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Since passage in November 2006 of Proposal 2, a state constitutional
amendment to prohibit certain types of affirmative action in state
entities in the state of Michigan, Kimberly Richardson, Esq.,
has taken an active role in helping public entities throughout
the state continue to achieve their diversity initiatives, including
organizing a breakfast series for women and minority contractors
to discuss issues with leading construction companies about winning
bids for public contracting opportunities.
Richardson graduated from the University of Michigan with a
bachelor’s degree in mathematics and recently received a
law degree from Indiana University’s School of Law. In her
second year at law school, she won the school’s Moot Court
Competition, and in her third year was inducted into the Order
of Barristers, a national honor society for courtroom advocacy.
Soon after graduating, she secured a position as an attorney in
the Labor & Employment Practice Group at Varnum, Riddering,
Schmidt & Howlett L.L.P., a leading firm in Michigan and the
Midwest.
Richardson has used her experiences as a youth in Flint, Mich.,
to fuel her success. “I plan on using all of my opportunities
to go well beyond what’s expected of me,” she states.
“I don’t limit myself to what I see before me; I go
by what I know is possible.” Richardson holds fast to her
favorite motivational quote from Charles Hamilton Houston, the
Black lawyer known as “The man who killed Jim Crow”:
“A lawyer’s either a social engineer or he is a parasite
on society.”
Richardson is no parasite. She sits on the West Michigan advisory
board of the United Negro College Fund, the board of directors
of West Michigan Film Video Alliance, and on the Grand Rapids
Bar Association Diversity Committee and is a founder of the Black
Professionals and Executives Network. She plans to teach labor
relations history as it relates to immigrants and African-Americans.
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