ADAIR MOSLEY
Adair Mosley is a visionary leader reshaping the future of equity in Minnesota. As CEO of GroundBreak Coalition, he leads one of the nation's most ambitious mobilizations of capital and partnership—orchestrating $5.3 billion over 10 years to close wealth gaps through homeownership, entrepreneurship, and commercial real estate development. GroundBreak brings together 40+ corporate, civic, and philanthropic partners in a backbone coalition deploying both market-rate capital ($4.2 billion) and flexible non-market rate capital ($1.2 billion) to build a future where Black communities thrive—not just survive.
A strategist, builder, and truth-teller, Adair's work is rooted in justice and scaled by innovation. Previously, as CEO of the African American Leadership Forum and Pillsbury United Communities, where he launched Justice Built Communities, securing $5 million to prioritize Black-owned development. He led the $7 million capital campaign for North Market, a nationally recognized grocery and wellness model designed to address food access and health equity. He revitalized North News—a Black-led media outlet—ensuring authentic storytelling from within the community. He helped develop a pioneering policy solution that created a national billing code for community health work, strengthening sustainable investment in grassroots health equity.
Adair's influence extends across sectors. He sits on the boards of Walker Art Museum, Women's Foundation of Minnesota, Community Advisory Board, Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis, and and GreenLight Fund National. His leadership has been recognized by Harvard's Young American Leaders Program and Twin Cities Business magazine, which named him one of "100 People to Know."
With a MSc in Cities from the London School of Economics, training from Stanford's d.school in Human-Centered Design, and credentials from the University of Minnesota and University of Michigan, Adair brings a rare blend of grassroots insight and executive strategy to every room he enters.
Whether working alongside community visionaries and leaders or corporate executives, Adair leads with an uing belief: systems can—and must—be rebuilt for justice. He isn't interested in incremental change. He's here to reimagine what's possible and to construct a future that honors Black brilliance, ownership, and self-determination.