What Happens When We Treat Housing as a Crisis

On November 22, 2019, the Los Angeles Business Council hosted its annual Mayoral Housing, Transportation & Jobs Summit at UCLA, bringing together leaders focused on housing affordability, equitable economic development, and transportation access across Southern California.

The forum explored collaborative approaches to some of California’s most pressing challenges, including housing affordability, homelessness, small business growth, and leveraging public transportation investments to strengthen communities.

The conversations reinforced an important reality: housing is connected to economic opportunity, health, transportation, and long-term stability.

The summit also introduced research and solutions, including work from the McKinsey Global Institute exploring the affordable housing crisis and opportunities to strengthen economic mobility.

At a time when housing challenges continue affecting communities across Los Angeles, the reminder remains relevant: Meaningful progress requires urgency matched with action.

What Leadership Requires Across Sectors

On October 11, 2019, I graduated from the Southern California Leadership Network’s Leadership L.A. fellowship following our final excursion in Little Tokyo.

The fellowship is designed to prepare and connect leaders across sectors to address issues shaping Southern California, with an emphasis on collaboration, civic engagement, and long-term community impact.

Over the course of the program, fellows explored challenges affecting Los Angeles, including education, economic development, transportation, community safety, sustainability, and arts and culture.

The experience highlighted something often overlooked: Meaningful progress depends not only on understanding challenges, but also on the relationships among the people committed to addressing them.

Programs like Leadership L.A. create space for cross-sector collaboration and help strengthen how communities respond to complex issues.

What Progress Requires Beyond Representation

On October 2, 2019, leaders gathered at the JW Marriott L.A. LIVE for the Third Annual State of Women & Girls Address and Expo to discuss gender equity and progress affecting women and girls across Los Angeles.

The event highlighted milestones, including women holding more than half of City board and commissioner positions and leading departments ranging from transportation to information technology.

The conversations also underscored how policy decisions influence economic opportunity. By increasing the minimum wage to $15 an hour by 2020, Los Angeles contributed to wage increases affecting nearly half of the City’s female workforce.

Progress deserves recognition. It also requires continued attention to representation, economic mobility, and conditions that support community thriving.

A Pathway Forward: Homeless to Hired

On September 30, 2019, more than 250 leaders across government, workforce development, philanthropy, nonprofit organizations, employers, and employment social enterprises gathered at the Center at Cathedral Plaza in Downtown Los Angeles for A Pathway Forward: Homeless to Hired, a summit I led and produced through the LA:RISE initiative.

The event explored lessons from LA:RISE and examined how public-private partnerships can strengthen pathways toward employment for people navigating barriers to economic opportunity and homelessness.

One of the most memorable moments came before the formal program began, when musicians with lived experience of homelessness opened the day with funk and R&B, creating energy, connection, and a reminder that conversations about homelessness must continue, recognizing humanity, talent, and possibility.

The summit reflected years of relationship building among workforce agencies, employment social enterprises, employers, and community organizations working toward shared goals.

More than presentations or panels, the gathering centered on a question that remains relevant:

What becomes possible when sectors stop working in silos and build solutions together?

What Compassion Makes Possible

On September 21, 2019, I joined thousands of community members supporting Homeboy Industries through its annual Run and Walk.

A longtime LA:RISE partner, Homeboy Industries, demonstrates what becomes possible when workforce development is paired with healing, belonging, and comprehensive support. The organization welcomes formerly gang-involved and previously incarcerated individuals through employment training, wraparound services, tattoo removal, mental health support, and opportunities designed to help people rebuild their lives.

As Gregory Boyle often reminds us: “We belong to each other.”

That philosophy is reflected in Homeboy’s emphasis on kinship, a belief that communities become stronger when people are seen beyond past experiences and offered pathways toward healing and opportunity.

Homeboy’s work continues to challenge traditional ideas of justice by demonstrating that compassion, connection, and investment in people can transform outcomes.

What Happens When People Are Given Another Chance

On September 19, 2019, after attending the B Corp Champions Retreat in Los Angeles earlier that week, I volunteered as a coach with Defy Ventures at the California Institution for Women.

The timing was striking.

Conversations at the B Corp gathering explored inclusive economies, systemic change, and redefining success beyond profit. One day later, Defy’s work demonstrated those ideas in practice through entrepreneurship, mentorship, and opportunities designed to support currently and formerly incarcerated individuals.

The coaching day brought volunteers and participants together for conversations centered on goals, possibilities, and life beyond incarceration.

The experience reinforced something important: Potential exists everywhere. Opportunity does not always.

Programs like Defy challenge assumptions about who deserves investment while illustrating how access, community, and belief in people can influence what becomes possible moving forward.

When Business Becomes a Force for Community Impact

From September 16 to 18, 2019, more than 600 global leaders gathered at the Loews Hollywood Hotel in Los Angeles for the B Corp Champions Retreat, exploring how businesses can contribute to more inclusive, regenerative, and climate-resilient economies.

Hosted by the B Corp community, the retreat focused on systemic challenges such as inequality, poverty, climate justice, and economic opportunity. The event also marked the launch of the B Corp Climate Collective, reinforcing growing expectations for businesses to help address complex social and environmental issues.

The conversations reflected a shared belief: Society’s most pressing challenges cannot be solved by government and nonprofits alone.

The B Corp movement recognizes organizations that use business as a force for good, balancing profit with positive impact for employees, communities, and the environment, while advancing stronger communities and more equitable economic opportunities.

The gathering raised an ongoing question: What becomes possible when success is measured not only by growth but by contribution?

What Fair Chance Hiring Makes Possible

On September 9, 2019, Los Angeles launched the Fair Chance Hiring Pledge and Engagement Campaign, increasing awareness of incentives and support available to employers hiring justice-involved individuals.

The initiative, authored by Los Angeles County Supervisor Hilda L. Solis and co authored by Supervisor Mark Ridley Thomas, reflected growing recognition that employment opportunities can influence stability, economic mobility, and long term community well being.

Fair Chance Hiring challenges employers to reconsider assumptions and recognize talent beyond a criminal record.

As Supervisor Solis shared:

“We challenge employers to think outside the box when making their hiring decisions. Studies clearly show that hiring rehabilitated people with past records is a smart business move. They work harder, stay longer, and promote faster than other employees.”

The campaign reinforced an important idea:

Expanding access to employment can strengthen communities while creating opportunities for people to rebuild and thrive.

Learn more about the Fair Chance Hiring Campaign through the Los Angeles County Department of Economic Opportunity.

Housing Is a Human Right

On July 24, 2019, the Los Angeles Area Chamber of Commerce hosted an Economic Briefing on Housing Supply & Affordability, bringing together leaders to discuss California’s housing challenges and opportunities.

The conversation explored how housing affordability intersects with economic prosperity, workforce access, and long term inequality.

Research continues to show that housing supply shortages and rising costs disproportionately affect communities already facing barriers to opportunity.

Housing discussions are rarely only about housing. They often reflect broader questions about equity, mobility, and who can continue to call Los Angeles home.

What Happens When Expertise Is Shared

On July 22, 2019, nonprofit leaders gathered at the California Community Foundation for Pro Bono Speed Consulting, organized by Taproot Foundation.

Taproot’s work centers on connecting nonprofit organizations with professionals who share expertise in strategy, marketing, operations, finance, and human resources, demonstrating how skills-based volunteering can strengthen organizational capacity and community impact.

The event created opportunities to exchange ideas, resources, and practical solutions with nonprofit leaders working across sectors.

One reminder stood out: Expertise can be a resource.

Sharing knowledge, networks, and time can help organizations strengthen their missions and expand capacity beyond limited budgets.

Community impact is shaped not only by funding. Sometimes it begins with people contributing what they already know.