Gender
Discrimination in Arkansas.
In overall gender
discrimination the state of Arkansas ranks 41st out of 50 behind
Mississippi 30th and Alabama 33rd. Almost all of the low
rankings are in southern states, where women’s rights have long languished. The
survey covers equal pay, political appointment, health care, and several other critical
items all of which are places where gender discriminations occurs. But I know some of you who are reading this
don’t believe women are discriminated against. Sure, women have equal rights, but that doesn't keep them from suffering
discrimination. Equal rights also doesn’t
mean women get equal pay for doing the same job as men, and equal rights
certainly doesn’t keep corporation boards and public commissions from being
made up of all men.
Of course, it’s worldwide discrimination that women are
subjected to. Up until recently, in Saudi Arabia, women couldn’t even drive a
car unless accompanied by a man. Yes, it clearly is a worldwide problem, but it
can be tackled locally. Of course, we Americans always like
to think we’re leading the world in just about everything you can imagine, and
hey, we’re doing that in a lot of ways, and I couldn’t be prouder of our country,
but gender equality is not something to brag about.
Just
to give you an example of how far behind we are, let’s consider the new cabinet
members of Spain: 11 are women and 6 are men. It’s almost impossible to even
imagine an American Presidential cabinet having a majority of women. That’s how
far behind we are, and most of the entrenched men who make up the leadership of
our corporations, state, and government entities, the ones who make the promotions
and appointments, consider a token woman equal representation.
If
we consider the inequality of women on a worldwide basis, the economic
potential that would result if we elevated women too an equal position is
staggering. One study says if women worldwide were brought to equal status with
men, productivity and the subsequent creation of goods would soar as much as
one trillion dollars a year. Naturally, that translates into a giant increase
in a worldwide standard of living.
Let’s
consider just a couple of the all-male Arkansas boards, and for a moment forget
about the hundreds more and several thousand additional boards with a token
women: First the Arkansas Highway Commission: If an equal number of women were
on that board, I don’t have a doubt that our highway right-of-ways would be
more attractive, and that the 50 yards of bare ground on either side of our
roads would be reduced, and we wouldn’t have an interstate running through a
historic neighborhood. If the Game and Fish Commission had an equal number of
women, the lakes and rivers that have Game and Fish Facilities would be more
attractive, have proper restrooms, and the Commission’s publications would
feature recipes and other ways to prepare wildlife. And to mention another
board with a token woman if women were equally represented on the Board of.
Commissioner of the Department of Environmental Quality, there wouldn’t be a
hog farm on the Buffalo River Watershed and Arkansas would have adopted all the
standards of the National Clean Water Act. Those are just my observation from
working around women. If you want a job done give it to a busy women. She’ll
get it done.
Across this country
there are thousands of all male boards. Can anyone say the only qualified
candidates for these positions are men? Of course not. So why do our male
elected officials, continue to appoint a much higher percentage of men, and
appoint only men to certain boards? Of course it's discrimination. There is no
other word for it. It is discrimination as sure as the South's Jim Crow laws
were, and don’t give me that old whine, “It has always been a male board.”
I’ll continue the
Gender Discrimination in Arkansas column with a question for the candidates for
governor, Asa Hutchinson, Jared Henderson, and Mark West.
To the candidates: The Arkansas Game and
Fish Commission and the State Highway Commission are all male appointees. Will you commit to appoint a woman to the
board of each of the above commissions when the next vacancy occurs, and will
you work to promote gender equality on all of the boards and commissions under
your authority?
To the candidates: This is a yes or no
question, and any other answer such as “the most qualified candidate” or “no
answer,” will be considered a “no” and be published as a “no” in my column.
Actually, trying to hide under the “best candidate” is so discriminatory that
it’s a disgrace to infer that out of over a million Arkansas women there aren’t
two that are qualified for the above noted commissions. And just to be sure the
candidates can’t say they didn’t read my column, I’m sending them the question
by registered mail.
Of course,
trying to hide behind, “It’s always been a male only board, or men are more qualified
because they hunt or fish or drive more trucks or more business orientated to
business is just trying to come up with reason to discriminate against the +50%
of the population in our fair state. For a person to say “Equal pay for equal
work would be hardship on many employers,” deserves a slap in the face---if I
were a women---and a man said that to me. The facts are self-evident with the
thousands upon thousands of women across our state who keep our economy humming,
while doing the work for so many male company heads.
On January 1st, 2018, Iceland became the first country in the world to make
pay inequality illegal. Companies that cannot prove pay equality will be
fined almost $500 a day if the gap continues to exist. Yes, equal pay for equal
work is a worldwide problem, and we do need the ERA (Equal Rights Amendment) to
move the process along.
Studies have
shown that having an equal number of women on a board or commission actually greatly
improves the work and mission of the commission. Even
a token woman board member matters to. Companies in every sector, not just
tech, perform 5 percent better when they have even just one woman on the board,
according to Credit Suisse, which examined 3,000 companies. There is a current
bill just signed by the governor of California that mandate at least one woman
on every company board headquartered in the state.
The two state commissions
I listed are just a fraction of the boards and commissions across the state,
but they are glaring examples of the inequality present in every community in
the state, and if you don’t think that’s a true statement, check with your city
hall. You will be shocked.
The intent of
this column is to focus on the gender inequality present on the most visible of
the many state boards and commissions, but the problem begins in the selection
of local boards and commissions. I urge you to confront your local candidates
for elective office to commit publically to work for equal representation by
women on all city boards.
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