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| 15th Anniversary  |  January 15-31, 2027 |  Exchanging Ideas  |  Inspiring Discussion  |  Igniting Change

| 15th Anniversary  |  January 15-31, 2027 |  Exchanging Ideas  |  Inspiring Discussion  |  Igniting Change

| 15th Anniversary  |  January 15-31, 2027 |  Exchanging Ideas  |  Inspiring Discussion  |  Igniting Change

| 15th Anniversary  |  January 15-31, 2027 |  Exchanging Ideas  |  Inspiring Discussion  |  Igniting Change

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NEWS

DreamWeek Returns with Messages of Tolerance, Equality and Diversity / SA Current

By NEWS

Established in 2013 with a mission to advance voices of tolerance, equality and diversity, DreamWeek is a citywide summit filled with discussions, screenings, concerts, exhibits and mixers rooted in 12 key topics: city, sports, cuisine, health, environment, technology, education, arts, youth, spirit, justice and business. Spread across 15 days and anchored by the Martin Luther King Jr. March on January 16, the fifth annual observance kicks off this week with an array of early highlights — including a reception for local artist Veronica Castillo’s “Trees of Life” exhibit (free, 6pm Wed, Forest Hills Library, 5245 Ingram Road); a talk between artists Robert Langham III and Casey James Wilson about the works they contributed to the group show “Hold Still” (free, 6pm Thu, Blue Star Contemporary, 116 Blue Star); “Foreign by Land, Native by Heart,” an exhibit examining the refugee  experience from the perspective of four San Antonio-based families who fled their homes in Malaysia, Pakistan, Afghanistan and Iran ($8-$10, 9am-5pm Fri, Institute of Texan Cultures, 801 E. César E. Chávez Blvd.); Delta Rho Lambda Chapter (of Alpha Phi Alpha Fraternity Inc.) and Moms Demand Action for Gun Sense in America’s interactive panel discussion  “The Election is Over, Now What?” (free, 4-6pm Sat, New Creation Christian Fellowship, 700 Fourwinds Drive); a reading from Anne Moody’s autobiography Coming of Age in the Mississippi (free, noon-2pm Sat, Carver Branch Library, 3550 E. Commerce St.); the opening of British-Nigerian photographer Juliana Kasumu’s solo show “From Moussor to Tignon: The Evolution of the Head-Tie” (free, 5-7pm Sat, Musical Bridges Around the  World Gallery, 23705 I-10 W.); keepHer San Antonio’s community-building discussion “keepHer Dream Alive: Celebrating the Long Legacy of Women of Color (free, 2:30pm Sat, Launch SA Auditorium, 600 Soledad St.); and an LGBT & Ally Safe Zone Training session led by Pride Center San Antonio (free, 11am-3pm Sat, Westfall Branch Library, 6111 Rosedale Ct.).


For a complete schedule of DreamWeek events, visit dreamweek.org.

Over 100 partners and hosts to participate in Dreamweek 2017 / La Prensa SA

By NEWS

Beginning Friday, Jan. 6 through Wednesday, Jan. 21, San Antonio will engage in the fifth annual DreamWeek summit of events. Planted in a city that thrives in diversity, DreamWeek aims to bring people together to attend a myriad of partner-hosted events throughout the city. This multicultural convergence of thought is designed to spread awareness and enlightenment on tolerance, equality and diversity.

San Antonians can inspire the start of their new year by attending the DreamWeek Opening Ceremony Breakfast with opening remarks from Mayor Ivy Taylor. Expanding on the success of previous years, DreamWeek will continue to keep with the spirit of inclusion, as there are events for all to participate in and enjoy including a series of keynote speaking engagements, evening mixers, live music, culinary galas, film screenings, art gallery exhibits, panel discussions, health and fitness expos, and more.

Throughout the events, participants honor the past, take stock of the present, and present a vision for the future. DreamWeek coincides with the MLK March, which is one of the largest marches in the country. The march is organized by the City of San Antonio Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. Commission, which is celebrating 30 years as one of the city’s leading volunteer organizations.

“Our fractured nation has had, for some time, a challenging time dealing with divisive issues such as race, immigration, gender and abortion. In a difficult and trying 2016 election year cycle this was compounded by the ‘dislocation’ of facts and the ‘resourcing’ of truths. Our goal for the 2017 summit is to stimulate an interest in receiving and accepting a balance of opinions, voices and tastes in a manner which allows for individual representation,” stated DreamVoice, LLC President Shokare Nakpodia. “Within this context, we advance that truth is a mirror, and our community in its entirety should be on display… blemishes and all.” Nakpodia continued. “We can only choose what we are to become, but not what we have been. DreamWeek 2017 aims to consolidate the progress made by our hosting partners and set up more paths to reveal our capacity for tolerance, diversity and equality as an enlightened community.”

DreamWeek is presented by DreamVoice, LLC, a collection of civic-minded individuals who are committed to advancing and modernizing the teachings of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. and humanitarians like him. The summit kicks off at 7:30 a.m. on Friday, Jan. 6 with an Opening Breakfast Ceremony. For a full list of events and ticket information, please visit www.dreamweek.org.

San Antonians Plan Bigger, Even More Diverse DreamWeek to Honor MLK / Rivard Report

By NEWS

It’s the beginning of a new year and, for many, January is the time for fresh starts and resolutions. It’s also the month when cities across the nation reflect on the life and legacy of one of the most influential leaders of the American Civil Rights Movement, Rev. Martin Luther King Jr.

King’s official holiday commemorating his birthday is observed on the third Monday of January each year, but DreamWeek, a summit started by DreamVoice LLC, gives San Antonians a chance to honor and advance King’s wisdom and teachings for the majority of the month.

Along with advancing King’s and other humanitarians’ messages of peace and justice, the DreamWeek summit – now in its fourth year – takes a more expanded approach to promoting equality, tolerance, and diversity among all communities, thus “proliferating and modernizing their aspirations of a more equitable and enlightened society for all.”

“We’re trying to use DreamWeek to present where we are today (as a society) along the path of that realization of (King’s) full dream itself,” said Shokare Nakpodia, DreamVoice LLC president and founder.

DreamVoice hosts the opening ceremony, but DreamWeek’s calendar is made possible by the dozens of groups around the city that host their own lecture series, workshops, mixers, film screenings, art shows, and other gatherings to foster healthy dialogue about topics relevant to today’s society.

A full schedule of DreamWeek events can be found here.

The point of DreamWeek in general, Nakpodia said, is for the community to come to the table with an open mind to acknowledge and explore our differences and complexities as individuals of varied backgrounds and beliefs, and to use those discussions to move forward.

This year’s 16-day program from Thursday, Jan. 5 through Saturday, Jan. 21 features more than 150 events by more than 100 nonprofits, corporations, and organizations, including the City’s MLK Jr. Commission of San Antonio, which has been hosting events in King’s honor since it was established in 1986.

The MLK Jr. Commission administers the Martin Luther King Jr. Scholarship Program, which gives college scholarships to several Bexar County students. To learn more and donate, click here. During January, it ramps up fundraising efforts and hosts a slate of musical performances, lecture series, worship services, and other activities centered around King’s work and message, along with its largest event, the Martin Luther King Jr. March.

See the Commission’s schedule of events here.

The march is one of the largest in the nation and brings together hundreds of thousands of people each year.

Last year, 300,000 individuals descended upon the city’s Eastside to take part in the historic 2.75-mile walk that concludes with speakers and live music in Pittman-Sullivan Park.

Organizers of this year’s event, which will take place on Monday, Jan. 16 starting at 10 a.m., expect around 350,000 people, said Christian Reed-Ogba, MLK Jr. Commission spokeswoman.

View the march route and find information about complimentary VIA bus rides to the festivities here.

City Councilman Alan Warrick (D2), whose district is home to the MLK March and a number of DreamWeek activities, attributes the strong and consistent collaboration among various local partners and the City – which has funded the march for 30 years – to the march’s success and growth year after year.

DreamWeek also is a time to reflect on the bigger issues facing the community, Warrick said, such as bettering police-community relations and, in his district, addressing the unemployment rate, which has gone down to 10% from 12% since he took office.

“We’re really looking to promote a positive message and it’s really about the promise for the future,” he said, adding that DreamWeek as a reminder of one of King’s biggest hopes for the United States: to be “a nation that we all can thrive and really grow and flourish in.”

This year’s commemorative event keynote speaker after the march is award-winning rap/hip hop artist, activist, and speaker David Banner.

The program also includes speeches by various City and County officials, performances by gospel artist Keith Pringles and rising R&B artist Janenna, and the presentations of the Baha’i Unity of Humanity Award and the Rev. R.A. Callies Courage Award.

The MLK Jr. Commission is chaired by Nathaniel Davis, director of major gifts/community & government relations at YMCA of Greater San Antonio. He has been on the commission for more than 20 years and Davis’ late father, Odie, founded the Davis-Scott YMCA for African American youth in 1944. His legacy was carried on by his wife, Nadine, who died in 2010.

The theme for this year’s march – “King’s Legacy for Peace is Justice for All. Remember! Celebrate! Act!” – is relevant to Americans today, Davis said, especially since inequalities still exist.

“One thing we’d like for our youngsters to do is to remember the sacrifices made before (them),” Davis said, “and that we can celebrate the progresses we’ve endured, as well, but don’t hesitate to act when things are not right. (They) have a voice to speak up.”

Other standout events hosted by the MLK Jr. Commission, Davis said, are the My City, Our Community Youth Summit on Jan. 14 at St. Phillip’s College and the interfaith service at New Creations Christian Fellowship on Jan. 15.

There also will be a wreath-laying ceremony at the MLK Jr. statue at Martin Luther King Jr. Plaza on Jan. 15 and the Eastside Education & Training Center-MLK Job Fair on Jan. 18.

The Youth Summit is an opportunity for young kids and teens to be brought “up to speed on different issues that affect their lives at this particular time,” Davis said. Education is going to be the main focus of the event, he added, but they’ll also be discussing topics related to social justice issues such as the Black Lives Matter movement and job creation, among other things.

Those looking to attend DreamWeek gatherings before and after the MLK March have plenty of options. Some events on the calendar focus on women’s rights, religion, LGBTQIA rights, immigration, politics, and race relations, and more.

“They’re sort of global issues right now,” Nakpodia said, “and I think that it’s important that we be able to at least have real, healthy discussions about them.”

Some DreamWeek events you shouldn’t miss, Reed-Ogba said, include the Mix and Mentor event hosted by My Brother’s Keeper-San Antonio, Soul Saturday hosted by her public relation firm’s networking group GoodPeopleSA, and the Taste the Dream gala for San Antonio for Growth on the Eastside.

Other notable events include The Epidemic of LGBTQ Youth Homelessness in America documentary screening and discussion hosted by the Thrive Youth Center Monday, Jan. 9 at 600 Soledad St., a musical showcase hosted by San Antonio Sound Garden on Friday, Jan. 20 at 723 N. Alamo St., and a Children’s Naturalization Ceremony held at the DoSeum on Saturday, Jan. 14, where 50 immigrant children will take their oaths of U.S. citizenship.

Nakpodia and Davis believe that San Antonio is a fitting location to host such a large tribute to King and his ideals of equality, diversity, and tolerance.

“We have (one of) the smallest African-American populations, but the largest march (in the U.S.),” Davis said. “That shows you that there’s a lot of people in San Antonio that believe in what Dr. King stood for, which was justice for all, not just one race of people.”

The community’s attempts to resolve conflict “with very little drama,” Nakpodia added, can make San Antonio “a real showcase for the rest of the world. … We can show people it’s a lot better to get together even if we are fighting than to be dismissive and to just throw rocks at each other.”

Why cybersecurity for businesses doesn’t stop at the desktop / San Antonio Business Journal 2016

By NEWS

While cybersecurity is often associated with firewalls and encryption for protection in the digital realm, for businesses it can come down to sound physical processes.

For example, taking a flash drive of sensitive files in an envelope and letting it sit on the loading dock for pickup by a shipping company is one way data can be breached.
From left, Tiffany Tremont, president of CEO of Silotech Group Inc.; Will Garrett, executive director of Cybersecurity San Antonio; Harvinder Singh, president of Bestica Inc.; Marina Gavito, executive director of TechBloc; and Debra Innocenti, lawyer with Strasburger & Price LLC, discuss cybersecurity at Dorcol Distilling Co. in San Antonio.
Enlarge

From left, Tiffany Tremont, president of CEO of Silotech Group Inc.; Will Garrett,… more

Kristen Mosbrucker

That was among the key takeaways from a panel discussion about cybersecurity in San Antonio during Martin Luther King Dream Week.

“We really need to stop separating the electronic from the physical,” said Debra Innocenti, an Internet and technology lawyer at Strausburger & Price LLC who was among several industry leaders on the panel.
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“Small companies may be thinking, ‘I’m not a target,'” Innocenti said. “But you are only as strong as your weakest link. So if your vendor has very poor cybersecurity protocols then that’s where you get hit.”

In 2014, Home Depot discovered that contact information for millions of customers were stolen by using credentials of a third-party vendor. Some corporations have sought cybersecurity audits with suppliers and service companies they contract with.

“It’s becoming a sales issue,” Innocenti said.

Likewise, the major move by banks for add a chip to debit and credit cards across the nation and shift liability to merchants that don’t upgrade their terminal technology came into effect in 2015.

“Financial institutions have been pushing for years to have some of that burden be put on vendors and merchant side of it,” said Will Garrett, director of Cybersecurity San Antonio, an advocacy group that promotes San Antonio as a hub for the industry.

“We are a large point-of sale-purchase fraud market, and part of the reason is that San Antonio is built on the backs of small businesses that plug and play,” Garrett said.

Rather than more regulation, Garrett suggested that a rating system for companies that employ best practices in cybersecurity — similar to LEED certification for promoting energy-efficiency measures — makes sense.

“It’s not regulated, but it shows you that a business is operating at a certain level,” he said.

Kristen Mosbrucker covers technology, finance and the military.

DreamWeek Closes with a ‘Freedom Party’ / Rivard Report 2016

By NEWS

More than 150 events on the 2016 DreamWeek calendar have come to pass and none remain after Tuesday night’s Freedom Party that concluded the 12-day summit of seminars, mixers, classes, and cultural events celebrating diversity in San Antonio.

DreamWeek founder Shokare “Sho” Nakpodia led the crowd that filled the Southwest School of Art‘s Coates Chapel to toast the more than 100 partner organizations that hosted events during this year’s DreamWeek. He called on the SA2020 team to show special appreciation. There wasn’t a lot of speechifying on Tuesday night, but there was plenty of dancing, free drinks, and mingling.

A live band, a DJ, Ballet San Antonio dancers, and local poet Amanda Flores performed for the crowd as they shared stories with friends both familiar and fresh.

“(DreamWeek has) gone exceptionally well and we’re very proud of the entire city’s involvement and contributions,” Nakpodia said while attendees laughed and danced. “We just happened to be the people who actually organized and put it together but without all our partners … it wouldn’t be so.”

He said the growth of DreamWeek, now in its fourth year, was unprecedented and he has no plans to slow it down. DreamWeek is about ready to start attracting people from all over the state, he said, not just San Antonio.

“These (early) years were really meant to grow the brand and create an environment where the entire city had some buy-in I think we need to do a little more next year to get people outside of San Antonio engaged,” Nakpodia said. “Austin, Dallas, Houston … more of a statewide effort.”

Several events drew huge crowds but perhaps the biggest, besides the MLK March, was the Good People SA Mixer at Freetail Brewery that hosted hundreds of people last Tuesday night.

The City’s MLK, Jr. Commission, which organizes the annual march and commemoration ceremony, estimates that about 300,000 people marched in the city’s Eastside this year.

“I was at the very end of the march,” Nakpodia said. “It’s very meditative for me.

“You can point at maybe a few thousand people who you saw at the march … but there are 298,000 who remain faceless. I wanted to be faceless … to be as anonymous as the number of people who are being oppressed.”

DreamWeek calendar concluded on Tuesday, but the MLK Commission has a few events scheduled for this and next month on its King Week calendar including a Dream Major Gala on Jan. 22 and two installments of the MLK Distinguished Lecture Series: An Evening of Music & Conversation with Chaka Khan on Jan. 28 and a conversation with actor, director, and author LeVar Burton on Feb. 11. Click here for details.

Applications for the MLK Commission scholarship for the 2016-2017 school year will be accepted until Feb. 26. Donations are still being accepted.

San Antonio will join U.S. cities in February to celebrate Black History Month with several events across the city, many of which will be held at the San Antonio Public Library.

Children Granted U.S. Citizenship in DreamWeek Ceremony / Spectrum News 2016

By NEWS

Becoming a citizen of the United States is a dream for many around the world.

As part of a special ceremony to celebrate DreamWeek at San Antonio’s DoSeum, more than 50 children were granted U.S. citizenship.

Many have lived here for a number of years but now they and their parents wished to make it official.

Some of the children realize citizenship means opportunities to reach their own dreams.

“My parents came over here to give us, their children, a better life because America has a reputation of having good schools, a good society,” said Cris Simonabrea, a newly U.S. citizen. “So my parents knew that and they moved over here just for that. So we could have a better life and I’m proud of them for the sacrifices they made.”

The DoSeum is offering several other chances for children to learn about DreamWeek and the history behind it.

After the ceremony, the public listened to immigrant family storytelling and original work from the San Antonio poet laureate.

Boys & Girls Club Create Sidewalk Chalk Messages for MLK Day / Spectrum News 2016

By NEWS

Martin Luther King had a dream, and so do young people with the Boys and Girls Club of San Antonio.

On the city’s Eastside, these kids are turning their dreams into chalk art. The location is on MLK Drive, and the march is just down the road. With more than 70 years of history at this spot, the staff wants this year’s march to reflect Dr. King’s message of racial equality and justice.

“What Martin Luther King said decades ago still applies today, it still applies to their lives and what they’re doing,” said Zuani Villarreal, Boys and Girls Club. “What they heard, what somebody said decades ago still applies to their lives.”

This is one of the several Dream Week events leading up to Martin Luther King Jr. Day on Monday, Jan. 18. The Boys and Girls Club will also be part of the march. The march is 2.75 miles and starts at the Martin Luther King, Jr. Academy, travels up Martin Luther King Drive, and ends at Pittman Sullivan Park, all on the City’s historic East Side.

Children, young adults become US citizens / ABC: KSAT 12 2016

By NEWS

SAN ANTONIO – More than 50 children and young adults became U.S. citizen Saturday morning.

The swearing in ceremony was held at the Doseum, as part of its DreamWeek Celebration.

The 52 people sworn in said they were excited to finally become citizens.

The 12-day summit was developed to promote ideas on universal issues facing our diverse communities, in the spirit set forth by Dr. Martin Luther King.

Naturalization ceremony part of DreamWeek / San Antonio Express News 2016

By NEWS

It was a special day for Abukar Omar.

He escaped Somalia’s civil war some 15 years ago when he arrived in the United States.

Now a naturalized U.S. citizen, he watched with joy Saturday as his son, Anas, 8, and daughter, Aliya, 5, held small U.S. flags and were sworn in as U.S. citizens during a ceremony at The DoSeum. His wife, Shukri Shueb is in early stages toward her path to citizenship.

This country “gives you more opportunity, and the right to vote,” Omar said, explaining why he brought his family here. “There’s a lot of freedoms — freedom of speech of expression, of religion. In some countries, it’s very tough to say what you want.”

His children were among 52 kids or teens from 24 countries celebrated in a citizenship ceremony Saturday that featured Bexar County Judge Nelson Wolff as keynote speaker. They became U.S. citizens through a process known as derivative citizenship because they have at least one U.S. citizen parent, or were adopted by a U.S. citizen parent, according to immigration officials.

The citizenship ceremony was among Saturday’s events at the children’s museum that are part of DreamWeek, a 12-day celebration that promotes tolerance, equality, and diversity. DreamWeek culminates with the Martin Luther King Jr. Day March on the East Side, reputed to be the largest in the country.

“When you think about it, attaining (U.S.) citizenship is like a dream come true,” said Mario R. Ortiz, director of the San Antonio District for U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services. “Citizenship is the greatest gift we can bestow.”

For the full story go to ExpressNews.com or Sunday’s edition of the San Antonio Express-News.

Local Experts Take Part in Spirited Cybersecurity Discussion / Rivard Report 2016

By NEWS

On a not-so-typical Friday night at the Dorćol Distilling Company on South Flores Street, the sound of bartenders working cocktail shakers and pouring icy drinks punctuated an earnest panel discussion hosted by Delta Risk LLC on cybersecurity and the cyber industry. “Cybersecurity in the Social Realm“ gathered local cyber professionals during DreamWeek to discuss topics ranging from common cybersecurity threats and workforce development to diversity.

Delta Risk’s Brian Dillard moderated the panel and introduced the first major topic, cybersecurity threats. Despite taking precautions on the Internet, many people are unaware of the cybersecurity risks in using a cellphone.

“At some point in your life, you are going to get your data hacked. What’s important is how you protect yourself against these risks and how you respond to the threat,” said Debra Innocenti, Internet & technology attorney at Strasburger & Price LLP,

Of keen interest to the audience was technology workforce development and ways to help San Antonio nurture its tech talent pool.

“For local students, there’s a huge gap from college graduation to an entry-level tech position. Despite local resources like Codeup that transition, it is still rough for many,” said Marina Gavito, executive director of TechBloc.

Will Garrett, director of Cyber Security SA at the San Antonio Chamber of Commerce, spoke about CyberPatriot, a National Youth Cyber Education Program. At its core is Cyber Competition, pitting teams of high school and middle school students across the nation against one another as each team manages the network of a small company. Each team’s mission is to find cybersecurity vulnerabilities while maintaining services under a series of increasingly difficult challenges.
From left: Silotech Group President and CEO Tiffany Tremont, Cyber Security SA Director Will Garrett, and Bestica President Harvinder Singh take part in a cybersecurity panel discussion. Photo by Iris Gonzalez.

From left: Silotech Group President and CEO Tiffany Tremont, Cyber Security SA Director Will Garrett, and Bestica President Harvinder Singh take part in a cybersecurity panel discussion. Photo by Iris Gonzalez.

“The best performing (CyberPatriot) teams tend to be in the poorest school districts in San Antonio,” Garrett said. “At Holmes High School, all it took was one dedicated teacher who helped a student gain some certifications. Rackspace hired him straight out of college. When that one student returned to talk to the high school students, he was a role model, someone they once knew as an upperclassman now driving a leased Audi with a great job at Rackspace. Mentoring is a long-term play, but it can and does work to help pull others along the path.”

Innocenti said Israel ranks globally as a leader in tech startups after the U.S., with much of that startup activity found in Tel Aviv. One way Israel accomplished this was with its ambitious campaign to encourage Jewish mothers to stop telling their children to go to college to become doctors and lawyers.

“It took a concerted effort to explain to Jewish mothers that the future of Israel depended on today’s youth pursuing innovative tech careers,” said Innocenti.

Educating parents on the importance of supporting STEM education and careers for their children can go a long way toward creating a local talent base, panelists agreed.

“Nontraditional education (such as certifications) is also beneficial,” said Tiffany Tremont, president and CEO of Silotech Group. “I think it will play a major role in the future, especially as an option for those who are not interested in nor cannot afford college.”

Social skills will be crucial for San Antonio’s future workforce.

“We need to think about how we can help students develop needed social skills — ones crucial for leadership, communication, team building,” said Harvinder Singh, president of Bestica. “How can we develop these skills if they are too busy playing on their cell phones watching YouTube videos?”
People packed Dorćol Distillery for the cybersecurity panel. Photo by Iris Gonzalez.
People packed Dorćol Distillery for the cybersecurity panel. Photo by Iris Gonzalez.

Building a more diverse tech workforce by encouraging more women and minorities to pursue a tech career also was the subject of discussion on what might have been the most diverse tech panel many in the audience had experienced. The STEM workforce, however, has not grown more diverse over the past decade. Women and minorities remain underrepresented in a field while older white males still are dominate both worker and management ranks. The U.S. needs to build a more educated, innovative workforce that reflects the diversity of our population, panelists agreed.

“We need to become a more pluralistic image of what people in tech look like,” Innocenti said.

“The demographic in San Antonio now is roughly what the U.S. population will look like in another 25 years,” Garrett pointed out. “If you want to help students in middle school and high school gain access to STEM opportunities to learn tech skills, join your local school board. You can help influence changes to your school district’s curriculum to expose them to those skills needed for a tech future.”

Panelists closed the discussion by offering suggestions on how San Antonio might become more tech friendly so more students not only pursue STEM careers, but stay here to help develop San Antonio into a brain hub.

Dillard thought it would take a two-pronged approach: Attracting and keeping talent here, which in turn, will help San Antonio become a tech growth city.
Moderator Brian Dillard stands amid the distillery equipment at Dorćol Distillery. Photo by Iris Gonzalez.

Moderator Brian Dillard stands amid the distillery equipment at Dorćol Distillery. Photo by Iris Gonzalez.

“We have a hard time convincing people and tech companies to move into the inner city core where public schools are not performing well,” Dillard said. “The two go hand in hand; making schools in our inner city STEM friendly not only helps educate local talent – those students we hope will stay here – but helps attract new talent to move here as well.”

“Tech entrepreneurs need to become more mainstream role models for (students),” Innocenti explained. “By visioning what our heroes look like, we can help move tech leaders from their niche to become more accessible to students, so they can see someone who looks like them working in the STEM field.”

But for many inner city students and parent, STEM education is a concern far down their list of priorities.

“Many local students are struggling to meet basic needs,” Tremont said. “When hunger and poverty are your biggest challenges, you need to approach that student and tell them, ‘This is how you are going to bring your family out of poverty,’ with a well-paying tech job. This is why I think offering opportunities for nontraditional tech career paths will be important, especially for those who just cannot afford college.”

Gavito mentioned a book that all panelists recommended, Enrico Moretti’s “The New Geography of Jobs“ in which the author describes cities that act as brain hubs, cities that attract highly educated people and the businesses hiring them. The author writes that every highly skilled job helps create five support industry jobs, jobs for carpenters, cab drivers and teachers. Creating more innovative jobs is the way a brain hub helps raise salaries and standard of living for everyone.

“Smart people are attracted to other smart people and want to be where other smart people are,” Gavito said. “We need that critical mass here in San Antonio so this city can become a brain hub also.”

San Antonio is in a position to poach companies that don’t make it in Austin, Singh said.

“San Antonio should watch closely what Austin is doing and see which companies are thinking of relocating there,” he said. “If we foster partnerships with Austin on tech, San Antonio could benefit.”

As the background music of Dorćol’s cocktail shakers played on, attendees and panelists alike agreed it will take a coordinated, multifaceted approach to create a brain hub here in San Antonio, one that can compete nationally with other top-tier cities. This panel scratched the surface of what San Antonio’s critical mass of dedicated tech leaders are doing. Attendees agreed it was an inspiring discussion for DreamWeek.
Panelists Silotech Group President and CEO Tiffany Tremont, Cyber Security SA Director Will Garrett, and Bestica President Harvinder Singh, TechBloc Executive Director Marina Gavito, and Debra Innocenti, Internet & Technology attorney at Strasburger & Price LLP, take part in a cybersecurity panel discussion. Photo by Iris Gonzalez.

Panelists Silotech Group President and CEO Tiffany Tremont, Cyber Security SA Director Will Garrett, Bestica President Harvinder Singh, TechBloc Executive Director Marina Gavito, and Debra Innocenti, Internet & Technology attorney at Strasburger & Price LLP, take part in a cybersecurity panel discussion. Photo by Iris Gonzalez.

*Top image: From left: Bestica President Harvinder Singh, TechBloc Executive Director Marina Gavito, and Debra Innocenti, Internet & Technology attorney at Strasburger & Price LLP, discuss the landscape of the local cyber industry. Photo by Iris Gonzalez.