Business resource

Urban League of NWI celebrates 80 years of human services programming

Since the Urban League of Northwest Indiana launched its entrepreneurship program, leaders have heard 4,257 times how much small businesses across the Region need this service.

That’s the precise number of inquiries tallied by entrepreneurship program leader Bahiyah Shabazz from small business operators with questions that run the gamut from financial to legal to marketing, branding, leadership or planning.


(The Urban League is) here to educate and make sure that
small businesses are thriving. We want to make sure that all the businesses that interact with us are able to
sustain past 10 years.”
Bahiyah Shabazz, Decimalytics— Bahiyah Shabazz, Decimalytics

The Urban League has responded with a program that offers frequent — and free — entrepreneurship workshops and a resource list providing direction to common services small businesses need. This summer, the entrepreneurship program offered its first small business training, in which a 14-person cohort learned the ins and outs of forming a business identity in a monthlong series called “Becoming a Brand.”

Urban League of NW Indiana

The Urban League of Northwest Indiana works to promote, encourage and enhance services to
improve social, educational, and economic conditions of African Americans and other minority groups in Lake,
Porter, and La Porte Counties.

“We’re here to educate and make sure that small businesses are thriving,” said Shabazz, an entrepreneur who runs the Merrillville-based financial and advisory firm Decimalytics. “We want to make sure that all the businesses that interact with us are able to sustain past 10 years.”

The work of the entrepreneurship committee is part of the Urban League’s mission to enhance communities in Lake, Porter and La Porte counties, with services to improve education, financial literacy, health, wellness and leadership for African Americans and other underrepresented groups.

“We are a resource center to support the community,” said Vanessa Allen-McCloud, president and CEO of the Gary-based Urban League. “Supporting businesses fits into the bigger picture, because we’re teaching organizations how to maintain and sustain their businesses.”


Supporting businesses fits into the bigger picture, because
we’re teaching organizations how to maintain and sustain their businesses.”
Vanessa Allen-McCloud, Urban League of Northwest Indiana— Vanessa Allen-McCloud, Urban League of Northwest Indiana

The entrepreneurship program falls under the financial literacy arm of what the Urban League offers. Shabazz said the effort has reached 175 participants who have attended workshops about topics, including how to start a business, how to apply for grants, understanding the effects of AI and succeeding as a woman in business.

Last year, businesses across the Region hosted the workshops, providing a chance for entrepreneurs to see each other’s stores and offices as they networked and learned, Shabazz said. This year’s events, including the branding series instructed by Cynthia Williams, founder of StartUP Gary, are all taking place at Ivy Tech Community College in Gary.

“We want to ensure that we’re not coming in to monopolize helping businesses in this area,” Shabazz said, “but to partner and collaborate with other organizations who are also assisting small business owners.”

Partnering, collaborating and providing resources is what the Urban League is all about, as a human services agency that’s now celebrating its 80th year, Allen-McCloud said. Partnerships allow the organization to support a variety of businesses, even beyond those taking advantage of entrepreneurship resources.

The businesses involved with Northwest Learning Labs are one example. While designed to offer summer education to students entering first through ninth grades — with 800 participating this year — the Learning Labs also provide stipends to local businesses that offer enrichment opportunities. After morning classes, students go on excursions, often visiting businesses that offer swimming, outdoor recreation or animal-focused experiences.

Learning Labs may be “more for kids in a sense,” said Yolanda Davis, Urban League board vice chairwoman. But the positive effects spread beyond a short-term boost for students.

“I do think that’s helping enrich their lives for business,” said Davis, who also is the community reinvestment act officer at Centier Bank.

Moving forward, the Urban League plans to increase its focus on young professionals ages 21 to 40, Allen-McCloud said, to ensure more mentorship and passing down of skills in leadership and professionalism.

The organization also is rebranding its annual symposium. The focus — and name — of the event now will center on leadership.

“Because of the national and state mandates to dismantle diversity equity and inclusion (programs), we don’t want any of those words to deter organizations from attending and learning how to better resolve conflict, develop leadership and provide opportunities,” Allen-McCloud said.

The rebrand is intended to improve understanding of the Urban League’s mission, which goes beyond those three words, to focus on leadership, development and community, Davis said.

“We want to make sure that we align with the climate that we’re in,” she said. “The most important part is to make sure that we’re connected and continue to be connected with our partners.”

Read more stories from the current issue of Northwest Indiana Business Magazine.

Don Babcock

Count way to success

Purdue University Northwest's Don Babcock argues weak math preparation is closing career doors for students, pointing to the U.S. ranking 34th in math among 78 nations.
Read More
Toyia Moore

Big on housing

The Northwest Indiana Reinvestment Alliance runs HUD-certified counseling and financial literacy classes across Lake County as foreclosures and evictions rise statewide.
Read More
photo of Glow-in-the-Dark Smooth Bore fire hose nozzle

Nozzle worth noting

Elkhart Brass Manufacturing's glow-in-the-dark firehose nozzle won the 2025 Coolest Thing Made IN Indiana contest, beating 48 products from 36 communities.
Read More
Sherry Langdeau and Tabetha Alvarado

Answering the call

Crown Point's Great Lakes Communications handles 24/7 calls for businesses, doctors, and crisis hotlines. Co-founders Langdeau and Alvarado launched the service in 2015.
Read More
Blessing Mene

Essential adviser

Blessing Mene, enFocus's director of entrepreneurship, draws on a career supporting 100-plus startups and $25M raised to coach South Bend-area founders.
Read More
Hammond Sportsplex

Economic power of play

Northwest Indiana's 114 scheduled youth sports events in 2026 could generate $45M, fueled by facilities like the Hammond Sportsplex and Elkhart aquatics center.
Read More
Wellfield Botanic Gardens in Elkhart

Sustainable prospects

From a food-waste plant in LaPorte County to PFAS detection in South Bend, Northwest Indiana companies are building sustainability into core business operations.
Read More
“Legacy Leaders” breakfast in November 2025

Lots of buyers out there

Indiana's office of entrepreneurship and innovation is partnering with regional groups to help small business owners plan exits as baby boomer retirements accelerate ownership turnover.
Read More
Valparaiso University engineering students

Trending careers in trades

Northern Indiana's construction industry is pushing to recruit more high school graduates, pointing to paid apprenticeships, major project demand, and AI-resistant job security.
Read More
Best of Business Awards 2026

2026 award winners

Northwest Indiana Business Magazine's 2026 Best of Business winners, chosen by reader survey for the 21st year, share how hiring, technology upgrades, and new offices shaped their 2025.
Read More
Chris Campbell

Professional advancement

Northwest Indiana and Michiana professionals across banking, health care, education, law, and manufacturing announce hires, promotions, and board appointments.
Read More
Cover of April-May 2026 Issue

In this issue

From small businesses to youth sports, discover how community spirit and local leadership are shaping a stronger Northwest Indiana.
Read More

Author

  • Wilson Family portrait at the Busse Woods Forest Preserve in Elk Grove on June 30, 2024.

    Marie Wilson has worked in local journalism and communications for more than a dozen years. She has received reporting awards from the Chicago Headline Club, Illinois Associated Press Media Editors, the Hearst Journalism Awards Program and the Daily Herald, where she covered suburban news, government and business for 10 years. Wilson has a degree in news-editorial journalism from the University of Illinois and lives in suburban Chicago.

    View all posts

Leave a Reply

Scroll to Top