Ad
related to: austin, texas chamber of commerce
Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
After a three-year transition period of being known as the Stonewall Chamber of Commerce, the Austin Gay and Lesbian Chamber of Commerce (AGLCC) was founded in 1997. It became one of the founding members of the National LGBT Chamber of Commerce (NGLCC) in 2004, and had representation on the Council of Chambers and Business Organizations from ...
Jul. 9—The Austin Area Chamber of Commerce invites you to mark your calendar for the 38th Chamber Ag Appreciation Summer Cookout from 5:30-7:30 p.m. on Tuesday, July 16,. This event, also known ...
For premium support please call: 800-290-4726 more ways to reach us
As of 2010 the Greater Austin Chamber of Commerce lists 29 public school districts, 17 charter schools, and 69 private schools. [74] The Chamber lists as the primary districts Austin ISD, Bastrop ISD, Del Valle ISD, Eanes ISD, Georgetown ISD, Hays CISD, Lake Travis ISD, Leander ISD, Pflugerville ISD, and Round Rock ISD. [75]
He was President/CEO of the Greater Austin Chamber of Commerce from 1983 to 1987. During his tenure, a new strategy for a more diverse economy with emphasis on technology research, software development, music-film-conventions in addition to government, education and services was adopted.
[13] [14] In 2023, Weigel partnered with Texas Health Action to launch the nation's first ever intersex care offering for adult patients through their Kind Clinics. [14] In 2019, she was awarded the Ceci Gratias Guardian Award by the Austin LGBT Chamber of Commerce. [12]
The West Texas Chamber of Commerce was founded in Fort Worth, Texas in December 1918. [1] Its first convention took place in Mineral Wells, Texas in 1919. [1] Its first chairman was Colonel Cornelius T. Herring, a rancher, banker and hotelier. [1] It published West Texas Today. [1] It merged with the Texas Chamber of Commerce in Austin, Texas ...
This development, fostered by the Chamber of Commerce since the 1950s as a way to expand the city's narrow economic base and fueled by proliferating research programs at the University of Texas, accelerated when IBM located in Austin in 1967, followed by Texas Instruments in 1969 and Motorola in 1974.