By Jamal Carter
AframNews
Reprinted – by Texas Metro News”
https://aframnews.com/
Houston is a city that loves to brag about growth. New tech campuses are popping up, warehouses are expanding across the Beltway, and construction cranes seem to touch the sky everywhere you look. But if you walk through places like Acres Homes, Sunnyside, South Park or the Almeda corridor, you hear a very different story — one where young Black Houstonians are still struggling to find steady work in a city that claims to be full of opportunity.
The truth is in the numbers. Teen unemployment across the Houston region sits above 14%, but for Black teens it’s even higher. For Black adults, un- employment has been reported at nearly double the rate of white workers. And in neighborhoods with long histories of underinvestment, it often feels like the prosperity happening downtown never makes it past 610.
Young people describe the same obstacles again and again: jobs that require experience they’ve never been given a chance to gain, employers who skip over applicants from certain ZIP codes, and training programs that are long bus rides away or too expensive to finish. Even when companies say they can’t find enough workers, young Black job-seekers in Houston tell a different story — they’re applying, showing up, and still getting passed over.
But there’s another truth, one that doesn’t show up in the statistics: these young people aren’t lacking talent or moti- vation. They’re lacking access. And access can be built.
For anyone trying to break into Houston’s job market right now, the path often starts with short-term training or certification. Fields like healthcare support, logistics, solar installation, and IT help desk work continue to grow across the city, and many programs offer financial assistance if you ask the right questions. Community centers, churches, and local nonprofits can also serve as unexpected connectors to employers who are actually willing to hire locally.
It also helps to speak up about your goals. When a supervisor or mentor knows you’re hungry for growth, they’re far more likely to point you toward opportunities you didn’t know existed. Houston may not always make the playing field fair, but there are doors that can open if you keep pushing.
Young Black Houstonians are ready to work, ready to learn, and ready to lead. The city just needs to meet them halfway.

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