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Personnel Moves: Nonprofit Exec Paige Flink to Retire From The Family Place Plus, North Dallas Bank & Trust Co continues to make leadership changes, United Way of Metropolitan Dallas welcomes new board members, and more. By Kelsey Vanderschoot Published in Business & Economy January 26, 2021 1:40 pm Paige Flink Longtime CEO of local nonprofit The Family Place Paige Flink will retire this year after a replacement is named and transitioned into her role. Flink has held leadership roles with the nonprofit since 1991. During that time, she grew its ranks from 38 to 190 employees and doubled the number of its facilities. Under Flink’s leadership, The Family Place has grown from an emergency shelter with 40 beds and one counseling office to three shelters providing 177 shelter beds each night including the only shelter for men and children in the state and three counseling offices in Dallas and Collin Counties. ....
Shae Armstrong And Scott Beckmen Join Bradley As Partners In Dallas News provided by Share this article Share this article DALLAS, Jan. 19, 2021 /PRNewswire/ Bradley Arant Boult Cummings LLP is pleased to announce that Shae Armstrong and Scott Beckmen have joined the firm s Dallas office as partners. Mr. Armstrong joins the firm s Real Estate Practice Group, and Mr. Beckmen joins the Corporate and Securities Practice Group. Both attorneys join the firm from Stinson LLP. We are pleased to welcome Shae and Scott to the Dallas office, said Dallas Office Managing Partner Richard A. Sayles. Their widespread knowledge across a variety of transactional and technology-related practices broadens our capabilities in Texas and marks another important step in furthering our strategic growth plan for our transactional practice areas. ....
In the early to mid-2010s, China-based investors flooded the coffers of U.S. commercial real estate. Multiple forces aligned to make the country the No. 1 foreign investor in the U.S. American real estate was hot, and the countries were fairly friendly as globalization ruled daily political discourse with minimal pushback. A lot has changed since then. Investment from China has plummeted, and the political relationship between the U.S. and China is different. Don t expect a new administration to change all of that. The coronavirus pandemic and its economic aftermath have placed more public scrutiny on China, which could continue to affect CRE investment flow between the two countries. ....