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Futuro Health Highlighted in New York Times as Promising Solution to Economic Mobility

A newly released study by a group of academic and nonprofit researchers reveals the stark reality of occupational segregation's extent and lasting impact in the United States on Black workers, even as the number of Black college-educated workers has surged. New York Times Pulitzer-prize reporter Steve Lohr breaks down the new study in his latest article on the disparities that Black workers in middle-wage professions face when compared to their white counterparts. Futuro Health CEO, Van Ton-Quinlivan, is interviewed in the NY Times article about Futuro Health’s nonprofit model that has successfully brought thousands of ethnically- and linguistically-diverse adults back into education for jobs in allied health, including Justice J., an African America Futuro Health Scholar who overcame many personal adversities to become certified as Medical Assistant through Futuro Health’s tuition-free scholarship offering.

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