s, families’, and reproductive rights. In a statement to The New York Times, Gates emphasized the severe underfunding of women-focused causes, stating, “Despite the pressing need, only about 2 percent of charitable giving in the United States goes to organizations focused on women and girls, and only about half a percentage point goes to organizations focused on women of color.”

Gates’ grant to Felix is part of a broader initiative. “In nearly 20 years as an advocate for women and girls, I have learned that there will always be people who say it’s not the right time to talk about gender equality,” Gates said. “Not if you want to be relevant. Not if you want to be effective with world leaders (most of them men). The second the global agenda gets crowded, women and girls fall off.”

The grant aims to tackle pressing concerns such as the disproportionately high maternal mortality rates among Black and Native American mothers, the loss of reproductive rights in 14 states, and the lack of national paid family leave in the U.S.

In addition to the grant, Felix’s personal experiences have driven her advocacy for Black maternal health. According to NBC Olympics, the athlete has partnered with Pampers to establish the first-ever Olympic Village nursery for the 2024 Paris Olympics. This innovative initiative, located at the Athletes’ Village Plaza, the heart of the athletes’ residential area during the Games, provides a sanctuary for competing mothers to nurture and bond with their infants.

“It was top of mind to support athletes who are mothers,” Felix said. “It’s a space where families can get away from it all and have some of the comforts of home. They can have playtime and places to feed their babies…It’s here so that mothers and families feel supported.”

She previously partnered with the brand to champion Black maternal health, securing a $250,000 pledge to the cause and providing $100,000 to the National Birth Equity Collaborative. As previously covered by BLACK ENTERPRISE, Felix spoke about her 2018 experience where she underwent an emergency C-section due to preeclampsia, later testifying before Congress about racial disparities in maternal care. Felix described her pregnancy as “a really isolating and lonely time,” revealing she had to conceal it from Nike due to contractual concerns.

Social Security, Elderly, Senior

Senior Citizens Are Catching Hell Economically Despite Inflation Dropping, Receiving Social Security Benefits

The Senior Citizens League reports that those living off Social Security continue to see an uptick in the cost of living despite declining inflation rates.


Inflation rates are decreasing, but the cost of living for Social Security recipients continues to rise.

The Senior Citizens League reports that nearly half of Social Security recipients continue to rely on monthly checks to survive. “About 50% of senior households depend on Social Security as the difference between [staying out of] poverty,” said Alex Moore, Senior Citizens League Social Security and Medicare statistician.

A 2021 report conducted by the Social Security Administration (SSA) reveals that 33% of Black and Hispanic people make up the amount of adults over age 62 who currently rely on Social Security due to lack of other income during their retirement years. On the other hand, 16% of their white counterparts count on the government-led program for their livelihood. Moreover, minorities are often responsible for taking care of others in their household, thus, making the need for Social Security more dire than others.

Living on a fixed income means that every penny counts. According to the Senior Citizen League’s most recent membership survey, 34% of retirees admitted to visiting a food pantry or applying for food stamps within the last 12 months, which may not change any time soon, given a recent forecast of the Social Security cost-of-living adjustment also known as COLA.

While it is estimated that they can expect an increase of 2.63% on their monthly checks in 2025, it is not a huge difference from the 2.57% forecasted in June.

“Social Security’s cost-of-living adjustments (COLAs) are based on the average inflation rate during the third quarter, the three-month period that includes July, August, and September. Curiously, COLAs are calculated using the Consumer Price Index for Urban Wage Earners and Clerical Workers (CPI-W), a subset of the better-known CPI-U,” according to Motley Fool.

In 2023, the COLA calculation was 8.7%,. However, the forecast for 2025 was 3% in June ,and it has recently slipped to 2.7% following reports that inflation declined more than what was previously anticipated last month.

While the most recent report shows that Social Security recipients may start to see their checks fall behind the overall pace of inflation, it is important to note that price surges are likely at any time of the year. The COLA may not account for the changes. The official forecast for the next year is generally announced in October.

As the economy continues to grapple with the effect that COVID-19 had on society both during and after, there has been a reported 20% increase in CPI-W from January 2020 to December 2023. The COLA only rose by 19% in that timeframe.

RELATED CONTENT: As Inflation Rises, So Should Your Pay

Olympic, Gatorade, Doping Ban

Olympic Hopeful Sues Gatorade Over Doping Ban

Issamade Asinga is suing the company after being given a supply of Gatorade Recovery Gummies before a banned substance was discovered


An Olympic hopeful banned after ingesting “recovery gummies” made by Gatorade is suing the company that labeled the product “NSF Certified for Sport.”

According to Reuters, Surinamese sprinter Issamade Asinga filed a lawsuit against Gatorade on July 10, alleging his doping ban was caused by the contaminated “recovery gummies” manufactured by the company. In May, the Athletics Integrity Unit (AIU) suspended Asinga for four years after the detection of cardarine, a performance-enhancing drug. Inside Bodybuilding has reported that The World Anti-Doping Agency (WADA) has cardarine on its list of prohibited substances.

The suspension stripped Asinga of his two South American Championship gold medals and his under-20 100-meter world record.

The paperwork was filed in Manhattan federal court. The sprinter claims Gatorade provided the gummies to him a year ago. The packaging claimed the product was “NSF Certified for Sport” and, therefore, free from banned substances. The suit claims that the gummies lacked NSF certification and “had been made using shoddy manufacturing processes and were contaminated with trace amounts of an illegal performance-enhancing drug.”

The sports drink company provided a statement to the media outlet.

“The product in question is completely safe and the claims made are false. Gatorade products are FDA compliant and safe for athlete consumption, which was validated by the findings of the Athletics Integrity Unit investigation.”

“Gatorade fully complied with the Athletics Integrity Unit investigation, including producing evidence that was accepted by the AIU that the gummies were not contaminated with the banned substance in their original ruling.”

The Washington Post reported that Gatorade honored Asinga as its high school track and field athlete of the year last July. He was given a gift basket that included Gatorade Recovery Gummies. Asinga alleges that the product is the reason he tested positive for the banned substance. He also accused the company of taking measures to protect its reputation while damaging his reputation in the process.

Asinga is attempting to “recoup the millions of dollars he has lost in economic opportunities, as well as compensation for the devastating emotional harm he has suffered.”

The teenager believes his performance at the Olympics could have yielded large monetary gains by way of sponsorships. His ban effectively stops his future opportunities in the sport.

“You’re either guilty or you’re not,” Asinga said in a Zoom interview. “I know I’m not, so I’ve got to chase my dream. I’ve got two Olympian parents; I was born to run. Am I going to destroy my dream because of something I didn’t do, or am I going to keep fighting until the end?”

RELATED CONTENT: Sha’Carri Richardson Graces ‘Vogue’ Cover Ahead Of Paris Olympics

Ben Crump, book deal, crime novel, Bantam Books, Beau Lee Cooper, legal, Trayvon Martin

Family of Black Man Killed By Milwaukee Hotel Security Promises To Push For Criminal Charges

Justice for D'Vontaye....


The family of D’Vontaye Mitchell expressed promises of pushing for criminal charges against the security guards allegedly responsible for his death.

During Mitchell’s funeral on Jul. 11, chants of “Justice for D’Vontaye” flooded Milwaukee’s Holy Redeemer Institutional Church of God in Christ as friends, family and supporters remembered Mitchell as a son, husband and brother who his mother, Brenda Giles, described as a “harmless teddy bear” and “a joy in his family.” “We’re going to fight. We’re not going to give up,” Giles said. 

Mitchell, 43, lost his life on June 30 after being held down on his stomach outside of the held down on his stomach June 30 outside of a Hyatt hotel. Police report he allegedly entered the hotel and, after causing a disturbance, fought with security guards as they were escorting him outside. Civil rights attorney representing Mitchell’s family, Ben Crump, claims Mitchell was having a mental health crisis, according to Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Attorneys working alongside Crumo, B’Ivory Lamarr and William Sulton said the victim spent the last few minutes of his life allegedly being beaten repeatedly by a security guard with a retractable baton while witnesses just looked and did not intervene. The legal team said video footage sent by the Hyatt shows Mitchell running from something or someone and hiding in the women’s bathroom. 

Crump said a signed affidavit from a hotel employee said a security guard was striking Mitchell with a baton, and Mitchell posed no threat while on the ground. When the guards approached him, footage shows his hands were up, but he was still dragged to the ground, beaten, begging for the blows to stop, according to the legal team. “D’Vontaye was trying to run for his life,” Sulton said. 

Mitchell’s widow, DeAsia Harmon, saw the surveillance videos and called the content “disgusting.” She said the video showed her husband being dragged outside while he was bleeding. “It makes me sick to my stomach,” Harmon said during a news conference. 

“He ran for his life. He was trying to leave. He said, ‘I’ll go,’ and they didn’t let him go.”

Aimbridge Hospitality, the company that manages the hotel, released a statement saying several employees involved have been fired. “The conduct we saw from several associates on June 30 violated our policies and procedures and did not reflect our values as an organization or the behaviors we expect from our associates,” the statement read. 

“Following review of their actions, their employment has been terminated. We will continue our independent investigation and do everything we can to support law enforcement with their investigation into this tragic incident.”

However, Civil rights leader Rev. Al Sharpton, who gave the eulogy at the funeral, said termination isn’t enough and questioned if Mitchell was white, would this have happened. “You should not lose just your job when D’Vontaye lost his life. What they did was a crime and criminals need to be prosecuted. And criminals need to face the penalty of their action,” he said. 

“This wasn’t a mistake at the job. This was taking somebody’s life, and there is no justice until you pay for the life you’ve taken. We’re not asking for an apology. We’re asking for justice.” 

Sharpton continued to compare Mitchell’s death to that of the death of George Floyd, the Black man killed in May 2020 by then-white Minneapolis police officer Derek Chauvin, by putting his knee on Floyd’s neck. Chauvin later was convicted of Floyd’s murder. “I thought you’ll learn that you can’t put your knee on our necks,” Sharpton said. 

“But if we have to go from Minneapolis to Milwaukee, you’re going to learn to keep your knees off of our necks.”

The Milwaukee County District Attorney’s office announced they, along with police investigators, were waiting on full autopsy results and that the case was being reviewed as a homicide.

50 Cent, Boxing, Oscar De La Hoya

50 Cent’s Humor & Harmony Festival Denied Outside Liquor Permit By Louisiana City Council 

Isn't too hot to drink outside anyway?


Rapper 50 Cent’s upcoming Humor & Harmony Festival hit a major roadblock as the Shreveport city council voted against allowing public alcohol consumption at the event, KTBS reports. 

The 5-2 vote for Resolution 109 received mixed reviews from council members, some of whom raised concerns about safety. Others felt the denial would have economic consequences. Councilman Gary Brooks expressed issues with clean-up and security and what the overall benefit would be.

“I don’t see any tax benefit from people drinking outside,” Brooks said. “I just don’t see this being a good idea at all.”

The plan proposed by Councilwoman Tabatha Taylor would have allowed the open container zone to extend to the Red River District, consisting of Stageworks of Louisiana and Independence Stadium, during the upcoming festival. The festival is scheduled for August 8-11, with an estimated 60,000 visitors attending. 

According to KSLA, Taylor said outside alcohol consumption is typical for the city so it wouldn’t be a problem at the Humor & Harmony Festival.

“We’ve passed an open container regulation,” she said. “We’ve done amendments and ordinances to suspect the rules for alcohol 215 plus times since 2010 with the city of Shreveport administration, so I thought with the number of people that were coming into the City of Shreveport that this would be a workable plan because we’ve done it before.” 

“I just think that sometimes fear, false information appearing real, you know, let’s see if it works. If it doesn’t work, then we have a capable police department that can take care of whatever,” Councilman James Green said. “And I know they can take care of four blocks.” 

Other council members like Ursula Bowman wanted to make sure the crowd can control be controlled “and the crowd doesn’t control us.”

The proposed open-container zone would have gone into effect from 5 p.m. on Aug. 8 to 3 a.m. on Aug. 9. City Attorney Marcus Edwards said at least 10 vendors were scheduled to sell alcohol in the zone if the measure passed. Since the resolution did not pass, festival participants will have to finish their drinks at Stageworks prior to walking outside to stay in compliance.

Bahamas

Family Of Woman Who Went Missing In The Bahamas Demands U.S. Involvement

Taylor Casey's mom says her transgender daughter has been missing in the Bahamas for three weeks and demanded U.S. officials intervene.


The family of Taylor Casey, a Chicago woman who went missing in the Bahamas, is urgently appealing for the involvement of U.S. officials in the investigation.

On Casey’s 42nd birthday, her loved ones held a press conference demanding action from federal authorities. The woman’s mother, Colette Seymore, shared that her daughter had been missing for three weeks.

“Please help us find Taylor. I just want the senators to light a fire under the people in the Bahamas feet so they can correctly search for my child and help to bring my child home,” Seymore said. Casey went missing in the Bahamas during a yoga retreat and was last seen on Paradise Island on June 19, BLACK ENTERPRISE previously covered.

The family has urged U.S. officials to intervene with Bahamian authorities. During Thursday’s news conference, Emily Williams, Casey’s close friend, stated, “If we don’t have answers, we’re going to keep pushing…That’s why we’re calling on the senators, Dick Durbin and Tammy Duckworth, to put pressure on the State Department to tell the Royal Bahamian Police Force to get the FBI down there right now and find Taylor.”

Seymore expressed deep concern over the apparent lack of progress in the investigation during a Monday appearance on News Nation’s “Banfield” podcast. She voiced her apprehensions about potential bias affecting the case’s handling, citing her daughter’s identity as both Black and transgender. “I feel like my child had two strikes against her when she went to the yoga retreat. One is that she’s Black, and the other is that she’s transgender,” Seymore said.

According to NBC News, Sen. Durbin’s office acknowledged the distressing nature of Casey’s disappearance in the Bahamas, emphasizing the importance of continued U.S. cooperation with Bahamian authorities.

However, conflicting information has emerged regarding FBI involvement. While Bahamian National Security Minister Wayne Munroe suggested FBI advisory participation, the U.S. Embassy reportedly told the family that the FBI was not involved.

While no evidence of foul play has been indicated since Casey went missing in the Bahamas, the woman’s phone and journal have been recovered, and several of her belongings remained in her tent at the retreat. However, her passport has not been located.

Angel Reese, Women’s Sports, Togethxr

Angel Reese Extends Double-Double Streak In Front Of Record Crowd At Barclays Center

'The basketball gods keep blessing me. I don’t even know how I did that.'


Angel Reese has extended her record-breaking double-double streak to 15 games. The Chicago Sky rookie scored 10 points and collected 10 rebounds in the team’s 91-76 road loss Thursday, July 11, to the New York Liberty.

The “Chi Barbie” continues to have an excellent rookie season, although she admittedly didn’t have a great game. “The basketball gods keep blessing me,” Reese said. “I don’t even know how I did that. I didn’t have a great night tonight, obviously.”

The game against the Liberty proved to be a challenge for the WNBA rookie, with Reese nabbing her 10th rebound with 2:12 left in the game.

“She goes hard, she’s not out there for records, she’s out there for wins,” Chicago head coach Teresa Weatherspoon said. “She puts in the work, it just so happens every time you look at the stat sheet there she is again with a double-double. I’m sure she’d want the win more than just the double-double.”

Reese is in contention for the league’s Rookie of the Year Award. This week, she was the first rookie this season to win the WNBA Player of the Week. In week seven of the WNBA season, the former LSU star averaged 16.8 points, 14 rebounds, and 1.2 assists. She was also named to this month’s All-Star Game in Phoenix. 

Reese was named WNBA Rookie of the Month in June when she averaged 14.5 points and 13.2 rebounds per game and had double-digit rebounds in all 11 games. After her record-breaking performance in June, she now leads the league in rebounding with 11.4 a game.

Thursday’s game broke the previous home attendance record for the Liberty. Earlier this season, the team faced another star rookie and Reese’s nemesis, Caitlin Clark of the Indiana Fever. A record 17,758 people at Barclays Center witnessed Reese continue her double-double streak.

MGM Grand, Black Jack, casino

Detroit Woman Denied $127K Jackpot by MGM Grand for ‘Trespassing’ Now Suing Casino

Denise Ezell claims she's been going to the casino regularly since 2015.


A Detroit woman won a $127,000 jackpot while playing progressive blackjack at the MGM Grand in Detroit last October. It’s July, and she still hasn’t received her winnings, so she is suing the casino.

According to the Detroit Free Press, 65-year-old Denise Ezell thought she was walking out of the casino she frequented with her winnings but remarked, “I walked out of there penniless.”

In the lawsuit, she stated that she and a friend were at the venue when she won a side bet while playing progressive blackjack on October 30. She was then told by the casino that she would not be getting any money because she was trespassing.

Although she had visited the place every week since 2015, she said she was never informed that she was a trespasser.

“I had no clue as to what the hell they were talking about!” Ezell said. “Do you think I would have gone down there and spent my money for eight years, knowing I was trespassing?”

She was told that it was from an incident that took place in 2015. The casino accused Ezell of panhandling and ordered her out of the building. She said it was a misunderstanding. Ezell attended that day with her cousin. When they gambled together, if one ran out of money, the other would supply the one who needed it with some cash. She was on the losing end and asked her cousin for some money and was rejected, which led to the two of them arguing.

“A security guard came up and said, ‘You’re bothering this patron,'” Ezell recalled. “I said, ‘This is my god—- cousin.'” But, the security guard didn’t believe her and allegedly told her: “‘You have to leave. You’re panhandling.'”

After leaving, she said she was never given notice that she may have been banned from the casino. She claimed she returned to the MGM Grand two weeks later and has been a regular since.

On the night she won the jackpot, she said people were congratulating her when the pit boss approached her and requested a player’s card or her driver’s license. She was then informed that she wasn’t eligible to take home the money.

Ezell’s attorney, Ivan Land, said, “We wasted three months trying to get action.”

“They allowed her to gamble there and spend her hard-earned money for eight years, and then, when she hits the jackpot, they run this crap, ‘Hey, you shouldn’t be here in the first place?'” Land said. “We know the casinos always win.”

CNN

CNN Eliminates ‘Race and Equality’ Team As Part Of Layoffs

So much for diversity and inclusion...


The Race and Equality team at CNN no longer exists after the network’s “newsgathering operations restructure,” Phil Lewis reported in his What I’m Reading newsletter.  

CNN’s new chief executive, Mark Thompson, announced the news on July 10. One reporter was laid off. The other two were reassigned to different departments in the newsroom. 

The award-winning team produced coverage on Black maternal mortality, police brutality, and other topics pertinent to Black viewers. In 2020, a memo by former CNN president Jeff Zucker, who created the team, hailed it as a “significant, sustained commitment to ensure race coverage is a permanent part of our journalism.”

“The recent conversations we’ve had in our newsrooms have been informative and constructive. We have valued them, we heard you, and we will continue listening,” the memo read. “There are structural changes and investments we can and will make to better cover what is happening in our society. We are committed to doing that.”

In the wake of the Black Lives Matter movement, segmented by the killing of George Floyd, a number of companies and media organizations, including CNN, made a pledge to fight against what was labeled a “racial reckoning” by examining internal policies and making donations to civil rights organizations. 

According to the New York Post, a spokesperson claimed the team was still employed as a mission-oriented unit, but later recanted.

“For all intents and purposes, the team is not a team anymore,” the spokesperson said. “They’re assigned to different areas so that their perspective and work [are] brought into all of our types of programming. It’s not a unit in the way it was before, but race and equality is very much still their focus.”

CNN’s laid off nearly 3% of the workforce, or 100 employees, including high-profile names like media critic Brian Lowry and senior tech writer Samantha Murphy Kelly. The network made headlines in 2023 after firing star anchor Don Lemon after 17 years. Rumors of Lemon leaving the network came after former CEO Chris Licht wanted to pull news coverage back to the center, catering to both sides of the spectrum regarding specific topics.

Under Thompson’s leadership, CNN will roll out its first-ever subscription product for the website. The subscription offerings will be “want to use” content produced by lifestyle journalists.

DeRay Mckesson, Lawsuit, First Amendment Rights

Landmark Ruling In DeRay Mckesson Lawsuit Protects First Amendment Rights

A landmark ruling in the case against prominent civil rights activist DeRay Mckesson upholds that a protest organizer cannot be held responsible for another person's violent actions during the time of the rally.


Civil rights activist DeRay Mckesson will not be held responsible for injuries inflicted upon an officer during a 2016 protest, upholding his First Amendment rights.

On July 10, the U.S. District Court for the Middle District of Louisiana ruled in favor of Mckesson and, in turn, changed the landscape around a person’s right to protest. The court held that, legally, a protest organizer cannot be held responsible for injuries inflicted by another person’s violent behavior at the time of the outcry. 

After an officer was injured during a protest organized by Mckesson to honor the life of Alton Sterling, the Black man shot and killed by two on-duty officers, on July 9, 2016, a lawsuit was filed against the prominent civil rights activist, claiming that he was a “negligent protest leader.”

“The goal of this lawsuit was to prevent people from showing up at a protest out of the fear that they might be held responsible if anything happens, which makes this decision a win not only for me but for all protest organizers and leaders across the country who are going to continue to show up and speak out. It’s heartening to know that the Constitution still protects our right to protest,” said Mckesson in a statement. “This has been a grueling eight-year process, and now that it is behind me, I can continue to channel all of my energy into the day-to-day work of envisioning a world beyond policing.”

Previously, the Supreme Court refused to hear Doe v. Mckesson, sending the case back to the district court in April 2024. However, thanks to a statement emphasizing a similar case, the Court’s decision in Counterman v. Colorado, Justice Sonia Sotomayor argued that the ruling, which determined that “negligence can never be the proper standard when it comes to political speech and that intent is necessary for incitement,” should also “govern any future proceedings in this case.” 

The district court agreed with Sotomayor’s statement. American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) legal director David Cole noted that the Supreme Court has “long recognized that peaceful protesters cannot be held liable for the unintended, unlawful actions of others.”

“Cases like this are used as a scare tactic to stop communities from organizing with a fear of being held accountable for any and all actions that take place,” said Billy Gibbens, an attorney with Schonekas, Evans, McGoey & McEachin. “We are thrilled that this ruling protected the rights of DeRay Mckesson, and all organizers and protest leaders.”

Additional members of Mckesson’s legal team also celebrated the landmark ruling and its implications for the future protection of a person’s First Amendment rights.

“This win is not just important here in Louisiana, but across the nation,” said Donahue & Goldberg attorney David Goldberg. “It ensures the fundamental right to protest that this country was built upon stands strong.”

As Americans continue exercising their First Amendment rights, the ruling in Doe v. Mckesson affirms that protest leaders and organizers are neither liable nor responsible for another person’s actions during the events. 

RELATED CONTENT: College Students Tasered By Atlanta Police During 2020 George Floyd Protest Get $2M Settlement

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