Studentsā€™ GIS work to highlight stateā€™s minority-owned businesses on ā€˜Greenlight Maineā€™ spinoff

Salma Bezzat and Lydea Rowell
Salma Bezzat and Lydea Rowell

Two ³Ō¹Ļ±¬ĮĻ students will use their knowledge of geographic information systems (GIS) to highlight Maineā€™s minority-owned businesses in an upcoming television series.

Marine biology Class of 2023 students Salma Bezzat and Lydea Rowell have partnered with the series ā€œElevating Voices,ā€ which aims to support various ethnic backgrounds across the state and the contributions they make to Maineā€™s economy. Part of the ā€œGreenlight Maineā€ franchise, the non-competitive series will feature 12 minority-owned businesses over the course of six episodes in March and April.

For the show, the two students will use GIS ā€” a framework for gathering, managing, and analyzing data rooted in the geographical sciences ā€” to map out the 12 featured businesses and, using ArcGISā€™ StoryMaps platform, make an interactive map that will help tell the participantsā€™ stories.

ā€œIt can be difficult to find minority-owned-businesses, and so mapping out these businesses can be a very valuable tool to the community,ā€ said Rowell, of Manchester, New Hampshire. ā€œWe hope that our map can serve as a more accessible and easy-to-interpret resource for others.ā€

The endeavor is one with which the Bezzat and Rowell are familiar.

In late 2020, as part of a final project completed for the pairā€™s Fundamentals of Geospatial Science and Technology course, Bezzat and Rowell ā€” home to ³Ō¹Ļ±¬ĮĻā€™s seaside residential campus ā€” both to acknowledge such businessā€™ presence and to encourage the ³Ō¹Ļ±¬ĮĻ and local communities to support them.

Using the same StoryMaps software, the students mapped out 19 minority-owned businesses in Biddeford ā€” a mix of restaurants, bars, music stores, clothing retailers, and salons ā€” and included links to their websites, social media, and contact information. To be considered minority-owned, the businesses must be at least 51% owned and operated by one citizen or more with an ethnic background of 25% or more (i.e. Asian-Indian, Asian-Pacific, Black, Hispanic, or Native American).

Although the map was created as part of a class project, it held deeper meaning for the two students, who recognized that there was no such database for businesses in the Biddeford area.

ā€œLydea and I realized how difficult it was to research and locate different minority-owned businesses near us. Even though there were businesses out there owned by minority groups, there was no resource for them online,ā€ said Bezzat, of diverse Malden, Massachusetts. ā€œEspecially during the COVID-19 pandemic, where many small businesses are having to close up shop, we wanted to showcase these businesses and encourage our ³Ō¹Ļ±¬ĮĻ community to explore them.ā€

The project came about as the nation saw a reckoning over racial and social injustice and as institutions across the United States ā€” including ³Ō¹Ļ±¬ĮĻ ā€” began to more comprehensively incorporate diversity, equity, and inclusion (DEI) principles into their curricula.

Marcia Moreno-BĆ”ez, Ph.D., visiting assistant teaching professor in the School of Marine and Environmental Programs, said that GIS is not just about making maps and solving complex spatial problems. Rather, she said, GIS can empower students to incorporate DEI values into their work.

"GIS students have used their platforms to make minority groups more visible as they create spaces that allow all of us to see things in ways we might not have before,ā€ Moreno-BĆ”ez remarked. ā€œWith GIS becoming more powerful and accessible, it is important to know how we can leverage its capabilities in unique ways to create a more equitable world."