Prince Georgeโs County now has a think tank focusing on law, media, policy and the historic preservation of those tasked with the mission of informing and organizing communities.
Karen Williams Gooden, a local lawyer who heads the Gooden Center for Law, Media, Policy and Historic Preservation, held a virtual launch party Saturday that united a panel of experts for upcoming events planned for the metropolitan area.
โThe mission of the organization is educate, lift and inform our communities through symposiums and conferences,โ said Gooden, adding that โthe top issue is COVID-19.โ

Gooden said her goal is to show, in a tangible way, what has been said about Prince Georgeโs County being the most affluent African American jurisdiction in the country.
โIf we are what [W.E.B.] Du Bois said about that โTalented Tenth,โ then letโs show it,โ she said. โItโs important to march, but we want to identify strategies for our community to support and augment the work of our elected officials.โ
Vernon Gray, former head of the political science department at Morgan State University, is also part of the think tank that will be named after former Maryland Sen. Gloria Lawlah.
Gray said such a center is needed now more than ever.
โThe center will delve into issues that are pertinent to the Black community such as police reform, the wealth gap that exists, health care, we want to research and bring solutions to our policymakers,โ Gray said.
Gooden began the program Saturday with the late Sam Cookeโs โA Change is Gonna Come,โ describing the song as โa message of hope.โ
Dr. Edwin C. Chapman Sr. and his wife Ann, a registered nurse, will also be part of the think tank. They run a medical clinic in southeast D.C., where they were busy Friday giving flu shots.

โWe have a combination of things and an inordinate amount of racism and it is dividing the country, which is adding stress to everybody, โ Chapman said.
The doctor said the best way to decrease stress is to โstay connected to positive people.โ
โIt could be your pastor, friends or loved one, but itโs really important to keep peopleโs minds off negative things,โ he said.
Meanwhile, Ann Chapman has volunteered to work with her husband during the flu season to avoid what she calls the โdouble whammy,โ for getting the flu and COVID-19.
โI always stress getting a flu shot every year,โ she said.

