This Black Woman Is Rewriting the Playbook on Community Power
Black woman leader in Newark rebuilds community through consistent, culturally-relevant initiatives that address real needs and strengthen social fabric.

At a time when conversations about rebuilding Black communities often stay theoretical, Asia J. Norton is doing something different; she’s making it real.
In Newark’s South Ward, where challenges around access, equity, and opportunity are all too familiar, Norton is offering a blueprint rooted not in slogans, but in consistency, culture, and care. And her approach speaks to something larger happening across the country: Black women stepping into leadership not just in title, but in action, meeting needs, closing gaps, and strengthening communities from the inside out.
Born and raised in Newark, Norton’s work is deeply personal. She understands the community because she comes from it. That lived experience shapes how she shows up, not as a distant figure, but as a neighbor invested in the everyday realities of the people around her.
Her résumé reflects excellence. A graduate of Rutgers Law School, she built a career as a corporate real estate attorney and later served as President of the Newark Board of Education, helping guide critical conversations around education and access. But what sets Norton apart isn’t just where she’s been, it’s how she continues to show up.

Across the country, Black communities are often sustained by leaders who understand that real impact happens between the headlines, in neighborhoods, at local events, and through consistent presence. Norton embodies that.
During Ramadan, she organizes iftar meals for members of the South Ward’s Muslim community, creating space for connection, reflection, and cultural recognition. It’s a small but powerful example of what inclusive leadership looks like, meeting people where they are and honoring the full spectrum of Black identity.
She’s also investing in joy, something too often overlooked in conversations about underserved communities. Her annual Easter Egg Hunt brings families together in a safe, welcoming environment where children can simply be kids and parents can build connections with one another. These moments matter. They create the social fabric that holds communities together.
And then there’s education.
Through her Book Scholarship initiative, now in its second year, Norton is directly supporting students who need help covering the cost of books, an often overlooked barrier that can derail academic progress. It’s a targeted, practical solution that speaks to a larger truth: sometimes strengthening a community starts with removing one obstacle at a time.
What Norton is doing in Newark mirrors a broader legacy. Black women have long been the backbone of community-building efforts in America, organizing, advocating, and creating pathways where systems fall short. From local neighborhoods to national movements, their leadership continues to shape what progress looks like.
Norton’s work is a modern extension of that tradition.
“Everything I do comes from a genuine place,” she says. “I grew up here, so I know what it feels like to need support, to need opportunities, and to need people who care. I want to be a part of that for others. If we all do our part, we can build stronger communities together.”
In Newark’s South Ward, that belief isn’t just words; it’s visible.
And for communities across the country looking for real examples of what sustainable, people-first leadership looks like, the model is already here.

Article by Jazmyn Summers. You can hear Jazmyn every morning on “Jazmyn in the Morning “on Sirius XM Channel 362 Grown Folk Jamz. Subscribe to Jazmyn Summers’ YouTube. Follow her on Facebook and Instagram.



