Business Delegation of The Slovenian Woodworking Companies In The USA

The Slovenian American Business Association (SABA) was founded in Cleveland, Ohio in 2012 with the main objective of providing connections between companies from Slovenia and the US. In addition to these connections SABA is also offering, fee based, market research, market analysis, search for local partners, as well as the organization of visits by economic delegations from both countries.

In the daysspaning from May 21st to the 25th, 2018 SABA, jointly with the Chamber of Commerce and Industry of Slovenia - CCIS, Wood Industry Cluster - GZS, Slovenian Public Agency SPIRIT and Slovenian Embassy in US, organized a visit of a business delegation of the Slovenian woodworking companies in the US. This delegation visited NYC, Cleveland (OH), Pittsburgh (PA) and Imperial (PA).

Representatives of the woodworking companies, CCIS and Wood Industry Cluster that were in the delegation : Donar (Ivan Ukmar, www.donar.si), Lina Design (Damjan Uršič, www.linafurniture.com), CETA (Igor Stepančič, www.ceta.si), Mizarstvo Florjančič (Robert Florjančič, www.florjancic.eu), Aleš Potočnik s.p. (Aleš Potočnik, www.pohistvopotocnik.si), CBD (Bruno Dujiċ, www.cbd.si), LESNA VRATA (Gorazd Ulbl, www.lesna-vrata.si), CCIS (Marko Jare, www.gzs.si) and Wood Industry Cluster (Bernard Likar, www.lesarski-grozd.si) visited Cleveland on Wednesday May 23, 2018 at the Slovenian Consulat General‘s meeting area presented an overview of their businesses and their products. Delegation members had the opportunity to address various US Architects, Designers, Real Estate Agents and Construction companies as well as potential financial resources.

The the objective of the members of this delegation was to present their purpose for potentially entering the US market with their wood products and services (construction, hotel equipment, hospital equipment, production of massive and high quality furniture as well as possible design of high efficiency commercial wood buildings).

The organizations in attendance at these presentations were HWH, Hiti, DiFrancesco + Siebold, Lobistica LLC, Prosen Consulting, J J Kokal & Associates, Inc., RS Interior Design LLC, Team NEO, Global Cleveland (several additional parties also showed great interest in further cooperation and information).

In association with SABA, the event was also supported by Slovenian Consulate General in Cleveland and Global Cleveland as the local partner of SABA and an organization that helps SABA to "connect" with Slovenian companies in Cleveland and the surrounding area.

Following the demonstrated interest and presentations,SABA will offer help to the companies that have demonstrated the greatest interest, to developing additional contacts, with further presentations to potential partners, and additionally keep the American market informed about new developments and products from the companies that were represented in this delegation.

SABA will also assist organizations such as Global Cleveland to be listed in other business direction in Slovenia and will thereby enable further cooperation between potential partners from RS and US.  For additional information visit SABA’s website at: www.sloaba.com

 


A Drift, A Dream Exhibition

 

The A drift, a dream exhibition began with an intersection in a courtyard at my high school reunion with Stacy Zitek, who was a person I started talking with about my further interest in working and engaging International visiting artists with young people in Cleveland Public Schools. Stacy teaches at Thomas Jefferson Newcomers Academy http://www.clevelandmetroschools.org/INA  (TJNA) and continued to tell me about the wonderful, unique CMSD school and students that go there from all around the world.  

I reached out and visited almost three years ago when I was the director of  Zygote Press https://zygotepress.com , a nonprofit printmaking studio that I co-founded. We were hooked.  We had a consistent roster of International visiting artists coming to work at Zygote and connecting them to the students,  particularly those students that didn’t have art in their schedules was paramount. We have had artists now who have worked in sustained ways at TJNA -from A-Z-   Albania to Zimbabwe. Artists have been role models and inspired and attracted other creative thinkers who work at TJNA in sustained ways. The success of the Zygote’s experience and its impact introduced other arts organizations to the school like the Apollo Outreach Initiative http://www.apollooutreach.org who teaches students stop motion animation and a sundry of different artistic expressions. Cleveland Public Art had already been working with students in the telling of their stories through performance, writing and spoken word.

My connection to this experience led me to a panel organized by the Refugee Service Collaborative where I was able to hear about the wonderful work that is happening to help and celebrate the newcomers to the Cleveland area. At this panel discussion, I expressed my many stories of students who saw other artists who looked like them telling their own stories mediated through art. This was powerful and I was humbly asked to put together an exhibition that would be the first of many. It was important to show the stages in creative development with students, emerging artists, professional artists who work with refugee communities and artists who were refugees and have been here in Cleveland for many years. The feelings of loss, chaos, transition, and belonging are all themes explored and lifted up in this exhibition.

The students of TJNA sparked this exhibition.  Their courage, grace and wisdom (beyond their years) are guided by the tireless and committed teachers Felicia Bode, Jamie Lindahl and Caleb Garcia. The entire TJNA staff has been heroic and been accepting for more creative resources and engagement from Cleveland’s collective spaces, non-profit arts and culture organizations and artists.  Creating a pipeline of growth, professional development, and modeling where the student’s ideas can be confidently built and developed through the skills and modes of communication by way of creative problem-solving and true grit is what my own vision is for this community.

Stories of challenge are displayed in their Struggle Stories where students wrote about the barriers they have with speaking English. These became accordion books where print-based media like relief, screenprinting and intaglio were used in the process of telling their own stories.    The stop-motion animations are brought to life through the student’s writings about their favorite places in the world. Oberlin students from Apollo's Outreach program became mentors and also got first-hand experience teaching, facilitating and developing their skills as leaders in these creative programs. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JTtZMnkKR1I

Most importantly, the on-going support of these exhibitions, programs and projects needs to continue. It needs to build on these tenants and grow networks of newcomer artists to resources here in Cleveland starting at TJNA. We need to ensure that the support of these creative avenues for refugee creatives, (including The Community West Foundation who supported this exhibition) continue to support these efforts. Our aim is to introduce students to resources like artists,  studios, theaters, music halls, and workshops so they can be the cultural collect and community that reflects the open and welcoming city of Cleveland.

Finally, what was most humbling was the students coming to see their own work and celebrate it in their own reception at 78th Street Studios. They got to see their work in a professional space where thousands of people have seen it. They met artists like Halim Ina, a refugee from Lebanon,  who came here over 30 years ago and has continued to work with photographic portraiture of refugees from around the world. They visited Eric Rippert’s painting studio http://ericrippert.com, Susie Frazier’s Showroom https://www.susiefrazier.com, OWOW radio station with Ravenna Miceli https://owownow.com/air-staff/, Hedge Gallery http://hedgeartgallery.com with artist Hilary Gent and Matthew Gallagher’s work, and arts conservators Jamye Jamison https://jamisonartconservation.com and Heather Galloway http://www.gallowayartconservation.com.

Thank you Refugee Services Collaborative for the once in a lifetime experience to put together this exhibition and work with the wonderful artists from everywhere in this exhibition. I am so grateful to you for your strength and resiliency and this is what motivates me and so many. My hopes for the future of this moment are:

  • An annual exhibition of multi-disciplinary arts reflecting the refugee experience
  • Creation of a Refugee artists registry and resources available locally to direct newcomer creatives to resources like the Cleveland artist registry http://www.gordonsquare.org/2018/02/01/gordon-square-artist-network/ and the Collective Arts Network http://canjournal.com
  •  A refugee artist curating the show in collaboration with a Cleveland-based curator      Continued field trips to artist studios and cultural venues embedded with the  exhibitions/presentation
  •  Refugee-friendly companies supporting and promoting the programs/projects/events to their    employees and staff
  •  Local refugee writers responding and writing about the exhibition

Listening to New Americans

Ohio has a rich history of immigrants settling in the state. Their contributions helped build the state’s industrial and commercial strength. Today, new immigrants that call Ohio “home” can be part of our continued economic strength.

Ohio’s Office of Opportunities for New Americans and Global Cleveland invite you to participate in a discussion to identify opportunities for the state of Ohio to help improve the immigrant experience in:

  • Finding a job or a better next job
  • Connecting with training and education
  • Starting a business and hiring others
Wednesday, July 18, 2018

11:00 a.m. – Noon OR 5:00 – 6:00 p.m.

Cleveland Public Library - Main Library

325 Superior Avenue

Cleveland, Ohio 44114

 

Ohio’s Office of Opportunities for New Americans coordinates education, training and workforce resources at the state level and works with local community organizations and businesses to help legal immigrants succeed at work and in their local communities.

Please RSVP to [email protected]. Let us know which session you can attend, if you are bringing anyone with you, and a phone number where we can reach you.


Why We Are and Why We Exist

Written By Joe Cimperman

 

Since we last met in the newsletter a month ago, the productions of “American Dreams” and “Making Our Way” came to Cleveland. Actually they came to and through Cleveland Public Theatre. “American Dreams” made its world premier here and it was met by full houses, wet eyes, and hopefully more empathetic hearts. “Making Our Way,” also a Cleveland Public Theatre experience, was spearheaded by Global Cleveland and fueled and infrastructured by Molly Andrews-Hinders and Adam Seeholzer. Both of these stories, the first a story of a game show that illuminated the absurdity of our current immigration “system” and the despair and hope of those in it, and the latter a story written by students at the excellent Cleveland Metropolitan School District Thomas Jefferson Newcomer Academy in the heart of the MetroWest Community Development Service Area, showed snapshots of those trying to immigrate to the US or most recently having immigrated to Cleveland.

Why tell a story as old as any ancient spiritual text through plays? As the ebullient leader of Cleveland Public Theatre, Raymond Bobgan, tells me: "we believe in the power of art to change people’s lives". To that Global Cleveland says Amen and we celebrate truth through these stories. The stories of an illustrator from Pakistan (fictional, American Dreams) to the story of how Ruba and Ahmed from Iraq fled war and came to Cleveland with their siblings and parents to make a life (non-fictional, Making Our Way).

I say all the time because it’s true and because it’s important that Global Cleveland is not political. As an organization committed to welcoming, attracting, and retaining International newcomers to our Northeast Ohio Home, we take our role of working with everyone very seriously. We have friends and allies and supporters on both sides of the aisle, in the vestibule, lobby, kitchen, boardroom, and theater. From our fundamental work of welcoming over 70 ambassadors from all over the world during the RNC to our day to day interactions with hundreds of volunteers helping an international student get matched with a local company in need of talent, to being there, REALLY BEING THERE, for every single person who has naturalized in the Downtown Cleveland US Federal Courthouse since 2016, a step of becoming a full irrefutable citizen of the United States. For all of this, we touched everyone of these immigrants to accelerate and support their and their families’ and friends’ integration in our community.

Sometimes a play or a poem or a painting communicates something so very complicated in a universal way. Immigration is a powerful and complicated subject. Immigrants are one of the powers to our national American equation. We work everyday in our vocations at Global Cleveland to welcome, attract, and retain newcomers from all over the world. And there is nothing complicated about the compassion and opportunity we feel when we meet people coming to Cleveland with needed skills and gifts. Who needs these skills and gifts? We do. University Hospital and Cleveland Clinic needs them. Sherwin Williams needs them. Cleveland State University, Case Western Reserve University and John Carroll University need them. Our restaurants, our start ups, our middle market juggernauts need them. Reading the recent report on how our native born population continues to decrease, our Cleveland and our Cuyahoga County and our NorthEast Ohio need immigrants. So while we are welcoming and compassionate, it’s key to remind ourselves if we want to be as strong economically and developmentally as we can be, welcoming immigrants is what we should do for them, and absolutely should do for us.

A study was recently authored by Richey Piiparinen and it excellently details with data, facts, numbers, and real truth the economic and social positive impacts newcomers bring to Northeast Ohio. Our Governor Kasich speaks to this fact constantly. Our County Executive Armond Budish gets it. Our Mayor Frank Jackson promotes this ideal everyday. Smart leaders know that doing the right thing (welcoming, advocating, connecting) is also the most just and righteous thing as well.

To look at how Global Cleveland was founded and who was there at the beginning, I think of 3 icons. There were many mothers and fathers but these three prove our point again and again: The Cleveland Foundation under Ronn Richard, knew we had to be more and do more when it came to formalizing welcome; The Jewish Federation, under the light filled direction of Steve Hoffman, gave Global Cleveland the moral direction to always remember how Cleveland became Cleveland because of immigration, and how we can never forget the negative consequences of shutting a door, and the positive echoes of when we open our homes in our hearts; and our very own Albert Ratner, who has been at the beginning and throughout the launch of so many life affirming and life saving efforts for Greater Cleveland for decades, including Global Cleveland. At the opening of the GALA Dual Language Super School in Cleveland, Mr. Ratner was presented with a portrait and a prayer inscribed his mother used to say to him. It was transcribed in the painting:

He drew a circle that shut me out.
Heretic, rebel, a thing to flout.
But love and I had the wit to win.
We drew a circle that took him in.

For our arts and culture, for our employers and entrepreneurs and economies, for our demographics and data, for our leaders elected and forged by our immigrant and migrant DNA, for our founders and their visions that buoy us through today, for Mrs. Ratner’s prayer. This is why we are, this is why we exist. Thanks for being part of this journey. Let’s draw that circle so darn big you can see it from space.


The  Top 25 Stop the Hate (R) Finalist Announced

Stop the Hate(r) Youth Speak Out is a personal essay contest with the chance to win individual scholarship money for college (schools also receive money for anti-bias education when their students win). By challenging young people to consider the benefits of a more inclusive society, the consequences of intolerance, and the role of personal responsibility in effecting change, the Maltz Museum's Stop the Hate(r) contest also reflects Jewish values of responsible citizenship and respect for all humanity.

Each year, through the generosity of a donor, the Maltz Museum gives out $100,000 in scholarships, awards, and support for anti-bias education in recognition of 6-12th grade upstanders from throughout Northeast Ohio. In 2018, the amount awarded to students and schools participating in Stop the Hate(r) will total $1 million. An estimated 30,000 students have participated in the last ten years.

 

The top 25 finalists for 2018 Stop the Hate(r) Youth Speak Out are:

Top 10 Juniors & Seniors, competing for grand prize of $40,000 in scholarship money:

Tadj Adams, grade 11/age 16 Hawken School

John Kunzo, grade 12/age 17 Gilmour Academy

Megan Lebowitz, grade 12/age 17, Solon High School

Peyton Lunder, grade 12/age 17, Padua Franciscan High School

Julia Mayer, grade 12/age 17, Solon High School

Dahlia Moskowitz, grade 11/age 17, Fuchs Mizrachi

Hailey Nudelman, grade 12/age 17, Twinsburg High School

Schuyler Radivoyevitch, grade 11/age 17, Cleveland Heights High School

Hannah Shuffer, grade 11/age 16, Orange High School

Maria Zou, grade 12/age 17, Hudson High School

Grades 6-10 competing for $400 awards, by grade:

 

6th grade
Flannery Costello, grade 6/age 11, Rocky River Middle School

Isabella Kovacs, grade 6/age 12, Rocky River Middle School

Scott O'Neill, grade 6/age 11, Newton D Baker

 

7th grade
Maggie Chen, grade 7/age 13, Memorial Middle School

Rebecca Lawton, grade 7/age 12, Beachwood Middle School

Jennifer Williams, grade 7/age 13, Old Trail Elementary

8th grade
Alexandra Holtz, grade 8 /age 13, Chagrin Falls Middle School

Elana Rouse, grade 8 /age 14, Rocky River Middle School

Bowen Zhang, grade 8 /age 13, Beachwood Middle School

 

9th grade
Jonah Gilbert, grade 9 /age 14, University School

Cara Finnegan, grade 9 /age 15, Elyria Catholic High

Rileyanna Karic, grade 9/age 14, Brecksville-Broadview Heights High

 

10th grade
Emi Cummings, grade 10/age 15, Laurel High School

Anaya Hunter, grade 10 /age 16, Whitney Young High School

Sabriya Zaman, grade 10/age 15, Solon High School

 

This year's judges for the 10th anniversary ceremony include: Toni Baker, MSM, PNC; Tai-Chi Chan, Lubrizol; Jessica Cohen, Jewish Federation of Cleveland; James Gutierrez, MD, FACP, Cleveland Clinic; Eduardo Kim, Thompson Hine; George Koussa, Margaret Wong & Associates; Monyka Price, City of Cleveland; Cecilia Render, Nordson Corporation Foundation; Phyllis Harris, LBGT Center of Greater Cleveland; Cynthia Norwood, The ARC Greater Cleveland.

 

The scholarship winners will be named live at the award ceremony on April 29.

The award ceremony is free and open to the public. The event beings at 4PM on April 29 and will be held at the Cleveland Museum of Art. Registrations are encouraged to guarantee seating. For more information or to register, 216.593.0575 or maltzmuseum.org


GALA: Mandarin & Spanish Immersion School, K-1 Enroll Now

Global Ambassadors Language Academy (GALA) is still accepting applications for K-1 enrollment in both our Mandarin and Spanish immersion program. Attend an upcoming open house to learn more and apply. 
 
 
GALA is a Mandarin and Spanish immersion K-8 school, tuition-free, open to all Ohio residents, and no prior language skills are required to enroll. GALA is the only language immersion school in Northeast Ohio. 
 
 
​Attend an Open House:
Wednesday, April 25th from 5:00 p.m. to 6:30 p.m.
 
Saturday, April​ 28th​​ from 10:00 a.m. to 11:30 a.m.
 
​Please ​RSVP: www.GALAOpenHouse.eventbrite.com *refreshments provided*

Wowed by Cleveland!

Reflections on a First Visit to Cleveland, February 2018

 

Mohamad: Until our visit to Cleveland, I knew little about this city. Honestly, I think the only reason I had heard about the city is because I am a big sports fan, so it was thanks to its fame as the home of the wonderful Cleveland Cavaliers! 

 

Rebecca: And I, having lived in America mostly in California and New York - had told Mohamad when we landed that – please forgive me, but I have to be honest – that this would probably be an uninteresting Midwestern town.  But how was I proven wrong!! 

 

Mohamad: We came to Cleveland for Hand in Hand, as part of a trip to the US to increase support for the important endeavor we’ve taken upon ourselves -- building a shared society in Israel through integrated and equal education for Jewish and Arab children, supported by integrated adult communities.

 

Our visit was meant to be short – less than 24 hours. But our brief stopover was, in fact, the beginning of a love story with this city.  The main thing that caught my attention were the people here: warm, candid, welcoming and willing to help with any question or problem. The people I met spoke a language that opened the heart and gave a strong sense of acceptance. 

 

Rebecca: We landed at Cleveland Hopkins International Airport in the evening.  It was dark outside, we were exhausted, and we dreaded the cold that we knew awaited us outside. We got to the rental car agency and a young man named Patrick greets us to begin to process our paperwork.  He was probably in his early thirties, African-American, with a close-cut beard.  “What is Hand in Hand?” he asks curiously when he enters in our organization’s name.  He is amazed when we explain that we work with an organization that is raising Jewish and Arab children to live together.  “That’s God’s work!  I will pray for you!” he says.  And we feel blessed. 

 

Mohamad: Patrick was disappointed when he heard that our trip to Cleveland was so short. He told us about how diverse Cleveland is with people from everywhere, white, black, Russian, Jewish, Arab.  His favorite place is the World Food Market because all the cultures are represented there.  Patrick made us promise to come back so we could get to know the city better and experience its spirit. 

 

Rebecca: He was this amazing personality and hearing him talk with such passion about his city and its people and warmth, made us say there must be something special about Cleveland! 

 

Mohamad: The special impression we got during our chat with Patrick followed us in every one of our meetings that evening and the next day. We heard about a city policy that promotes integration of immigrants from diverse backgrounds, countries and cultures, as well as stories about people and organizations working devotedly to support disadvantaged populations.  Our exposure to many social change and civic integration initiatives, combined with an astonishingly kind, friendly, and accepting attitude we found in every one of our encounters, filled us with a surprising sense of connection to Cleveland and a desire to discover more about this city.  The social and communal challenges that the people we met raised made me very curious to come back, learn more and delve deeper into these issues.

 

Rebecca:  We met with a colleague at the Jewish Federation of Cleveland who, when he heard I had worked with refugees and migration issues, lit up and said we must meet his friend Joe Cimperman and hear about Global Cleveland and see the Thomas Jefferson school.  We met Joe the next day and it’s like reconnecting with an old friend, even though we are meeting for the first time.  We all talk a mile a minute to share our stories and work with each other. 

 

Mohamad and I were deeply moved to hear about the work of Global Cleveland and the school to both enrich and be enriched by immigrants and refugees.  And we heard about the local Arab and Palestinian community, as well as local Jewish and Arab efforts to forge cooperation; and organizations like Salaam Cleveland, Ishmael & Isaac, and the Jewish Community Relations Council.  Joe tells us about how the Jewish Federation reached out to him and his father to help take in the Kosovar refugees who were landing as new immigrants in Cleveland, since Joe’s family was from Slovenia and the former Yugoslavia. 

 

To me these are all important examples of America’s best self in action.  The real question is not what kind of problems we face, whether in Cleveland, Israel or anywhere, but what can we do about them – and there is always something to do to improve things.  Our trip was too short to meet the people we were hearing about or go see more of their important work. 

 

Mohamad: I know that there must still be an “other Cleveland”, and that like many places, Cleveland must have its tensions and groups, individuals, who are desperate to be heard, and who might chuckle at our first impressions of the city.  But all of this made me leave with a desire come back again, learn and discover more about this city. 

 

And so, dear Patrick, we hope that we will meet again at the airport, and dear Joe, that we will go together to visit all the places you wanted us to see; and meet the people you told us about, and see more of the Cleveland that you are proud of.  And maybe we can even squeeze in the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame! 

 


What is the H-1B and Why is the Government Reducing the Number Available?

The H-1B visa is a nonimmigrant visa that permits companies in the United States to hire high-skilled foreign workers. 1.8 million H-1B visas were distributed between 2001 and 2015, according to the Pew Research Center. In April 2017, as part of the “Buy American and Hire American” executive order, President Trump required scrutiny on the H-1B, and immediately USCIS took steps to limit the program.

Suspending the fast track program, called “premium processing,” that allows those applying for an H-1B to pay a higher fee to get a notice of whether their application was accepted, within 15 days, was the first thing USCIS did to limit the H-1B. With H-1B applications due in the first two weeks of April, 2018, premium processing has once more been suspended.

The H-1B is a nonimmigrant worker visa that is typically valid for 3 years and permits an employer to hire alien workers who are employed in “specialty occupations.” The H-1B visa beneficiary needs to have at least a bachelor’s degree or the equivalent. Sample specialty occupations for the H-1B include engineers, lawyers, doctors, and computer engineers. While the visa is valid for 3 years, it can be extended for a maximum of six years and then extended beyond that if the green card process has been initiated.

An employer files the H-1B petition with USCIS, but the initial step is to have the U.S. Department of Labor certify a “labor condition application” (LCA) to ensure the foreign worker will not harm any U.S. workers as far as displacement or wages. With some exceptions, H-1B petitions can only be filed during a short window of time which is this year from April 2, 2018 to April 6, 2018. Employers need to be prepared ahead of time in order to get the H-1B filed timely for their application to be part of the “lottery” which is explained below. USCIS limits or “caps” the number of H-1Bs made available each year, and currently 65,000 are available, with 20,000 additional for beneficiaries who graduated with a US master’s degree. If an application is not selected in the lottery process then the employer and employee must consider other options to either stay in the US in another status, re-enroll back to school (F-1 status) or leave the US.

H-1B extensions and petitions by public educational institutions and their nonprofit affiliates and government research agencies, known as “cap exempt” H-1Bs, are not affected by this numerical limit and are not part of the lottery.

Over the last several years, the numerical limit has been reached in the first week of H-1B filing, which typically starts on April 1 (depending on the day of the week that the 1st falls), meaning there is a “lottery” for the limited H-1B visas. If the petition is selected in the lottery and the H-1B petition is approved, the beneficiary’s H-1B classification begins on October 1 of that year. USCIS has recently increased scrutiny on cap exempt cases to ensure that there is an active relationship between the nonprofit and university and a fundamental activity of the employer is to directly contribute to the research of the affiliated university. The 2017 fiscal year cap H-1Bs met even tougher review from USCIS due to “level 1” wage assignments. If an employer used a level 1 wage in the LCA, USCIS required additional evidence to prove that the job meets the proper wage assignment for the occupation and/or that the occupation is a specialty occupation requiring a bachelor’s degree. Essentially, employers must demonstrate that the position is complex enough to qualify for an H-1B, but still suitable for Level 1 wages.

President Trump’s philosophy of improving our country includes improving opportunities for the American worker. This will likely see further pressure on the H-1B program. The President’s strategy is complex, and it may take years to determine its degree of success. I remain hopeful that foreign born will continue to find Northeast Ohio one of the best places to find work and raise their families for many decades to come.

Margaret W. Wong, Esq.
MWW Immigration Center
3150 Chester Avenue
Cleveland, Ohio 44114
[email protected]
216-566-9908
www.imwong.com
twitter: @margaretwwong

Margaret W. Wong, Esq., is an adjunct professor of law at Case Western Reserve University Law School and has been recognized as a National Asian Pacific American Bar Association (NAPABA) Trailblazer. She enjoys a “Preeminent AV” rating by Martindale Hubbell. She was attorney for President Obama’s Auntie. Margaret W. Wong & Associates LLC is a national, full-service immigration and criminal law firm with offices in Atlanta, Chicago, Cleveland, Columbus, Los Angeles, Minneapolis, Nashville, New York City, and Raleigh.


What Does it Mean to be an American?

Our country, which spans over 2,600 miles from east to west is populated by individuals of all races, ethnicities, religions, economic means, levels of education, and political beliefs.  For better and for worse, Cleveland and Northeast Ohio offer a perfect example of the patchwork quilt that is America.  We have suffered together, seen violence together, marched together, cried together, witnessed a CAVS victory together, and been proud of our city throughout the spotlight of the RNC together.   Collectively, we make NEO our home, but what do we really know about our fellow Clevelanders?  Probably not too much.  If you are like majority of us, you in all likelihood spend most of your time with people who are similar to you.  In today’s world, it seems harder than ever (even with an abundance of social media platforms) for people from different backgrounds to come together and learn about each other.  Facing History and Ourselves and Ideastream would like to help bring residents of our region together for an intentional conversation about the promise of America in our world today and into the future. 

Please join Facing History Cleveland and Ideastream for a special FREE American Creed Community Conversation with guests; entrepreneur Terrence Davenport and Marine Corps veteran Tegan Griffith, both of whom are featured in the documentary film American Creed.  During our evening together, selections from American Creed will frame an on-stage discussion and audience Q&A session, engaging Cleveland community members in a dialogue about freedom, fairness, opportunity and the meaning of citizenship. This free event is sponsored by the Allstate Foundation.

In the documentary film American Creed, former US Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice and Pulitzer Prize-winning historian David M. Kennedy come together from their remarkably different life experiences, to investigate the idea of a unifying American creed. In the film, they bring together of a wide variety of Americans who discuss their own histories, perceptions, of what it means to be an American both today and into the future.

We look forward to you joining us for this important Cleveland community conversation.

To attend, register HERE: https://www.eventbrite.com/e/american-creed-community-conversation-tickets-44027331935

 


The Spanish American Committee Thanks Global Cleveland

Dear Supporters of Global Cleveland,

When Hurricane Maria hit Puerto Rico this past September, Norma Rosado lost everything. As soon as she and her husband were able to leave the island, they came to live in Cleveland to be near their son. For Norma and many others in similar situations after the disaster, The Spanish American Committee was her first stop. We helped Mr. and Mrs. Rosado get settled, get jobs, secure an apartment, and find furniture and other necessities.

The Spanish American Committee has served hundreds of families like Norma’s who are hoping to create a new life here in Cleveland. We have helped well over a thousand individuals who were displaced by Maria, providing them with employment and social services, housing and financial literacy counseling, childcare, immigration services and more through our three core programs; Families First, Mi Casa, and Little Footsteps Bilingual Child Enrichment Center.

Since 1966, SAC has been dedicated to serving as the gateway to socioeconomic success for the Hispanic community of Greater Cleveland. I have been with the organization for thirty-eight of its fifty-one years, serving as the Executive Director for the past eight. In my time working with this community I have seen many changes, but nothing quite like what we’ve experienced in the past six months. None of the work that we are doing to ensure that these families are taken care of would be possible without the incredible support we receive from our partners in the philanthropic community, as well as the organizations that collaborate with us to ensure quality programming for those who need it most.

I would like to thank Global Cleveland and Mr. Cimperman for giving me the opportunity to share a little bit about the Spanish American Committee’s work with you and lend a voice to the many families in need in our community. Again, none of our work would be possible without people like you who believe in our mission of providing low-income families with the tools and resources they need to break the cycle of poverty.

Sincerely,
Ramonita Vargas
Executive Director, The Spanish American Committee