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(412) 392.0610
information@aaccwp.com

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Doris Carson Williams, Chief Executive Officer

Welcome to the African American Chamber of Commerce of Western Pennsylvania

Hello, I am Doris Carson Williams, Chief Executive Officer of the African American Chamber of Commerce of Western Pennsylvania. Our mission is to promote access and business opportunities for African-American business owners and professionals throughout the region.

Please take a moment to browse our website to see the products and services our members & partners offer. We update this site regularly, adding new members, companies, and sponsors as they join our organization. Membership Benefits include Health, Life, & Disability Insurance, Dental, Vision, Payroll services, Discount Automobile Insurance, Special Programs, Networking Events, and many more.

Our Presidential Roundtable Members & Corporate Sponsors are also featured. For more information on becoming a member of the African American Chamber, you may write us at:

African American Chamber of Commerce of Western Pennsylvania
Koppers Building
436 Seventh Avenue, Suite 2220
Pittsburgh, Pa. 15219
Call: (412) 392-0610
Fax: (412) 392-0612
Email: information@aaccwp.com

Our Mission

To tap the expertise of the business, academic, and healthcare leaders to provide Chamber Members and small business owners the training, coaching, and leadership development needed to strengthen their business acumen to achieve entrepreneurial excellence and compete in the global marketplace.

Our Values

In executing the Business Institute mission, we are guided by the Chamber’s values of: entrepreneurial excellence, empowerment and self-sufficiency, life-long learning, innovative thinking, meaningful linkages and partnerships.

Our Core Values

Small businesses are vital to the U.S. economy! They are the engine which ignites the vitality felt perhaps even more keenly at the local and state levels.

Local economies are made to shrivel or thrive on the basis of the rate of new jobs created and maintained whether the national economy is in growth or receding. The Allegheny County, Pennsylvania region is seen as having, largely, reinvented itself in the face of the 2008 recession from which opportunities continue to abound. Whether the minority business cache benefits from this abundance is a matter of the presence and extent of opportunity.

The African American Chamber of Commerce is dedicated to fostering multiple avenues to identify, create and sustain opportunities for its members and the general small business sector to thrive in this environment of growth. We work directly with corporations and the public sector to maximize opportunities for African American Business Owners and Professionals to gain access on doing business and to move their firms to the next level of engagement.

It is our belief that equal opportunities for minority businesses help to position our region as a vibrant area for small business development.

The Chamber is interested in the economic advancement of the region as manifested in the social, financial and civic health of its businesses, communities, and citizens. We remain focused African American, Hispanic, Native American, women, and other minorities who statistically lag behind the general population in indicators of health, wealth, and successful pursuit of generally-defined indicators of wellbeing.

Pittsburgh Today reported that “Pittsburgh’s gross domestic product (GDP) increased 3.3 percent and had the fifth-highest rate of growth from 2014 to 2015.” And, the average annual wage has grown faster in the region than it has in the nation for eight of the last nine years. Yet, other studies find that among 15 benchmark regions, African Americans post unequal rates in indicators of wellbeing such as poverty levels and home ownership.

A 2014 update of a 1994 economic benchmarks study found Blacks in Pittsburgh and Allegheny County suffering the lowest economic wellbeing of all 50 benchmark MSAs. Both database analyses and survey responses reflect an unequal enjoyment of the advancements of the region. The Chamber must be vigilant in knowing and understanding the implications of indicators of disparity and for identifying and implementing strategies for redressing those disparities.

Advancements in the vitality and effectiveness of African American businesses can go a long way in intervening in the persistence of economic disparities. The Chamber continues to work to establish relationships with important organizations, institutions and people that are leading the region’s business sector. These relationships help spawn the corporate, community to help strengthen minority and small business owners, leveraging our access to aid in improving business owners and professionals’ ability to create material wealth for their business enterprise.

While the enormity and persistence of the disparities in economic wellbeing of African Americans and other minorities in the region cannot be erased by singular strategies, it is still postulated that substantial inroads can be achieved by the strengthening and increase of African American business endeavors in this region.

A combination of serious efforts from major business to reach out to and employ minority workers at all levels in concert with highly successful achievements in African American entrepreneurial efforts can proffer opportunities for self-sufficiency in businesses, communities and their individual citizens. The objective of the Chamber is to aid African American Business Owners and Professionals in becoming independent and having the ability to sustain themselves. This will be accomplished through programs and events produced through the Chamber’s Business Institute.

The Chamber was founded on the premise that excellence in entrepreneurship will do much to encourage success in individual businesses, communities, and the region as a whole. The Business Institute was conceived as an effective instrument to provide ways for individual business owners and clusters of businesses to pursue the training, knowledge and opportunities associated with proven pathways to excellence and to share the successes achieved from them.

Through the Chamber’s programs and services, the goal is to insure Chamber Members achieve a level of performance that will take them to the next level of engagement and will carry them into the next decade with the ability to mentor and help new entrepreneurs begin their journey.

Officers:
Chief Executive Officer: Mrs Doris Carson Williams
President: Mr Barãta Bey
Chairman: Mr. Samuel Stephenson
Vice Chairman: Mr. Louis Alexander
Treasurer: Ms. Cheryl Allen
Secretary: Ms. Ann Rucker

“Striving to Achieve Economic Parity”

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