News

  • After the racially motivated mass shooting, annual conference is more critical than ever
    7/26/22

    Igniting Hope 2022, “Advocating in a New Reality: Breaking Barriers, Maintaining Resilience and Reconstructing a Community of Care,” will take place on Aug. 13 in the Jacobs School of Medicine and Biomedical Sciences and on Zoom. 

  • Freedom Gardens Serving As One Solution Among Many
    7/20/22

    Buffalo Freedom Gardens has given dozens of residents of Buffalo’s East Side neighborhoods a free raised bed garden. Since 2020, Freedom Gardens has installed 134 raised beds in communities of color in Buffalo. Their goal is to fight racism, inspire resilience and provide fresh vegetables in neighborhoods that lack grocery stores and access to healthy foods.

    Learn More

  • Recognizing The Life and Impact of Dr. Jonathan Daniels
    7/7/22

    Dr. Daniels was a tireless advocate for diversifying the physician workforce and has worked closely with the Associated Medical Schools of New York to expand the pool of scholars choosing careers in medicine and health care, by providing academic enrichment and support to students from educationally and/or economically underserved backgrounds.  

  • East Buffalo vs. East Side
    6/30/22

    A growing number of politicians and community leaders think the time has come to drop East Side from Buffalo's geo-vocabulary. Their preferred choice? East Buffalo. Others cautioned about those from outside the communities taking it upon themselves to brand geography.

  • Our Public Systems Were Not Created to Produce Equal Outcomes or Experiences for Everyone
    6/21/22

    Although Juneteenth is symbolic of the chains coming off, the U.S. government used numerous ways to legally put them back on by creating laws and policies that intentionally discriminate against Black Americans, making true freedom impossible.

  • Rising Fear and Anger on the East Side of Buffalo
    6/10/22

    Buffalo is one of the poorest cities in the country, and nearly half of children living in the city are poor. But the hardship that defines the city is not evenly shared. There is severe residential segregation, which keeps Black and white residents living in different social, economic, and political realities.

  • Now is the Time for Bold Initiatives
    6/1/22

    As our community continues to mourn the loss of those who tragically lost their lives on May 14th, 2022, at Tops Supermarket. We ask that you take this time to think about what your role, responsibility and commitment is as a change agent. What we are called to do individually and collectively, because our community needs us now more than ever.

  • The Words 鈥淩eturn to Normal鈥 Refer to a Reality That No Longer Exists
    5/19/22

    Thinking about communities where for decades their health was degraded by entrenched medical racism, environmental injustice, and systemic inequality.

  • County Health Rankings Show WNY Remains Unhealthiest State Region
    5/19/22

    Poor health outcomes flow directly from adverse social determinants of health including poverty,  and access to education, employment, transportation, safe neighborhoods, affordable childcare and others..

    “Instead of framing health outcome questions around matters of ‘personal choice,’ it’s more reasonable to note that there are marginalized and vulnerable people in our community that are faced with few positive choices,” said Dr. Gale Burstein, Erie County health commissioner.