Next Street and Common Future partnered with Lendistry, Concerned Capital, and a collection of local stakeholders in Los Angeles County to examine the current state of play of the region’s small business communities and supporting ecosystem, with a particular with a specific lens on local businesses owned by people of color and the COVID-19 response and recovery.

The path forward

This assessment culminates in a set of recommendations and a proposed path forward aimed at narrowing racial gaps significantly narrowing racial gaps in business ownership, revenue, and employment across all of L.A. County within the next five years, with the long-term goal of closing the racial gaps. There is an opportunity to meet small businesses owned by people of color where they are, provide them with capital, services, and opportunities that have a transformational impact on their businesses, and create wealth and vibrancy in their communities.

How we approached the assessment

With the financial support of JPMorgan Chase & Co., Next Street and Common Future studied L.A. County’s unique economic and social context and the state of play for the region’s small business communities, identifying critical needs in equitable access to capital, customers, and services. The research was then synthesized and shared with a coalition of over 45 local stakeholders, led by Lendistry and Concerned Capital, to inform strategies co-created to address the historical inequities for small businesses owned by people of color, deepened by the COVID-19 crisis.

This research approach will span across nine cities and regions across the U.S. throughout 2020 and 2021 and is centered around community engagement and fostering a network of relationships among local community organizations and leaders to catalyze solutions focused on racial equity and recovery from the COVID-19 pandemic.