Houston Embraces Diversity and New Approaches
to Business
By
Karen-Janine Cohen
If you ask Edgardo Colon, Houston is one of the best cities for
Hispanics to call home. Give Colon, a corporate attorney and chairman
of the board of the Houston Hispanic Chamber of Commerce, a minute
and he’ll tell you why.
In a city where people of Latin American heritage constitute more
than 40 percent of the population, Colon says the atmosphere has
never been better for Hispanic entrepreneurs and business people,
thanks in part to the city’s vibrant international port and
the presence of many of the nation’s top businesses. But Houston
also has other hard-to-quantify, but important, advantages.
“It’s a very welcoming city, it’s a very open
city,” Colon says, adding that in some cities, success depends
not so much on what, but who, one knows. “Here, that’s
not the case. If you have the idea, and you work hard, you can succeed
in business.”
Houston has one of the more colorful backgrounds of a major U.S.
city. It was established in 1836 and named for Sam Houston, who
played a variety of roles in his life. They range from being a founding
father of the Republic of Texas to helping wrest the area from Mexico—surely
a bit of irony when many of Houston’s citizens, their parents
and grandparents later came to the United States from Mexico.
Today Houston trails only New York, Los Angeles and Chicago in
population size—2.02 million in mid-2005, according to the
Greater Houston Partnership, an umbrella group that includes the
Chamber of Commerce and other business organizations. Oil gave the
city a boost early in the 20th century, but while energy is still
important to the economy, businesses today are diversified with
international trade playing a particularly strong role.
Houston, Colon says, has factors that make it especially welcoming
for Hispanics. Quoting the U.S. Census Bureau, Colon noted that
Harris County, which includes Houston, has one of the highest concentrations
of Hispanic-owned businesses of any U.S county. Moreover, the Port
of Houston is the No. 1 U.S. port with respect to handling foreign
cargo. And 22 percent of the $85 billion in trade moved through
the port is directly related to Latin America.
Houston also has more than 800 multinational companies and 20 foreign
banks, and has more direct flights to Mexico and Central America
than any other U.S. city.
All that, says Colon, means Houston attracts those eager to participate
in the economy.
“I see all kinds of people wanting to start their own businesses,”
he says, referring to his experience as a corporate attorney. Ideas
range from the traditional—like restaurants—to proposals
that build on the Houston area’s strengths, such as an executive
car rental firm, or businesses that tap into the well-established
chemical industry sector.
The chamber is working with the University of Houston Small Business
Development Center to sponsor the Hispanic Entrepreneur series,
a free, 13-week program presented in Spanish on how to start a business.
“The response has been great,” Colon says, adding that
more than 100 people are participating in the program. “It’s
very rewarding for me to go there and see the enthusiasm.”
And just as the business community has diversified in the last
decades, so has the Hispanic community, with a greater Central American
and Caribbean presence mixing in with the traditional Mexican influences.
The Houston Hispanic Chamber is also working to increase Hispanic
representation in business leadership positions. In September the
Houston Chronicle ran an article by Colon and Adolfo Santos, chair
of the Social Sciences Department and associate professor of political
science at the University of Houston-Downtown, about the lack of
Hispanics on corporate boards and upper management in the top publicly
traded Houston-based corporations. The article pointed out that
less than 2 percent of corporate leadership positions are held by
Hispanics in a city whose Hispanic population is expected to approach
50 percent within the next 10 years.
The situation is not confined to Houston, Colon and Santos point
out, but is part of a national problem. The paper emphasized that
Hispanics have made significant contributions to the city’s
economy, and it called for the business community to make a greater
effort to bring Hispanics into leadership positions, especially
as Houston area businesses increase trade ties with Latin America
and Spain.
For Colon, bringing the situation to the fore is a plus. “At
least here in Houston we are willing to talk about it,” he
says.
|