News & Updates

Member Spotlight: Moms Making Six Figures

Angela Gange joined as a partner in Moms Making Six Figures, founded in 2009.  She and the company have continued to build supportive connections between women ever since. “We all have really different backgrounds, but we all really wanted to have flexibility around our families,” Angie said of the group, noting that members come from a wide variety of educational and professional backgrounds. “We really didn’t know when we started the company that we would be as successful as we are today. We just had an idea that there would be a lot of other women who were like us.”

Moms Making Six Figures represents a U.S.-based manufacturer. The marketing company is based in San Diego, but a number of the nearly 90 moms live in Orange County, the Bay Area, Nevada, Arizona, Chicago, and New York. Wherever they live, they’re able to replace or supplement their income while staying at home on their own schedules. About half of the members work at least 25 hours a week. Rather than a background in marketing, members need to be self-motivated to work hard and write their own success stories.

When Angie joined the business, her sons were 17, 13 and 11. She had worked in the mortgage banking industry, but she knew there had to be a way to support her family without working late and traveling away from her sons. “The corporate environment just isn’t very accommodating to moms,” said Angie. “They say that they are, but when push comes to shove, they’re not.”

She found her new path with Moms Making Six Figures. “There are so many moms like me,” said Angie. “Most of us need a dual income, especially in California. But when you’re a mom, you have kids, and you have all the responsibilities and activities that children have, it’s difficult trying to figure out a way to have a career and balance everything.” Now that Angie’s sons are grown and successful, happy young men, she is committed to helping other moms have the same success she had, owning her own business, and being a “total stay at home mom”!

Member Spotlight: Retail Habitats – Design + Consulting

If opening or redesigning your store, restaurant or office is part of your 2019 plan, let our passionate group of rebellious creatives make the process simple, stable and successful.   

Retail Habitats has a 10-year track record of delivering human-centered environments and experiences that your customers, clients and patients will love. Further, we know the importance of sticking to budgets and timelines, so our approach keeps your investment predictable and ensures your grand opening stays on track.

We also have access to a deep bench of key service providers that we can manage on your behalf. From brand development to build-out, your search for vendors can end when you partner with us.

Best yet, we are a nationally recognized design agency based in right your back yard! Brian Weltman, our CEO, Creative Director and founder, has just earned two of the most prestigious awards in the business: design:retail magazine’s “40 Under 40” recognition, and VMSD’s “Designer Dozen” award. We’ve also been named one of VMSD’s Top 50 Design Firms for four of the last five years.

Our team has already helped local favorites including Donut Bar, Ballast Point Brewing Co. and Davanti Enoteca create spaces that resonate with their customers, and companies like MGM Resorts International, American Greetings and Meineke Car Care Centers have also entrusted us with revamping their environmental brands. Check out our case studies from previous clients.

If 2019 is the year you bring your business vision to life, we want to be on your team. For more information visit www.retailhabitatsdesign.com, or contact Adam Jones at 800.764.5133

Tips for Holiday Travel in Mexico

As the holidays approach, many U.S. residents will be travelling internationally. Please read the information below to ensure no trips are disrupted or missed.

  • Get your passport before you go.  S. citizens require a valid passport book or card to enter Mexico.  Apply now to get your documents before your holiday travel.  For more information, please see travel.state.gov.

 

  • Know the rules before you leave. Mexico has strict rules for entering the country, bringing your U.S.-registered car into the country, and importing commercial goods.  These rules also apply for dual U.S./Mexican citizens.  Failure to follow these rules can result in your auto or goods being confiscated and you being deported or detained.  Consult your local Mexican consulate for more information.
  • Leave your weapons at home.  Mexico has very strict rules for entering the country with firearms and ammunition.  You may be arrested and prosecuted by Mexican authorities for failing to adhere to these rules.  Click here for more information about traveling with firearms.

 

  • Get informed.  Read the Department of State’s Country Information for Mexico on travel.state.gov for general information and tips for visiting Mexico.  The Travel Advisory for Mexico contains additional state-specific information on security and related risks U.S. visitors should consider when traveling to Mexico.

 

  • Register your trip.  Register your trip with step.state.gov to receive up-to-the-minute updates from the Department of State for areas along your planned route, and to allow better assistance in the event of an emergency.

 

  • U.S. Embassies are ready for you.  The United States Diplomatic Mission to Mexico has an Embassy in Mexico City, as well as nine Consulates and nine Consular Agencies throughout the country.  The U.S. Embassies have been working together with Mexican authorities to ensure that the over 125,000 U.S. citizens expected to travel to Mexico during the holiday season have a safe trip.  For more information about services provided by the various diplomatic offices throughout Mission Mexico, see mx.usembassy.gov.

Chamber joins SDSU President Adela de la Torre for meetings in Tijuana

We joined SDSU President Adela de la Torre during her two day agenda in Tijuana which included a breakfast hosted by U.S. Consul General Sue Saarnio with female leaders in business, education, science, human rights to discuss the future of leadership and binational collaboration. President de la Torre also met with the Mayor of Tijuana and the city’s Under Secretary of Education. As a result of the various meetings, a two day conference is in the works for 2019 with one day taking place at SDSU and the second in Tijuana.

Our region benefits from deep collaborative ties across organizations and sectors. We are home to nine academic institutions with cross-border agreements, including exchange programs for students, staff and faculty, double diploma programs, and joint research teams. We are fortunate to have these existing partnerships which enables us to focus on strengthening ties and specific initiatives.

Mexico Signs Central American Development Plan to Curb Migration

Mexico’s President López Obrador signed an agreement with counterparts from Honduras, Guatemala, and El Salvador to create a fund to reduce the U.S.-bound flow of migrants from Central America. The four leaders agreed to design a work plan comprising “programs, projects and policies to promote and generate new jobs and address poverty in the region” (Mexico’s southern border and Central America). These programs aim to increase the quality of life in Guatemala, El Salvador, and Honduras and thus minimizing the number of potential new migrants. The agreement will be backed by the Economic Commission for Latin America and the Caribbean (CEPAL).

President López Obrador has proposed that Mexico, the U.S., and each Central American country contribute to the fund according to their economy, allocating 75 percent of the collective funds to finance projects generating new jobs and minimizing poverty, and the remaining 25 percent to border management and security. At a United Nations migration conference in Morocco, Mexico’s Minister of Foreign Affairs Marcelo Ebrard stated that Mexico will invest over $30 billion in the next five years and reiterated Mexico’s commitment to collaborate with Central American nations to curb migration.

Economy, Migration, Culture and Innovation Forum at CETYS Universidad

Last month, Chamber Director of International Business Affairs Kenia Zamarripa participated as a panelist of the Economy, Migration, Culture and Innovation Global Forum in CETYS Universidad Campus Tijuana. The discussion focused on the threats and opportunities of the Cali-Baja region from a multidisciplinary approach. Guest speakers included representatives from URBI Tijuana and the Mexican Consulate in San Diego.

Zamarripa provided an overview of the economic and human impacts of the border in the Cali-Baja region for international business students to understand the importance of stakeholders from both sides of the border to work together in the development of projects, initiatives and policies that benefit both communities. The event provided an excellent opportunity to share the Chamber’s internship program which is designed to provide a unique learning opportunity to students with a “real-world” work experience. Chamber interns have the chance to develop new skills in a team-oriented environment.

For information about internship opportunities at the San Diego Regional Chamber of Commerce, please contact Kenia Zamarripa at kzamarripa@sdchamber.org.

From NAFTA to USMCA forum at UC San Diego

Fullbright Canada and the Center for U.S.-Mexican Studies at UC San Diego hosted a full-day conference in November on the new NAFTA, (USMCA). Featured speakers analyzed trade negotiations and the agreement itself from the private and public sector perspectives to identify potential socioeconomic and political impacts for North America partners.

Chamber Vice President of International Business Affairs, Paola Avila, participated in a panel discussion covering the gains and losses of NAFTA negotiations for the Cali-Baja region and business community. The Chamber is also conducting a series of informational forums on NAFTA 2.0 / USMCA including this morning’s forum in partnership with BIOCOM, and an upcoming forum in Tijuana on January 29th.

Keynote speaker Jesus Seade, President López Obrador’s Chief Negotiator for Trade, shared a message stating that USMCA is not a massive improvement, but a clear and extremely positive improvement. The Chamber had the opportunity to share our region’s efforts in promoting trade and advocating to the U.S. and Mexican governments for a modernized trilateral trade agreement. We look forward to continue collaborating with Seade and the Mexican administration during the Chamber’s upcoming Binational Delegation Trip to Mexico City taking place March 31 to April 3, 2019.

Voices of International Trade Podcast

Director of International Affairs, Kenia Zamarripa, participated in a panel hosted by Chamber member EUSAGA as part of their series of roundtable discussions on topics relevant to binational trade and regional cross-border collaboration from the public and private sector perspectives. Zamarripa provided an overview of the Chamber’s international work, binational delegation trip to Mexico City, and the business community role in the U.S.-Mexico relationship.

Participating in the roundtable discussion:

  • Cecilia Ortega, EUSAGA Logistica Internacional
  • Rafael Mauricio Cruz Manjarrez Garcia, MORENA Baja California and President of Tijuana’s Law Council
  • Kenia Zamarripa, San Diego Regional Chamber of Commerce
  • Rodrigo Perez, EUSAGA Logistica Internacional
  • Heriberto Polanco, Grupo Polanco
  • Jose Antonio Fajardo, Grupo Aceves
  • Lino Zamora, Attorney at Law

Previous podcasts have featured the Chinese Consul General in Tijuana, INCOMEX, and Servicio de Administración Tributaria (Mexican Customs).

Meeting with IBWC Commissioner

Chamber Director of International Business Affairs, in her role as board member of the U.S. International Boundary and Water Commission’s Citizens Forum, met with recently appointed U.S. Commissioner Jayne Harkins. Zamarripa and the board briefed Commissioner Harkins on the binational efforts underway to minimize the Tijuana River Valley transboundary pollution and reiterated the critical need to improve Tijuana’s sewage infrastructure and pump station CILA to prevent dry weather flows impacting water quality in South Bay.

In addition to the meeting with board members, Commissioner Harkins participated in the Citizens Forum which included a presentation from IBWC’s feasibility studies and conversation with the local community. One of the projects already implemented in the City of Tijuana has recently started collecting, compressing, melting and molding plastic trash into tile squares which are ready to be reused or recycled.

NAFTA 2.0/USMCA Update and Informational Forums

The San Diego Regional Chamber of Commerce, together with business and community leaders across the border, recognize the benefits of cross-border trade and the modernized North American Free Trade Agreement known as the United States-Mexico-Canada Agreement, or USMCA. The agreement, signed by the leaders of the United States, Mexico and Canada, now enters the critical ratification process. To take effect, each country’s legislative body must approve the new agreement. The Chamber will continue working with cross-border partners to seek the support needed for ratification.

“Our mission as champions for cross-border commerce starts with ensuring our region’s businesses have access to our top trade partners: Mexico and Canada,” said Chamber President and CEO Jerry Sanders, “the United States-Mexico-Canada Agreement will bring certainty to businesses and preserve the trilateral trading bloc that has brought economic vitality to our region for more than a quarter century.”

The Chamber’s Board of Directors, voted unanimously to support the updated trade agreement at its October meeting. A long-time supporter of NAFTA, the Chamber has actively participated in various legislative hearings and public comment periods throughout the past year and a half in the renegotiation process.

The tariff-free commerce between the United States, Canada, and Mexico – which NAFTA provides – has resulted in deeply interlinked cross-border supply chains. In San Diego, this has resulted in a $2.5 billion supply chain and more than 110,000 jobs that are supported by trade.

“Mexico and Canada are San Diego’s top two trading partners, so supporting this updated NAFTA supports San Diego workers and the regional economy that keeps us competitive. As we review the document, we may seek adjustments or clarification, but I’m encouraged that USMCA has many of the same provisions as the Trans Pacific Partnership to even the playing field for U.S. companies and workers,” said Congressman Scott Peters. “Since the agreement only accomplishes a fraction of what TPP would have done if we expanded the agreement to include more countries around the Pacific Rim, I will continue to work to see the United States raise the standards for workers, the environment, and business worldwide.”

By preserving the spirit of this trilateral relationship, the Chamber asserts the trade agreement will allow for continued growth in trade and restore predictability and certainty in North America’s private sector. For San Diego, the agreement’s provisions and regulatory language protecting intellectual property, enforceable labor protections and standards, along with the modernization of the customs chapter, the preservation of the TN visa, and assistance to small businesses are particularly important. In addition, the agreement’s environment enforcement provisions could be used to address the Tijuana River Valley pollution issue.

“The agreement includes our proposed labor agenda presented during the campaign, which fully guarantees workers’ rights and freedom to unionize,” said Marcelo Ebrard, Secretary of Foreign Affairs on behalf of Mexico’s president Andrés Manuel López Obrador. “We will continue working on a bilateral relationship with the U.S. and Canada that includes areas of strategic interest for Mexico: commerce, immigration, development, and security.”

The termination of NAFTA, without a replacement in place, would result in a disruption of supply chains causing production cost increases. In addition to the impact to businesses and consumers, the absence of a trade agreement with the nation’s two closest neighbors and trading partners risks the collaboration that has been fostered and is necessary for border management, citing and managing ports of entry, and national security, as well as addressing shared environmental issues such as air and water, and workforce development. Below is a list of upcoming informational forums:

–              Tijuana, January 29 at Club de Empresarios

–              San Diego, February 12th at the San Diego Chamber

For more information about upcoming USMCA forums, please contact Chamber Director of International Business Affairs, Kenia Zamarripa at kzamarripa@sdchamber.org.