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The Lighthouse | Black Girl Projects Celebrates Passage of Bill Extending Medicaid Coverage for Postpartum Moms

For Immediate Release

March 8, 2023

JACKSON, Miss. – After the Mississippi House of Representatives passed a bill to extend Medicaid coverage for postpartum moms, Angela Grayson of The Lighthouse | Black Girl Projects released the following statement:

“I wholeheartedly believe that Senate Bill 2212 passed the Mississippi House of Representatives because Black women were relentless in keeping the conversation around postpartum care at the forefront on the radar of legislators,” said Angela Grayson, director of advocacy and organizing for The Lighthouse Black Girl Projects. “Even outside of the legislative session, we worked to highlight the challenges of Black maternal health. Black women and mamas, and midwives came together to say that this legislation was good not only for Black women, but for women, and for the state of Mississippi.”

Earlier this year, NBC News noted that “The Mississippi Maternal Mortality Report shows that the maternal mortality rate increased by 8.8% between 2013‐2016 and 2017‐2019, with the latter period being the most recent one analyzed by researchers.”

“We will continue to work through The Black Women Vote Coalition and use the momentum from this win to continue to advocate for Medicaid expansion, particularly to ensure hospitals in the Delta are open and that people have access to healthcare that is a reasonable distance from their homes. We will continue to fight to ensure that women have the tools to advocate for themselves.”

Race Forward and PolicyLink Announce Review of Federal Equity Action Plans

For Immediate Release

Feb. 28, 2023

Race Forward and PolicyLink Announce Review of Federal Equity Action Plans; Share Findings on Potential for Meaningful Action to Advance Racial Equity

February 28, 2023 – One week after President Biden announced his second historic Executive Order 14091, Further Advancing Racial Equity and Support for Under-served Communities Through The Federal Government, mandating racial equity across policy and practice within the federal government, Race Forward and PolicyLink released their review of a sample of the Equity Action Plans (EAPs) presented early last year by federal agencies. 

More than 90 federal agencies and departments, including all cabinet-level agencies and over 50 independent agencies, prepared EAPs as mandated by President Biden’s Executive Order 13985 “Advancing Racial Equity and Support for Under-served Communities Through the Federal Government.” 

The groups found that while the EAPs demonstrated a clear distinction between equity and equality, only half of the 30 plans they reviewed explicitly referenced racial equity.  Despite the executive order’s explicitness in naming racial equity in the title, the initial federal plans have adopted a less prescriptive framing.  

“Prioritizing equity is a clear departure from previous administrations,” said Carlton C. Eley, Senior Director for Federal Strategies at Race Forward. “Still, strategies to achieve racial equity differ from those to achieve equity in other areas. A strong racial equity framework targets the differences between individual, institutional and structural racism as well as the history and current reality of inequities.”

Race Forward and PolicyLink’s report notes focusing on racial equity provides the opportunity to introduce a framework, tools, and resources that can also be applied to multiple areas of marginalization. Therefore, to achieve maximum impact, the plans need explicit focus and specificity. 

“We commend the Biden-Harris Administration, agency leadership, and career staff for their commitment to ensuring that the federal government’s resources, power, and purview work for everyone, especially the nearly 100 million Americans prevented from experiencing financial security,” said Jessica Pizarek, Director of Federal Policy and Advocacy at PolicyLink. “The equity action planning and implementation supported by the executive orders illustrates the power of a federal governing agenda that acknowledges the persistence of structural and institutional racism and pursues a more just nation by centering racially equitable policy priorities.”

Race Forward and Policy Link approached the review of the agency plans believing in several principles as outlined in PolicyLink’s “For Love of Country: A Path for the Federal Government to Advance Racial Equity,” : 

  1. Understand and acknowledge the federal government’s role in impacting society at
    a wide scale to this day–whether positive, negative or seemingly neutral.
  2. Target the fundamental root drivers of gaps and inequities, and prioritize the people who have traditionally been excluded, recognizing these investments will benefit all.
  3. Leverage the expertise and experiences of all to promote equity, particularly leaders of color and their communities.
  4. Acknowledge that the scale and complexity of reaching racial equity will require ongoing
    commitment, action and adjustments to drive meaningful change and strengthen our
    democracy.
  5. Build public trust and accountability in the long-term commitment for racial equity through data-driven decision-making and outcome tracking.

A summary of additional findings of the 30 EAPs reviewed in the report include:

  • All of them correctly distinguish between equity and equality
  • 28 include actionable strategies that have a strong chance of improving racial equity outcomes
  • Eight reference equity tools developed by experts or utilized by other government partners
  • Only three explicitly named “institutional racism” and “structural racism.”

“The federal government bears a unique responsibility because the creation and perpetuation of racial inequities has been baked into government,” Eley said. “Racial inequities across all indicators for success are deep and pervasive. Further, marginalization is driven by a range of factors including gender, sexual orientation, ability and age, and experiences of marginalization are compounded by experiences of racism. As a nation, we can and should do better.”

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Background

In January 2021, on the heels of a historic uprising for racial justice, President Biden issued “Advancing Racial Equity and Support for Underserved Communities Through the Federal Government,” an executive order. The move signaled the Biden-Harris Administration’s commitment to advancing racial equity throughout the federal government and to addressing the nation’s history of entrenched structural racism. In issuing the executive order, the Biden-Harris Administration gave federal agencies and departments one year to create and publish Equity Action Plans (EAPs). The purpose of the EAPs was to identify barriers to advancing equity within the agency’s high-impact services and introduce actions to address those barriers. 

The goal of Race Forward’s and PolicyLink’s report was to examine the degree to which the plans lay the groundwork for meaningful and sustainable agency action to advance racial equity.

About Race Forward:

Race Forward was founded in 1981 and brings systemic analysis and an innovative approach to complex race issues to help people take effective action toward racial equity. Having worked with local and regional government jurisdictions across the country for 20 years, in 2021, Race Forward began its Federal Initiative to Govern for Racial Equity to help federal agencies and departments operationalize racial equity in their policies and practices.

About PolicyLink:

Founded in 1999, PolicyLink is a national research and action institute advancing racial and economic equity by Lifting Up What Works®. 

Redistricting and Voting Rights Advocates Remember ‘Bloody Sunday’

For Immediate Release

March 6, 2023

WASHINGTON – Redistricting advocates including Alabama Forward, Equal Ground, Florida Rising, the Ohio Organizing Collaborative, the Power Coalition for Equity and Justice, and the Southern Coalition for Social Justice, today remembered ‘Bloody Sunday.’ In releasing the following statement, they urged voting rights organizers to continue the fight that civil rights leaders began more than 58 years ago:

“We commemorate ‘Bloody Sunday,’ while acknowledging that many of us are confronting our own Edmund Pettus Bridge via attacks on the right to vote and inequitable and racially-discriminatory legislative maps,” said Evan Milligan, executive director of Alabama Forward.

“Although it has been 58 years since ‘Bloody Sunday,’ our communities are still struggling under the weight of oppression,” said Andrea Mercado, executive director of Florida Rising.

“I come to the 58th remembrance of ‘Bloody Sunday,’ mindful that Selma (and many Southern cities) has weathered, and continues to weather, many storms,” said Mitchell Brown, Senior Counsel for Voting Rights, Southern Coalition for Social Justice. “Although the fight looks different, our communities are once again resisting efforts to restrict the right to vote. We are also awaiting a decision in Merrill vs. Milligan, among other redistricting and voting rights cases at the Supreme Court. As if that wasn’t enough, Selma continues to navigate the fallout from a devastating tornado that displaced many. There can be no celebration until all people have been made whole, and until the threats to voting rights have ceased.”

“We are clear that the only hope for justice is staying the course,” said Ashley K. Shelton, founder and president of the Power Coalition for Equity and Justice. “Attacks on the right to vote and efforts to enshrine inequitable and unfair redistricting lines are meant to wear us down, but we must stay the course.”

“In the same way that our ancestors persisted – even amid death and threats of death – we too will persist,” said Jasmine Burney-Clark, executive director of Equal Ground. “What we are seeing in Florida, in terms of attacks on Black history, efforts to silence discussions on race, restrict the right to vote, and oppress political opponents is emblematic of a new wave of Jim Crow. But we will continue to organize and resist.”

“There are no parts of the nation that should be seeded to legislators who wake up every day with a desire to suppress and abridge the right to vote,” said Prentiss Haney, executive director of the Ohio Organizing Collaborative. “Until every state has equitable and fair maps that afford all communities the ability to elect candidates of choice, we will continue the journey our ancestors began 58 years ago.”

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