Worcester Business Journal

September 13, 2021

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wbjournal.com | September 13, 2021 | Worcester Business Journal 5 Editor, Brad Kane, bkane@wbjournal.com Senior Staff Writer, Monica Benevides, mbenevides@wbjournal.com (Manufacturing, higher education, diversity & inclusion) Staff Writers Katherine Hamilton khamilton@wbjournal.com (Real estate, health care) Sloane M. Perron perron@wbjournal.com (Banking & finance) Editorial Interns Devan Greevy, dgreevy@wbjournal.com Contributors Susan Shalhoub, Livia Gershon Photgraphers Matt Wright, Edd Cote Lead Researcher, Timothy Doyle, tdoyle@nebusinessmedia.com Research Assistant, Heide Martin, hmartin@nebusinessmedia.com Production Director, Kira Beaudoin, kbeaudoin@wbjournal.com Art Director, Mitchell Hayes, mhayes@wbjournal.com Senior Accounts Manager Christine Juetten, cjuetten@wbjournal.com Senior Special Accounts Manager Mary Lynn Bosiak, mlbosiak@wbjournal.com Marketing & Events Manager Kris Prosser, kprosser@wbjournal.com COO, Mary Rogers, mrogers@nebusinessmedia.com Accounting Assistant, Rae Rogers, rrogers@nebusinessmedia.com Account Receivable Specialist, Patty Harris, pharris@nebusinessmedia.com Human Resources, Jill Coran, jcoran@nebusinessmedia.com Director of Audience Development, Valerie Clark, vclark@nebusinessmedia.com Operations Assistant, Leah Allen, lallen@nebusinessmedia.com Publisher, CEO, Peter Stanton pstanton@nebusinessmedia.com Associate Publisher, Mark Murray mmurray@wbjournal.com President, Tom Curtin tcurtin@hartfordbusinessjournal.com Worcester Business Journal (ISSN#1063-6595) is published bi-weekly, 24x per year, including 4 special issues in May, September, October, and December by New England Business Media. 172 Shrewsbury St., Worcester, MA 01604. Periodicals postage paid at Worcester, MA. Copyright 2021. All rights reserved. Postmaster: Please send address changes to: Worcester Business Journal, PO Box 330, Congers, NY 10920-9894. Subscriptions: Annual subscriptions are available for $60.00. For more information, please email wbjournal@cambeywest.com or contact our circulation department at 845-267-3008. Fax: 845.267.3478 Advertising: For advertising information, please call Mark Murray at 508-755-8004 ext. 227. Fax: 508-755-8860. Worcester Business Journal accepts no responsibility for unsolicited manuscripts or materials and in general does not return them to the sender. Worcester Business Journal 172 Shrewsbury Street, Worcester, MA 01604 508-755-8004 tel. • 508-755-8860 fax www.wbjournal.com Worcester Business Journal WBJ A s a white male, can I effectively lead reporting on diversity & inclusion in the Central Mass. business community? Sure. Would I be better at it if I were someone from an historically excluded group? Absolutely. In her feature "Who reports the news" on page 16, Senior Staff Writer Monica Benevides points out the many limitations of media being composed of mostly white staff – or in the case of Central Mass. newsroom leadership, 100% white men in a region where a quarter of the population is non-white. We just don't have the lived- in experiences of people of color, women, and, speaking for myself, members of the LGBTQ+ community. As a journalist, I am trained to put biases aside, and be objective and skeptical in all things, but no amount of research or interviews can compare to the knowledge and perspec- tive someone has gained in being Black in America for their entire life, for example. e media response to the murder of George Floyd by Minneapolis police show- cases this dilemma. As horrific as the video of the murder was, for a significant portion of Black Americans, the incident was an extension of what they experienced their entire lives. For white media, myself in- cluded, the video laid bare the intolerance many of our fellow Americans have dealt with because of their skin tone. We vowed change. WBJ Publisher Peter Stanton and I put out an editorial saying our economy could only achieve its true potential if all its members were given equal access to opportunity. I made diversity & inclusion one of WBJ's major coverage areas. Before Floyd's murder, 16 of the 129 WBJ cover pages under my tenure as editor featured a person of color. Aer his murder, eight of 32 featured at least one. I am simultaneously extremely proud of WBJ's diversity & inclusion coverage over the last 17 months and utterly disgusted by it. I'm sickened because all that really changed in the world was I watched a vid- eo. I should have known more about how inequality and racism had permeated all corners of American society, but I've been shielded from needing to be concerned about institutional racism on an every day basis. If I had been, I likely would have already baked diversity & inclusion cover- age into WBJ's ecosystem, and our audience would have been well versed in the systems of oppression inherent in our economy. e best I can do now is accept my lim- itations, learn as much as I can, and strive to be better than I was yesterday. – Brad Kane, editor e limitations of being a white man N E W S & A N A LY S I S 6 Central Mass. In Brief 8 Focus on Diversity & Inclusion 21 Special Sponsored Section: Diversity & Inclusion 37 The List: Top minority-owned businesses 38 Know How 40 Movers & Shakers 40 Photo Finish 41 Opinion 42 Shop Talk: YWCA Central Massachusetts 34 Immigrant health Holes in health insurance coverage for Worcester's immigrant population weighs heavily on healthcare providers. 39 Why QCC is focusing on robotics Guest advice columnist Betty Lauer details why Quinsigamond Community College has shaped its latest curriculum around the anticipated robotics needs of multiple industries. D E P A R T M E N T S A division of: Member FDIC For more information, contact: Peter Staiti, First Vice President Commercial Lending Center Manager 508.957.1108 Peter.Staiti@RocklandTrust.com RocklandTrust.com/Worcester A relationship your business can rely on. Now with three branches across the greater Worcester area, and a dedicated commercial lending center – our team is ready to support your business. 100 FRONT ST WORCESTER 301 GROVE ST 967 GRAFTON ST 193 BOSTON TPKE WORCESTER SHREWSBURY 633 PARK AVE NEW LOCATION! 100 FRONT ST Commercial Lending Center Coming Fall 2021! 633 Park Ave. Branch W CORRECTION: The 2021 WBJ Giving Guide, published on Aug. 30, mistakenly left off The Health Foundation of Central Massachusetts, which has $89 million in assets, off of the Charitable Foundations list. A new version of the list, which has been renamed Largest Grant-making Foundations, has been added to the digital edition of the Giving Guide and can be found at WBJournal.com. I N T H I S I S S U E

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