Zora’s House breaks ground
Initiative looks to help Black women in careers
Brenda Thomas’s dream was finally realized in 2019 when she was able to start her own business selling herbal teas and balms online and at popup events. ● But with no brick-and-mortar location of her own, Thomas, 42, spent much time working from home — and with five kids to care for, that often proved challenging. It could be isolating, too, for a Black business owner looking to build connections with others in Greater
Columbus. ● Fortunately, the Reynoldsburg resident found what she needed at Zora’s
House in Weinland Park, where a few months ago she joined a community of women of color focused on supporting one another while developing professionally.
“The sisterhood alone is something I never experienced before, how they branch around you and they gather around you with love, with encouragement, with resources,” said Thomas, whose business is called Healing Garden Cafe. “It’s something I’d never experienced before in my community growing up in Columbus.”
Thomas joined Zora’s House at a time when the nonprofit — which since 2018 has offered a co-working space to women of color on Summit Street — was eyeing expansion. Earlier this month, leaders broke ground on a multi-million dollar 10,000-square-foot facility slated to open in early 2024 in Weinland Park.
That expansion is part of founder and CEO LC Johnson’s mission to ensure that as Greater Columbus grows and attracts new businesses such as Intel to the area, women of color can join in that prosperity. And it’s a vision other area organizations — including the Columbus Urban League — share as they prioritize similar programs and spaces.
“The work that we do, it’s for the women of color, but it’s also for our community so Columbus and central Ohio can say, ‘We see you, and we’re going to invest in you,’” Johnson said. “It feels important that women of color in this community see things that are being built for them, that are representative of their unique needs.”
“(Zora’s House) gives Black women a place where they can be their authentic selves ... there just hasn’t been spaces like that for Black and brown women in the past.”
Stephanie Hightower
Columbus Urban League president and CEO
Statistics show that women of color are the fastest-growing group of entrepreneurs in the United States.
Companies owned by them increased 43% between 2014 and 2019, far outpacing the 21% increase by women-owned businesses in general, according to the State of Womenowned Businesses Report by American Express. Black women-owned businesses grew even faster at 50%.
The Ohio RISE Survey released at the end of 2020 by the Alliance of Black Businesswomen & Entrepreneurs (ABBE) Ohio, found the most pressing needs for Black women business owners at the time were access to capital, greater business operational support (including technical assistance) and an equitable opportunity to get private and public contracts.
It’s a need the Columbus Urban League has sought to address through its growing programming.
This month, the Urban League received a $3 million investment over the next three years from Jpmorgan Chase to fund its new Accelerate Her initiative. With plans to provide education, support, access to capital and contracting opportunities for Black and minority-owned Columbus businesses, the program is envisioned as the next evolution of its Incubate Her program, according to Stephanie Hightower, president and CEO.
Incubate Her, which began in 2020 during the beginning of the COVID-19 pandemic amid a racial justice movement that followed the murder of George Floyd, has provided women of color with training and resources to open new businesses or grow fledgling ones over a 12-week period. As Incubate Her prepares to welcome its latest cohort of 25 women this month, Hightower said Accelerate Her is focused on helping them sustain and grow those ventures.
“When you want to build up people who have dealt with systemic inequities over time, you can’t throw them in the deep water and expect them to swim,” Hightower said. “We had a lot of people say it was life-changing just because of the nature of being able to provide that technical support that was needed to start to scale their business up.”
One of those people was Tonya Kelly, who was able to work on the antibullying nonprofit Empower Our Youth Foundation that she founded in 2017.
Kelly said she learned business skills and financial literacy that made her better equipped to take her nonprofit to the next level. In December, the 52-year-old East Side resident even launched a new program focused on science, technology, engineering and mathematics (STEM) and literacy education.
“It’s really allowed us to be a voice and become not just an advocate but now a leader in anti-bullying (efforts),” said Kelly, a fourth-grade teacher. “What the Urban League has done is they’ve cultivated opportunity.”
Hightower said she hopes the Urban
League can partner with Zora’s House, given their shared missions.
“You can’t be what you can’t see,” Hightower said. “(Zora’s House) gives Black women a place where they can be their authentic selves, and it’s a nojudgement zone; there just hasn’t been spaces like that for Black and brown women in the past.”
The idea for Zora’s House was born in 2016 soon after Johnson and her husband moved to Columbus and she found herself one of the few women of color in a predominantly white workspace. She purchased a vacant lot on Summit Street, where the nonprofit opened its doors in 2018.
At Zora’s House, known for its distinctive green exterior and purple door, women find more than a space to work; it also offers a bevy of programming and community events tailored to professional and social growth.
It has helped more than 3,000 women so far with its “pay what you can” membership model. It was only a few years before Johnson began looking for land to build a larger facility for Zora’s House to keep pace with its growing membership, and she found it at the corner of North Fourth Street and East Eighth Avenue near the Short North and Ohio State University.
The future facility, which will replace the 2,000-square-foot Summit Street house, is expected to cost $6 million, including $1 million for operational funds. Plans for the build include communal workspaces and event space, private offices and a residential incubator program where people from across the country will be able to stay for up to a week.
So far, Johnson said, $3 million has been raised, including $600,000 from the state of Ohio, $500,000 from the City of Columbus, and $1 million from the federal omnibus bill. The remaining funds have come from corporate partners and individuals.
Despite their various backgrounds and professional interests, Johnson said the women who walk through that purple door are all looking for the same thing: a place where they know they’ll belong.
“A lot of our members come in and they navigate spaces every day in their neighborhoods, in their jobs, where they may be the only women of color they saw that day,” Johnson said. “To come in and feel like you have a space where you’re represented is really important.” elagatta@dispatch.com @Ericlagatta