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Welcome!

Please enjoy The Wright Group’s inaugural newsletter! In addition to the in-depth all-client updates you receive regarding City and State matters, we’ve decided to create an email newsletter every other month that will allow us to keep you updated on what the firm is up to, as well as highlight some of the work that you and our other clients are engaged in. We hope this fosters greater connectivity within the TWG community.

Welcome

Happy Women’s History Month! As a government relations firm with a majority female staff, all of us at TWG have been spending March in awe of the incredible women leaders we represent, the organizations that advocate on behalf of women and girls in New York City, and the female communities that we work with all of you to uplift. We asked four inspirational women who lead TWG client organizations to identify historical women they admire and to recognize their own leadership styles and accomplishments. You’ll find excerpts of those responses below, and we encourage you to follow TWG on LinkedIn to read more from each of them.

Gotham Park was originally founded with the lofty goal of creating public access

at the Manhattan landing of the Brooklyn Bridge – a site that was closed for over a decade. Since opening, the park has since become a refuge of open space for community members – something Co-Founder & President Rosa Chang knew would benefit the mental and emotional health of everyone who visits. Read on for more in Rosa’s own words:

It is with deep sorrow and profound love that the family of John Edward
Akiwande Wright announces his passing on January 17, 2023, at the age
of 57 in Poughkeepsie, New York.

John was born on August 2, 1965, in Freetown, Sierra Leone in West Africa to Cyrus Rogers-Wright, barrister at law, and Claudia (May) Harding a retired employee of the NYU School of Medicine. He attended high school at LaSalle Academy in New York City and graduated with his Bachelor of Arts degree in History from Niagara University. In his early years, John spent many summers upstate New York as a participant in Fresh Air Fund. He was an avid long-distance runner and captained his high school and collegiate cross-country teams. He then went on to receive his Master of Public Administration from the New School.

John is the father of three sons, Caleb Gardner Wright, Elijah Gardner Wright, and Jaylin Speight whom he raised in Brooklyn with his life partner, Regina Woods. It was John’s identity and role as a father that he cherished most. Creating a world of access, equity, beauty, and love for his boys gave him his deepest sense of purpose and was his constant north star.

John was a tireless advocate for his fellow New Yorkers. He served as Assistant Executive Director for the Center for Children and Families/Safespace, Inc. While there, John established one of the first drop-in centers in Times Square for runaway and homeless youth which became a critical resource in the early 1990s for LGBTQ+ and HIV-positive youth who too often had nowhere to feel safe. He was also the Assistant Executive Director of New York City’s oldest African-American-run child welfare agency, the Harlem Dowling-Westside Center.

In 2010, John founded The Wright Group NY, one of the first Black-owned government relations firms in New York City and one of the only firms committed to representing non-profit organizations and the social services sector. The firm’s clients range from some of New York’s largest cultural institutions to smaller non-profits that serve some of the City’s most underinvested communities. John took enormous pride in the numerous legislative advancements he and The Wright Group NY were instrumental in achieving, like New York’s Raise the Age legislation.

What John created in The Wright Group NY was fundamentally unique and grounded in his vision to support New York’s communities and causes that too often are rendered voiceless. John built a firm and brought together a community of those connected by their efforts and commitment to advance justice and equality. John believed that meaningful transformative change could only be achieved when the City’s most marginalized have access to influence and become decision-makers in every aspect of government. He empowered those advocating for equitable solutions to advance systemic change by supporting clients and coalitions and guiding leaders and youth alike. John served as a board member for numerous non-profits, including Harlem United and the Brooklyn Community Foundation. He inspired and mentored so many with his compassion and steadfast dedication to justice and equality

John’s passion and joy for life were infectious to all those around him. He was a creative at heart who loved and supported the arts, music, and theater. He proudly celebrated his cultural and historical roots and was an avid lover and collector of African art. These ventures were equal to his love for animals and the outdoors. John trained dogs and raised rare and exotic birds. At any given time, you could find him enjoying one of his many hobbies: fly fishing, sailing, or kayaking.

John moved through the world with a commanding presence and power. But it was a power not through dominance, but through service and understanding. He was a colorful, spirited, and complex person who was widely respected for not just what he did, but for who he was and how he did it. His inquisitiveness, humility, and thirst for knowledge meant that he was always learning. And John’s openness about his journey and pursuit of personal betterment and healing illustrated the integrity with which he lived his life. John was known for his deep and lasting relationships, brilliant strategic mind, infectious laugh, and his generous and compassionate spirit. He created meaningful connections with each person with whom he interacted and served as a bridge between people, communities, and spaces where he saw synergy, often before others could.

John was preceded in death by his father, Cyrus. He is survived by his mother Claudia, his partner Regina Woods, his three sons Caleb, Elijah and Jaylin, ex-wife and mother to Caleb and Elijah, Tracie M. Gardner, and several aunts, uncles, cousins, nieces and nephews.

Welcome to the first TWG Newsletter of 2024! We are excited about what this year has in store for us. In today’s edition, you’ll find a NYTimes Arts Section cover page story about the Climate Museum, information on a Mental Health Roundtable TWG co-hosted with Senator Hoylman-Sigal, and more.

We would also like to acknowledge that today marks one year since John Wright’s passing. His life touched us in so many ways, and at times, it has been overwhelming to reflect on – let alone carry on – his legacy. As we look back on the last year, we are incredibly grateful for the support and understanding you have offered us. We hope that in turn, we have helped provide time and space for each of you to ruminate on and process this profound loss. The Wright Group is proud to bear John’s name, and we continue on with renewed purpose, underscoring the values each one of us shared with him. We are honored to work with all of you to achieve a better and more equitable life for those living in New York’s most underserved communities.

Many of John’s friends have found comfort in leaving reflections on the Memorial Page that TWG created – please feel free to visit if you’d like, whether to read entries or offer your own. Additionally, his memorial service was recorded, and the video can be found here. As each of you continues to grieve and reflect on the impact John had – on our own lives and on the communities and the sectors in which we operate – please know that we do so alongside you.

We are so grateful for all of the feedback we received from our inaugural client newsletter. We are always seeking out opportunities to highlight our incredible clients and their work, nurture our community and improve our sense of connection. This edition features TWG’s feature in a specialty print publication, National Black Theatre’s historic topping out ceremony, a Dia de Los Muertos event at Green-Wood Cemetery, and more!
 

TWG Update

TWG is honored to be featured in the most recent edition of Government Business Review!

Read the full article here

Last month, we were pleased to host TWG Presents: The Art of the One-Pager Part Two: Creating and Maximizing Leave-Behind Material. TWG Presents is a series of educational interactive Zoom trainings offered to all clients.

With Terri Richardson having recently joined our City practice and Cleveland Stair now officially on board our State practice, we are thrilled to have such a robust and experienced team heading into the FY25 legislative and budget sessions.