Photo Courtesy California Black Media

Charlene Muhammad | California Black Media

Hundreds of African American women, professionals from dif-ferent backgrounds and all corners of the Golden State, came to-gether Jan. 31 to discuss a range of issues important to Black women in California.

California Black Woman’s Collective, California Black Media and Black Women Organized for Political Action (BWOPA) or-ganized the event to held to release and discuss the findings of a report titled the State of Black Women in California 2022 and Beyond: Essays from Black Women Thought Leaders.

“Our speakers are subject matter experts on the issues that are important to Black Women and the Black community,” Kellie Todd Griffin, convener of the California Black Women’s Col-lective told the virtual audience. More than 700 people regis-tered for the event.

There are nearly 1.1 million Black women in California. How-ever, according to the report, more than 75% of Black house-holds in the state are headed by single Black mothers and 80% of Black households have Black Women breadwinners.

The report’s authors say the data in their study is significant for shining a light on the needs of Black women, which is critical to uplifting the Black community. The goal of the State of Black

Women in California report is to focus in strategic and collabo-rative ways on the needs and concerns of Black Women and Girls in California, they explain.

The forum had four panel discussions, each one centered on the major themes of the report, which were: Political Participation; Work and Family; Health and Wellness; Employment and Earn-ing; Poverty and Opportunity; Organizational Spotlight; Educa-tion; Violence and Safety; and Black Women and Aging. Au-thors who contributed to the study each spent time diving into the details of their essays.

The discussion was co moderated by Regina Wilson, executive director of CBM.

Kristin McGuire, Executive Director of the Young Invincible wrote The Power of Next. Her essay highlighted the need to fo-cus on young women leaders.

“To move forward we must be intentional about developing the power of the next generation. There are several ways to unleash the promise of the next generation of Black leaders. It can be policy-focused as well as interpersonal in nature,” she wrote.

Ms. McGuire told the audience during the forum that her essay was motivated by the need to look at who was best qualified to lead.

“Who better to lead than people directly impacted,” she said. “Black women are disproportionately impacted.”

Shakari Byerly, of Evitarus was the other co-moderator. She questioned, “Why is work and family along with employment and earnings important issues for Black women?”

Jonie Ricks-Oddie, Director of the UCI Center for Statistical Consulting, answers that in her essay titled, The Balancing Act and the Support Needed. She writes about the near circus act Black women perform on a regular basis maintaining their fami-lies and careers. Can Black women have it all?

“For Black women, this balancing act has gone way past the breaking point. With nearly 80% of Black mothers with children under six participating in the workforce, the highest workforce participation of any racial/ethnic group, the challenges facing their ability to remain in the workforce remain,” she wrote.

Ricks-Oddie’s answer to the problem entails “addressing the complexities of working families, particularly working Back families with female headed households. It is going to require both legislative and non-legislative solutions.”

She told the audience, “There are a lot of things employers can do to improve our quality of life (allow telecommuting and hy-brid work options). Some of that can be creating cultural aware-ness of the needs of families. Dispelling the stigma associated with asking for a flexible schedule and alternative arrangements to handle the responsibilities of caregiving.”

Ricks-Oddie reflected on her experiences during the COVID pandemic. Her husband is an essential health care provider. They have two children. The responsibility for childcare was hers. She explained that if she had a regular 9-to-5 job she would not have been able to stay home with her children.

She recommends the following, “Employers can build work-place policies, benefits and programs that provide coaching, wellness, and support services to support caregiver well-being. Additionally, employers can review their current leave policies to ensure that they are meeting the current and future needs of their staff.”

Dr. Colette Harris Mathews, Founder/Principal DEIB Consultant at Harris Mathews Consulting wrote about the challenges Black women face becoming the most educated group in America. Her essay is entitled, Education’s Part in the Disruption of Suc-cess for Black Women.

“The journey to college is mythical for most Black girls in Cali-fornia. Our Nation has a long history of racial trauma and dis-criminatory behavior toward Black students). The urgency of closing the pay and wealth gap makes Black girls’ path to col-lege particularly alarming due to the role Black women often play in being the primary breadwinner in Black households,” she wrote.

Black girls are further challenged with disproportionate punish-ments while in school.

“For Black girls, the highest suspension disparity was also in early childhood education where they are 3.56 times more likely to be suspended than the statewide average for this age demo-graphic. Based on 2018-2019 data, there were nine Sacramento County Unified School District schools that suspended 15% or more of their Black female students,” she explained.

Carlene Davis spoke about the needs of aging Black women. Her essay written with Kiara Pruitt is titled, Enhancing the Ex-perience of Growing Older for Black Women in the Golden State. They brought their lived experiences to the creation of Sistahs Aging with Grace & Elegance (SageSistahs). It was cre-ated to provide Black women with knowledge, strategies, tools, resources, and sister support to live fully empowered lives as older and aging women.

“From a health perspective, in addition to the myriad of ways in which COVID-19 has and continues to ravage the Black com-munity, it is important to note that Black women are also dispro-portionately impacted by the intersectional issues of Alz-heimer’s/other dementias and family caregiving,” they wrote.

In California, according to the report, the population aged 60 years and over is growing at three times the rate of the popula-tion overall and, by 2026, the number of Californians over the age of 65 is expected to increase by 2.1 million (as compared to an increase of approximately 500,000 for those 25-64 years old).

“We may find ourselves not only having to make room in our hearts but also in our empty spare rooms for our sister friends in crisis,” she told the audience. “We must plan and prepare for full lives that can turn frail at a moment’s notice.”

The issues forum was created to improve “the lives of Black Women and Girls throughout California and to ensure we don’t get left out of the conversation,” explained Griffin.

“So often we are behind the scenes doing the work to help all communities thrive but there is still a need to focus on our spe-cific issues to ensure there is intentionality to making sure change happens for us and our communities. That is why it was imperative to have this report center around the intersection of gender, race and location,” Griffin added.

The report can be found at www.cablackwomenscollective.com.

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