Title: Breaking Bread over Race, Religion and Politics
1Breaking Bread over Race, Religion and Politics
- PRISCM Regional Issue Summit
- March 3, 2007
- Bowie State University
john a. powell Williams Chair in Civil Rights
Civil Liberties, Moritz College of Law
Director, Kirwan Institute for the Study of Race
and Ethnicity
2Overview of presentation
- We are at a crossroads metro, state, nation. We
need to - Recognize how we been divided by race, class, and
place - Understand and articulate our linked fates
- Develop a transformative vision for the future
- Link this vision to policy goals
3Crossroads
- The region can adopt a bold new vision that
requires regional cooperation and fairness or - Continue to struggle with
- Uneven growth
- Troubling economic trends
- Opportunity segregation
- Racial polarization
4Growing, but not as fast as your peers
- In the DC Region, Marylands Counties are not
keeping pace with the rapid job growth in
Virginias Counties - Northern VA 27 Job Growth (1990-99)
- Suburban MD 14 Job Growth (1990-99)
- Suburban Washington DC Counties in Maryland are
also growing slower than their peers in Suburban
Baltimore - Suburban MD--Baltimore 17 Job Growth (1990-99)
- Suburban MD--DC 14 Job Growth (1990-99)
5Growing, but not as fast as your peers
Source Greater Washington Research Center
6Opportunity, Race, Housing and Jobs in the Region
- Opportunity mapping creating an index of
indicators of neighborhood health, economic
health, educational resources and social
conditions - Gives us a more nuanced view of how opportunity
is distributed in the region
7Opportunity, Race, Housing and Jobs in the Region
- Assessing conditions and trends in affordable
housing, racial segregation and economic
conditions raises concerns for Prince Georges,
Calvert and Charles Counties - Opportunity is segregated away from these
counties, in comparison to other suburban DC
counties - African Americans are segregated in these
counties in lower opportunity areas (and
suburbanizing African Americans are moving to
lower opportunity areas) - Affordable housing is more concentrated in these
suburban counties than in suburban Virginia - Lower concentrations of jobs and slower economic
growth are found in these areas
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14Divergent health outcomes
- Community health ratings vary by race
- Rates in metro DC for whites were better than the
national average for 17 of 19 community health
indicators (i.e. tobacco use, obesity,
environmental quality), but were better for
blacks for only 5 of the 19 - Source Metropolitan Washington Public Health
Assessment Center, Community Health Indicators
for the Washington Metropolitan Region - Lack of dental care for children on Medicaid
- Fewer than one in three children in Maryland's
Medicaid program received any dental service at
all in 2005 - In the District, 29.3 percent got treatment, and
in Virginia, 24.3 percent were treated - Source For Want of a Dentist, Prince Georges
Boy Dies After Bacteria from Tooth Spread to
Brain 2/28/07 WashingtonPost.com
15Market segregation
- Favored quarter
- Captures largest share of public investment
- Enjoys strongest tax base and job growth
- Uses local powers to exclude the non-affluent
- Disfavored quarter
- Concentration of racial minorities leads to
decline in access to and influence of
institutional actors who shape markets - This undervalues and limits African-American
buying power and the economic health of
communities - See Sheryll Cashin, The Failures of Integration
16Business redlining
- Empirical studies show that commercial
disinvestment in majority-black communities, even
affluent ones, is commonplace - See Sheryll Cashin, The Failures of Integration
- Original research in Philadelphia found that
black tracts received fewer small business loans
after controlling for other factors (i.e. firm
size, neighborhood income) - Federal bank regulators should include race in
their small business lending data (they currently
do not in fact, voluntary collection of such
data by banks is prohibited) - More research is needed to confirm business loan
discrimination in other regions - See Dan Immergluck (2002) Redlining Redux
Black Neighborhoods, Black-Owned Firms, and the
Regulatory Cold Shoulder. Urban Affairs Review
38 (1) 22-41.
17Divergent industry / sector development
- Government outsourcing has enriched Northern
Virginia (Loudoun, Fairfax Co.) - Loudon Co. is nations most affluent (highest
median income of 98,483) - Fairfax Co. unemployment rate at 1.9
- Northern Virginia is strongest regional economy
of last 5 years in the U.S. - Source Time Magazine 2/8/07, The Federal Job
Machine - How to get into this pipeline?
18Comparing federal investment spending in five
counties
- In a preliminary analyses, Kirwan researchers
separated out key measures of safety net
spending (geared to short term, individual
sustenance) such as Medicaid, income security,
housing assistance - versus key measures of investment spending
(geared to long term, sustainable economic
development) such as Defense Department
procurement and health research grants - Calculations from data retrieved from
www.dataplace.org
19Comparing federal investment spending in five
counties
- Then calculated a rough ratio of investment
spending to safety net spending for five counties - Prince George, Calvert and Charles Counties are
not receiving anywhere near the federal
investment spending that Fairfax and Loudon
Counties are. - Ratio (Investment Spending Safety Net Spending)
- Prince Georges Co 10 1
- Calvert Co 1 1
- Charles Co 2 1
- Loudoun Co 55 1
- Fairfax Co 74 1
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21Loudoun, Charles, and Calvert Counties are much
smaller in population, but similar in size.
Fairfax and Prince Georges County are
similar-size counties.
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23The cost of disparities
- Inequality is a sign of an economically and
socially undercapitalized society - Not everyone can meet his or her potential
- Disparities deplete the regions economic and
social well-being - Educated labor is a primary indicator of an
economically healthy region in a global
skill-based economy - Disparities depress the earnings and quality of
life for everyone, including the better off
24The cost of a divided region
- Comparison among those doing well and those doing
less well sets the bar too low, rather than
asking how to lift it for all - Fragmented regions with disparities are not
sustainable - People in the region compete rather than
cooperate - Disparities become the way things are without
recognizing the role governmental policy has
played in the past, and can play in shaping our
future
25Linked fates
- Realize that our fates are linked, yet our fates
have been socially constructed as disconnected - Through the categories of class, race, gender,
nationality, region - We need socially constructed bridges to
transform our society
26transformative change
- Conceive of an individuality as connected
toinstead of isolated fromthy neighbor - Be advocates for transformative change
- Transformative An intervention that works to
permanently transform structural arrangements
which produce inequity and disparity
27Transformative changefrom reflection to policy
- Equitable regionalism Putting our linked fates
in the center of our policy concerns - Every community in the region should have a voice
in the future of its people - Goal is to improve the health of the whole and
expand opportunities for all
28Cooperate in strategic interventions
- Need to understand the linkages between ourselves
and our communities, but also among policy areas - Examples cycle of school segregation and
housing public/private investment and
neighborhood conditions
29Cycle of School Segregation
30Policy examples
- Examples of policies that prioritize the need for
everyone to have access to opportunity - Housing
- Education
- Economic Development
31Housing
- Housing is Critical in Determining Access to
Opportunity
32Housing
- People
- Subsidies for affordable housing in
high-opportunity neighborhoods with good schools - Places
- Regional housing and neighborhood development
plans - Opportunity-based Zoning (Rusk presentation)
- Links
- Improved public transportation to jobs
33Education
34Education
- People
- Vouchers for students to access high-performing,
low-poverty schools - Places
- Magnet and charter schools
- Targeted support (service learning, de-tracking,
early childhood education, high-quality teachers
to high-need schools) - Links
- Collaborative education with community
stakeholders - Link P-12 to University and employment
35Economic development
- People
- Networking, mentoring between minority and
majority firms - Firms in growing sectors participate in inclusion
and regional economic discussions - Places
- Better distribute federal investment spending
- BRAC opportunities
- Smart growth policies
- Links
- Coalitions around regional economic development
plans
36Economic development
Industry-focused workforce development
MBE/SBD development
Equitable Economic Development Practice Areas
Leveraging and distributing resources
investments
Neighborhood development
37Equitable regionalism framework
- Regional development must be fair advocate for
equitable investments in all people, in all
communities - Combat segregation, isolation, disconnection from
opportunity - Multi-county collaboration is one strategy to
redirect regional growth patterns - What is the opportunity cost of doing nothing?
Continued sprawl, disinvestment, economic and
educational disparities
38Equity calls for cooperation
- Why do we need cooperation between the regions
communities to address concentrations of poverty
and disparity? - Linked fates the regions disparities harm
everyone, not only those directly impacted - Through collective imagination, we need to define
what the future should look like - What is our alternative vision?
- A model where we all grow together
- Policy emphasizes collective solutions
- This vision requires collective action and will
require diverse coalitions to be successful
39Vision for future
- How to meet convergence of defense and
high-tech industries - Skills needed technology, consulting, computer
services, scientific research - BRAC challenges and opportunities
- Economic engine of region is national security
- DC Metro added more jobs than Sun Belt boomtowns
from 2000-2005
40BRAC Base Realignment and Closure
- Will close down 25 major installations and
radically realign 24 others, with a very healthy
focus on growth - Realign from Cold War stance to 21st Century
threats - Global reshuffling
- Have to respond quickly to change share
underutilized facilities - FY 2006 Budget Estimates
- Military Construction approx 1.2 billion (lions
share of total budget of 1.4 billion) - See Appendix slide for BRAC sources
41Federal PolicyWhat to do?
- BRAC illustrates the power of federal policy to
radically rearrange economic activity and
investment - Private dollars often follow public dollars
- What can we learn from this experience?
- Need to preempt future policy decisions that have
economic ramifications like BRAC - Lobbying for fair investment from major federal
policy initiatives like BRAC in the future
(lobbying easier if done collaboratively)
42Business RedliningWhat to do?
- How can we counteract private sector business
redlining (4 strategies) - Direct policy to address the factors that bias
investment models (Business GIS Investment
Models) - Work to counteract racial segregation, avoid
concentrated subsidized housing development,
educate realtors to avoid steering (racial
segregation opportunity segregation) - Attract and anchor private investment with
strategically placed public investment (local,
state, federal) - Produce a collective voice to sell the region
(Prince George, Charles and Calvert) to national
firms and venture capitalists - What are your assets that can be used to entice
investment? - This goal is easier if done collaboratively
- Encourage home-grown business development
- Assure equitable investment in small business
lending, support MBEs and local entrepreneurial
activity, develop accelerators and incubators for
new businesses (work on growing firms)
43Vision for future
- Preparing everyone for public and private sector
employment in growth sectors - Education and training
- Housing policy is school policy
- Lobbying for future fair regional distribution of
federal defense outsourcing and investment - Federal investment often results in private
spin-offs - Investments are for long-term growth
44Thank you!Visit us _at_ www.kirwaninstitute.org
45Appendix A BRAC sources
- Information from www.dod.mil/brac
- Troop Moves, BRAC Part of DoDs Transformation
Agenda, Officials Say. Gerry J. Gilmore,
American Forces Press Service. 6/21/2006 - The Report of the Department of Defense on Fiscal
Year 2006 Planned Expenditures from the
Department of Defense Base Closure Account 2005.
BRAC Conference Focuses on Both Downsizing,
Growth. John D. Banusiewicz, American Forces
Press Service, 5/3/2006 - BRAC FAQ
- The Federal Job Machine. Justin Fox. Time
Magazine 2/08/07