SUBSCRIBE NOW

SIGHT

Be informed. Be challenged. Be inspired.

Data tools boost US campaigners push for racial equity

Washington DC, US
Thomson Reuters Foundation

Americans lobbying in support of racial equity can use a data tool launched on Thursday to illustrate inequalities faced by their communities around housing, wages and more. 

Racial Equity Data Lab draws upon the National Equity Atlas, which provides racially disaggregated data on poverty, air pollution, unemployment, home and business ownership and other economic indicators at the state, city and national level.

“Community-based organisations that work in the most impacted communities often lack access to data describing the conditions they’re working in,” said Sarah Treuhaft of PolicyLink, a research group involved in the project. 

US Brooklyn basketball

Men play basketball at the Pink Playground outside the Louis H Pink Houses in the Brooklyn borough of New York City, US, on 22nd April. PICTURE: Reuters/Shannon Stapleton

Racial inequities have topped national discussions in the United States over the past year, with Black Americans losing their jobs, businesses and lives at a greater rate than whites during the coronavirus pandemic. 

The average white family has roughly six times the wealth of the average Black family – about the same ratio as before the civil rights movement of the 1960s, US Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen said earlier this year.

On his first day in office, President Joe Biden issued an executive order to create a Working Group on Equitable Data to improve the data available to the federal government “to measure equity and capture the diversity of the American people”.

Datasets that are not disaggregated by race, ethnicity, gender, disability, income or veteran status “impede efforts to measure and advance equity”, the order said.

PolicyLink and the University of Southern California’s Equity Research Institute created the National Equity Atlas in 2014, which they describe as the “most detailed report card on racial and economic equity” in the United States.

“The need and demand is tremendous,” Treuhaft told the Thomson Reuters Foundation, noting that the goal is to address a power imbalance that is rarely recognised, by helping poorer advocates access data tailored to their communities. 

In March, the National Equity Atlas produced a fact sheet with the tenant-led Housing NOW! California lobby group to support their efforts to protect people facing eviction because they were behind on their rent during the COVID-19 pandemic.

(in-article-ad}

It showed that the number of Californian households with rent arrears was falling, from 1.1 million families in December to 800,000 in January, and that 80 per cent had lost employment income during the pandemic and 77 per cent were people of colour.

Such data helped prompt county officials in Contra Costa County, in the San Francisco Bay Area, to extend a local eviction moratorium, Treuhaft said.

Nationwide, 5.7 million renter households – 14 per cent of US renters – owe nearly $US20 billion in rent, most of them people of color who have lost jobs and income during the pandemic, according to the National Equity Atlas.

 

Donate



sight plus logo

Sight+ is a new benefits program we’ve launched to reward people who have supported us with annual donations of $26 or more. To find out more about Sight+ and how you can support the work of Sight, head to our Sight+ page.

Musings

TAKE PART IN THE SIGHT READER SURVEY!

We’re interested to find out more about you, our readers, as we improve and expand our coverage and so we’re asking all of our readers to take this survey (it’ll only take a couple of minutes).

To take part in the survey, simply follow this link…

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

For security, use of Google's reCAPTCHA service is required which is subject to the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Use.