The Equalizer Institute
A new social economic justice initiative to augment our work on inclusive economic growth and small business.
A new social economic justice initiative to augment our work on inclusive economic growth and small business.
The Equalizer Institute is a groundbreaking approach to leveling the playing field for aspiring business owners who have a business plan and a vision, but who do not have easy access to traditional capital to launch their businesses.
As a business and legal organization, NELF understands that legal costs and bureaucratic red tape are often prohibitive for many aspiring entrepreneurs. By eliminating this enormous barrier to entry, NELF has found an innovative approach to filling the gap in the legal ecosystem that now exists between civil legal aid for the poor and market-rate law firms.
The Equalizer Institute will provide free corporate legal services to historically underserved entrepreneurs who cannot afford counsel, including women-owned business, black-owned business, New American-owned business, veterans, students, and others.
Formation, finance, and transactions
Leases and permitting
Human resources and workforce development
Provisional patents, copyrights and trademarks, etc.
The Equalizer Institute is based at NELF, in our downtown Boston headquarters, and will open its first legal clinic in Boston and Suffolk County for proof of concept, with plans to expand to other areas of Massachusetts–with a special focus on Gateway Cities– and all six New England states over the next several years.
Originally awarding EI $225,000–Cummings later increased this amount to $300,000 for a three-year term.
We are honored to be the recipient of a $400,000 two-year matching grant–meaning our funding is effectively doubled.
We are grateful to M&T Bank for providing $45,000 in funding for the Equalizer Institute
Whether you are an individual donor, a venture capitalist, a foundation, or a corporate funder, every dollar will be maximized through not only the Rappaport matching grant, but also through the impact that the Equalizer will have.
Our first legal clinic will cost a minimum of $600,000 annually, and will yield more than $3.6 million of market value corporate legal services; this is a six-time return on investment for funders. The impact and ROI will increase as our budget increases and we build out capacity.
Whether you’re a future client, a funder, a law student or law school, a potential partner organization, or a lawyer/firm interested in providing pro bono services, we want to hear from you!
Honorary Chair
We are honored to have Dr. Bernice A. King serving as the Honorary Chair of our Advisors. Dr. King is the CEO of the King Center for Nonviolent Social Change. The King Center was founded by Coretta Scott King as the official living memorial to the life, work, and legacy of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. of nonviolent social change through policy, advocacy, research. Through her work at The King Center, Dr. Bernice A. King educates youth and adults around the world about the nonviolent principles and strategies modeled by her parents. Under her leadership, the Center has implemented numerous initiatives reaching over 500,000 people around the world.
Dr. Bernice A. King received both a Juris Doctor (JD) and Master of Divinity (MDiv) Degrees from Emory University, and a Bachelor’s Degree in Psychology from Spelman College. In 2007, she established the Be A King Scholarship in honor of her mother at Spelman College. From 1990 -1992 she served as a law clerk for Judge Glenda Hatchett, the Chief Judge of The Fulton County Juvenile Detention Court.
Dr. King is a member of the State Bar of Georgia, admitted since 1992, and a registered mediator through the Georgia Office of Dispute Resolution. She is also Advisory Council Chair for Ready Life, a Fintech (Financial Technology) Services company that provides a novel pathway to home ownership without a credit score. Additionally, she serves as Consultant for Redemption Holding Company, which is a Black-owned holding company that is currently acquiring a non-Minority Depository Institution in the Rockies Region in order to expand access to capital for people of color.
Senior Vice President
M&T Bank
Pedro Arce is a Senior Vice President at M&T Bank and has been at the bank since 2018. Pedro started his career with Bank of Boston in 1991 and has experience in Retail Banking, Community Development and Commercial lending. Currently, he is the Team Leader for the Central and Western Mass Business Banking Group at M&T.
He has severed in an advisory and board capacity for ACCION USA, the Federal Reserve Bank of Boston, Mass Housing, Adelante Youth Center, Merrimack Valley YMCA, the Lower Merrimack Valley Workforce Investment Board, Vamos Ventures, Cambridge College and Beyond Soccer. He received his Bachelor’s Degree in Legal Studies and Sociology from the University of Massachusetts at Amherst, and obtained a Master’s Degree in Business Management with a concentration on Multinational Commerce from Boston University.
Pedro encourages and promotes partnerships that help small business from start-ups, to the micro-business level to mature businesses. M&T was named SBA Minority Lender of the Year in 2023.
Senior Associate Attorney, Law Offices of Nicole M. Bluefort, LLC, Boston
Claudia Augustin is a Boston attorney who holds a degree from the prestigious Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy with a focus on human rights. Earlier in her career, she was a Research Associate at NELF and coordinated our successful nomination for the Equalizer Institute to be recognized as a Gold Level winner in the non-profit DEI category.
Principal, Public Purpose Strategies
Co-Founder, City Year
Brown brings 30 years of experience in nonprofit leadership, social entrepreneurship, and policy development to his leadership of Public Purpose Strategies, which advises nonprofit CEOs on achieving breakthroughs in impact, scale and policy. In 1988, Brown co-founded City Year, a leading national service organization that served as an inspiration for AmeriCorps, the federal initiative through which more than one million Americans have served their country. Michael dedicated three decades to building City Year into one of the most successful nonprofits in the country, with programs in 29 U.S. cities, affiliates in South Africa and the United Kingdom and a budget of more than $175 million, including support from more than 40% of The Fortune 100 companies.
Named one of America’s Best Leaders by U.S News & World Report and Executive of the Year by The Nonprofit Times, Brown is a recipient of the Reebok Human Rights Award and Independent Sector’s John W. Gardner Leadership Award, presented annually “to an individual whose leadership has been transformative and who has mobilized and unified people, institutions or causes that improve the quality of life on our planet.” Brown is a recent past president of the Harvard Board of Overseers, co-chaired Harvard’s National Advisory Board on Public Service and served as a Hauser Leader at the Center for Public Leadership at Harvard’s Kennedy School of Government. Brown is a graduate of Harvard College and Harvard Law School, where he was a member of the Harvard Law Review.
“The Equalizer Institute is a brilliant idea that will help level the playing field for startups in low-income and underserved communities,” said Brown. “When we were starting City Year, we benefited greatly from pro bono legal and corporate advisors, so I know firsthand the kind of difference this kind of advice and support makes – it is literally game changing. I am honored to serve as an advisor to The Equalizer Institute and support its important mission and work.”
VP, Programming and Community Outreach, Babson College
Founding Partner, Jane’s Way, LLC.
Jane has devoted decades to fighting for civil rights in various positions in government, academia, and her own consulting firms. Jane has served as the first chair of the Massachusetts Commission Against Discrimination under Gov. Michael Dukakis, and later as the Massachusetts Secretary of of Workforce Development under Gov. Mitt Romney. Edmonds excels in finding common ground to create cultures of diversity, equity, and belonging.
Having spent a lifetime uplifting people denied their fair rights and opportunities, she has been named to the board of directors of the National Center for Civil and Human Rights. Jane has taught leadership at Northeastern University and, now as a vice president at Babson, she performs outreach and develops programs with organizations throughout Greater Boston, addressing issues such as recidivism and diversity, including through Babson Executive Education’s Leadership program for Women and Allies. Jane also has served on her local School Board.
Executive Vice President and Chief Legal Officer at Liberty Mutual Insurance
Founder, The New Commonwealth Racial Equity and Social Justice Fund.
Damon brings decades of professional and community experience to EI. Before joining Liberty Mutual, Damon served as a partner at national law firms where he focused on litigation and employment matters. Damon is actively involved throughout the community. He is a founding member of The New Commonwealth Racial Equity and Social Justice Fund – a coalition of Black and Brown executives in Massachusetts working to address and eliminate systemic racism and racial inequity. In addition, Damon is on the Board of Directors of The Home for Little Wanderers and the New England Legal Foundation, coaches youth sports, and mentors rising professionals.
Founder & CEO, And Still We Rise, LLC
Dr. Natasha Holmes, PsyD is the Founder & CEO of And Still We Rise, LLC, a liberation-focused mental health and consulting practice based in Massachusetts that is dedicated to dismantling oppressive systems, liberating marginalized people, and providing culturally affirming services. Dr. Holmes is also a licensed Clinical Psychologist who has published and presented on the topics of race, class, gender, sexuality, intersectionality, intergenerational trauma, and engaging in difficult dialogues. Lastly, she serves on the Board of Directors of We Rise Collective, Inc. and Community Conversations: Sister to Sister.
Vice President at Pickwick Capital Partners
Rachel has over six years of investment banking experience and over twenty years of managerial and financial experience. Prior to joining Pickwick, Rachel was the CEO at Arcova Technologies Inc., a consumer-focused predictive analytics company. Earlier in her career, Rachel served as the Assistant Secretary of Economic Affairs – Commonwealth of Massachusetts. Rachel also has held the position of Managing Principal of iparallex LLC., a privately-held company specializing in transforming distressed corporate assets into high-impact, high-profit companies.
As the daughter of Panamanian and Bahamian immigrants in the United States, Rachel was able to witness how her parents built their own business and will bring this experience, together with her professional experience, to bear. Rachel is a Boston resident, a cellist, an avid landscaper, and a member of the Museum of the National Center for African American Artists board.
Founder and Managing Director, McKenzie & Associates, P.C.
Denzil brings over 40 years of experience in the areas of business litigation, probate administration, bankruptcy, tax appeals, and business, representing in particular family-owned businesses and non-profits. He often serves as outside counsel to small and mid-sized corporations and non-profit organizations, including health and human service providers and churches.
Denzil is Honorary Consul to Boston, an assignment that involves representing the interest of the Government and operating the Jamaican Consulate, which serves the over 125,000 Jamaicans residing in New England. He has received many awards and citations, including the U.S. Small Business Administration, and has been named Massachusetts Super Lawyers and featured attorney of the Massachusetts Family and Probate American Inn of Court.
Denzil is active in many community and volunteer organizations in Greater Boston, including being a member of the Advisory Board of the Center for Urban Ministerial Education at Gordon Conwell Theological Seminary and Vice President of the Executive Council of the Boston University School of Law Alumni Association. He is also an active member of Peoples Baptist Church, Boston, a 210-year-old congregation, where he serves as Legal Counsel and Vice Chair of the Renovation and the Business and Finance Committees.
Former Governor of Massachusetts
Governor Deval Patrick was sworn in as governor of the Commonwealth of Massachusetts on January 2, 2007, and was sworn in for a second term on January 6, 2011.
After earning his law degree, Patrick served as a law clerk to a federal appellate judge before joining the NAACP Legal Defense and Education Fund as a staff attorney. In 1986, he joined the Boston law firm of Hill & Barlow and was named partner in 1990, at the age of 34. In 1994, President Clinton appointed Patrick Assistant Attorney General for Civil Rights, the nation’s top civil rights post. At the Justice Department, Patrick worked on a wide range of issues, including the prosecution of hate crimes, and the enforcement of employment discrimination fair lending, and disability rights laws.
In 1997, Patrick was appointed as the first chairperson of Texaco’s Equality and Fairness Task Force where he led a company-wide effort to create a more equitable workplace environment. Patrick later served as Texaco’s Vice President and General Counsel, leading the company’s global legal affairs, and as Executive Vice President, General Counsel, and Corporate Secretary of the Coca-Cola Company, a member of the company’s senior leadership team.
Patrick graduated from Harvard College in 1978 and earned his law degree from Harvard Law School. Diane and Deval Patrick have been married for more than 25 years and have two adult daughters.
Partner, Krokidas & Bluestein LLP, Boston
Vincent started his legal career many years ago working for Greater Boston Legal Services as a litigation attorney in the housing practice, working principally out of the Blue Hill Avenue office of GBLS. Today, he is on the Board of GBLS. Vincent feels that the work of the Equalizer Institute is, in some ways, coming full circle in his effort to engage in meaningful work and he is interested in continuing those efforts.
Executive Strategic Planning, Organizational Growth & Operations Specialist, Amherst MA
Tom brings decades of experience as a fast-growth ventures designer, operator, advisor, specialist in premium tech/educational services, and analytics-driven collaborator. He is a program concept innovator, with a record of building market-leading educational ventures, professional learning programs, media/technology companies, and membership organizations including best-in-class brand equity champions CAIA Association, CFA Institute, National Geographic Television, Discovery Channel, and National Collegiate Inventors & Innovators Alliance.
With broad experience in professional education, content, curriculum, and higher educational markets, he brings deep expertise in designing solutions and new programs to meet professional education needs. As a seasoned senior/corporate officer, Tom excels at leading efforts to set and accomplish strategic aims, serve and retain customers throughout the lifecycle, motivate and engage staff, and continually improve operating processes.
Civil Legal Aid Advocate
Founder, Lonnie Powers Consulting
Lonnie brings more than 45 years of civil legal aid advocacy to the EI, devoting the majority of his career to establishing, building, sustaining, and revitalizing legal aid organizations. Lonnie served as Executive Director of the Massachusetts Legal Assistance Corporation from its founding in 1983 through August 2018, when he launched his current consulting firm.
Lonnie currently focuses his work on increasing funding for civil legal aid; expanding public understanding of the legal needs of low-income people, and the value to society of providing legal assistance; enhancing partnerships with the bar, the legislature, the judiciary, and the public; and strengthening legal aid programs across the Commonwealth.
Among other community service, Lonnie has led Commonwealth of MA statewide legal needs studies, and the annual legislative campaign for civil legal aid funding from the Commonwealth, developed new funding sources for civil legal, including the Massachusetts Office of Victims Assistance, the Massachusetts Equal Justice Fund, and a consortium including the City of Boston and several private foundations to fund immigration legal assistance.
DEI Attorney to Start Ups and Nonprofits
Community Advocate
Susan brings more than 30 years of experience working with nonprofits and startups, from early-stage funding to acquisition, as counselor, litigator, trainer investigator, and mediator, both within law firm and in-house settings – including tech and manufacturing – and as a solo practitioner.
Susan thrives on building new businesses, giving them a toolkit, seeing them launch, staying out of the way, and being there downstream as a trusted advisor when next-level need for legal representation becomes just that.
Susan’s area of focus is employment and HR law and she has returned recently to her roots of working with nonprofits. Susan is an advocate for traumatized students in the educational system, including being a surrogate parent making special education and IEP choices for children in state custody. Susan has practiced before the Tax Court, Patent and Trademark Court, and state and federal courts and agencies, e.g. MCAD.
Executive Director
Natalie joined the Equalizer Institute as an accomplished legal advisor and executive-level leader with 10+ years of experience advising senior management teams and boards of directors of companies across multiple industries on a variety of complex business, strategic, risk and legal issues. She thrives on collaborating with passionate, mission-driven leaders to create next level growth.
Prior to joining the Equalizer Institute, Natalie served as Chief Legal Officer of Accession Risk Management Group, a large, national insurance and risk management company, where she built and managed a team 15 lawyers and legal professionals to enable and support the company’s growth from a $300M business to a $1.7B business over the course of just five years. In addition to her role as CLO, Ms. Logan served as an executive sponsor to the company’s Diversity, Equity & Inclusion Council and joins the Equalizer Institute with a deep commitment to the furtherance of ESG issues.
Prior to joining Accession, Ms. Logan was a partner at Kirkland & Ellis, where she specialized in advising private equity firms and their portfolio companies on a wide range of corporate, transactional and securities matters and started her legal career as an associate at Ropes & Gray. Ms. Logan is a member of the Association of Corporate Counsel and the Women’s Bar Association, among other organizations. A summa cum laude graduate of the University of Oregon and cum laude graduate of Boston University School of Law, Ms. Logan holds a Bachelor of Science degree in Business Administration, a Bachelor of Arts degree in political science and a Juris Doctorate.
Development Director
Tara DeSisto is a fourth generation Bostonian who graduated from the University of Massachusetts – Boston where she was the elected student representative to the Board of Trustees. She comes to NELF after serving as the Director of Development for a national public policy organization based out of Alexandria, VA as well as building up a strong client base around the country in her own consultancy High Wire Strategies.
Tara has worked on a wide array of fundraising and event management projects housed in universities across the greater Boston Area. Some of these successful projects include: The Forum for Cities in Transition and the Center for Rebuilding Sustainable Communities After Disaster, both housed at the McCormack Graduate School at UMass Boston; The Center for Women and Business at Bentley University and The Future of Diplomacy Project out of Harvard Kennedy School of Government. Tara lives with her family in Newton and her greatest passion is being a football mom.
VLO Project Director
Chenelle Brown heads the Equalizer Institute’s Virtual Law Office (VLO) project to develop the AI-powered platform that will serve as the principal operating tool for potential clients, clients, pro bono counsel, staff counsel, referring partners, and law student interns and business education partners involved in the Equalizer Institute. When completed, the VLO will be available to any region of the United States where people hunger for a fair shot at the American Dream.
Chenelle has more than a decade of experience in politics, public relations, corporate social responsibility and communications. She has held roles in the public, private and non-profit sectors, and accrued significant experience launching, leading and managing programs, coalitions, departments and campaigns. Chenelle first gained experience partnering with attorneys while working at non-profit organizations focused on combatting poverty. To better assist clients experiencing housing emergencies, Chenelle developed strategic partnerships with legal aid entities such as Greater Boston Legal Services, Massachusetts Law Reform Institute and Harvard Legal Aid Bureau.
Chenelle held multiple leadership roles in the corporate office of one of the nation’s largest managers of multifamily housing. While there, she helped develop and manage the firm’s Corporate Social Responsibility Program and annual report. The program also established a Day of Service employee benefit, which enables approximately 3000 employees across 23 states, to spend 8 hours annually volunteering in their local community.
Chenelle studied Philosophy and Public Policy at the University of Massachusetts Boston. Chenelle also completed the Semester in Washington Politics Program at George Washington University Graduate School of Political Management. While in DC, Chenelle worked on Capitol Hill for a Member of Congress and participated in the Congressional Black Caucus Foundation’s Emerging Leaders Program.
Communications Manager
Camaryn serves as Communications Manager in our downtown Boston headquarters as well as Development Associate working with the Development team. In this role, Camaryn is responsible for all internal and external communications, graphic design, digital media, PR, and mainstream media relations.
She also works to maintain and strengthen the foundation’s brand presence by building strong relationships with media outlets and securing coverage for key initiatives.
Before joining NELF, Camaryn worked as Executive Assistant to the CEO of No Limit Enterprises Inc., a technology start-up based in Chicago, IL. Camaryn holds a B.S in Strategic Communications from the University of Colorado at Boulder.
Please contact our Development Director, Tara DeSisto, for more information on supporting the Equalizer Institute:
tdesisto@lat.cup.mybluehost.me.