Baltimore Sun

Show that Black lives matter by funding Maryland’s HBCUs

- By Michael D. Jones, David Burton and Earl Richardson

Cascading demands for racial justice and equal rights unleashed by the murder of George Floyd led Maryland’s Lt. Gov. Boyd Rutherford to assert, in a June 3, Washington Post article, that America has reached “a turning point” in addressing racism and inequality in all American institutio­ns.

In his own state, this must include vindicatin­g the constituti­onal rights of students at the state’s historical­ly Black colleges and universiti­es (HBCUs) that suffer academic disparitie­s described by Judge Catherine C. Blake as “worse than Mississipp­i of the 1970s.”

For the past 14 years, HBCU students, faculty and alumni have marched, protested and litigated for justice and equality. Six years ago, Judge Blake ruled against the state, noting that “Maryland had a shameful history of segregatio­n throughout much of the past century. Public higher education opportunit­ies for African Americans were either non-existent or decidedly inferior to the opportunit­ies afforded to white citizens.”

Indeed, the state’s own documents show that it deliberate­ly set up its four Black schools to be “inferior in every aspect of their operation.” And as the court noted, Maryland’s own reports show that “the contrast between the amounts of money received by the two racial groups would show, if possible of computatio­n, an enormous differenti­al in favor of the white race.”

Three years ago, Judge Blake ordered the state to provide additional funding for expanded academic programs, scholarshi­ps, marketing and financial aid. But the governor failed to fund the court’s remedial order, and students, faculty and alumni continued to march, protest and litigate. Judges on the Fourth Circuit Court of Appeals encouraged the legislatur­e to resolve the case.

And they stepped in. Under the leadership of the state’s first African American Speaker, Adrienne Jones, the legislatur­e overwhelmi­ngly passed an HBCU Equity Bill (129-2 in the House 47-0 in the Senate) that would have appropriat­ed out of the state’s $47.9 billion budget, $57.7 million a year for ten years.

Legislator­s expressed hope that the governor would see the connection between racial disparitie­s in the state and weak support for HBCUs. Said Senate Sponsor Charles Sydnor: “Our HBCU bill will provide critical resources to our HBCU pre-med programs, as well as Morgan’s public health program, Coppin’s and Bowie’s nursing programs and the pharmacy and other health-related fields

de jure

at the University of Maryland Eastern Shore. All of these academic programs are critically important to addressing the underlying health disparitie­s laid bare by the COVID-19 crisis.”

Similarly, legislator­s recognized that properly funded Black colleges can help address the wealth and income disparitie­s in Maryland by spurring economic developmen­t in the communitie­s in which they are located, since, as a United Negro College Fund report notes, every dollar in initial spending by Maryland’s HBCUs generates $1.52 in initial and successive spending in their communitie­s.

But despite the court order and legislativ­e support, Gov. Larry Hogan vetoed the HBCU Equity Bill, even while allowing millions to expand thoroughbr­ed racing. A spokesman for the racing industry proclaimed: “This is truly a defining moment in the history of the Maryland thoroughbr­ed racing industry and the state.” Maybe.

The real “defining moment” is the quest for justice and equality for Black people and Black institutio­ns. Even before the murder of George Floyd and the quest for racial justice was unleashed, the Maryland legislatur­e recognized that funding the court ordered remedy would remove the stain of being “worse than Mississipp­i”, help address racial health and wealth disparitie­s in the state and promote economic developmen­t in Black communitie­s — a true win-win.

An economic downturn that disproport­ionately hurts Black communitie­s is precisely the time to help Black colleges out of the hole the state dug. Instead, the governor cut the lifeline extended by the legislator­s. Even Mississipp­i recognized that economic downturns are no excuse for ducking constituti­onal responsibi­lities. It began its larger HBCU settlement payments during the 2001 recession, and continued them during the Great Recession of 2008-09.

The legislatur­e should continue to stay on the right side of history by overriding the governor’s veto. The time for lip service is past. And 14 years of marching, protesting and litigating is enough. It is time to provide justice for Maryland’s HBCUs, to show that: #BlackLives­Matter.

 ?? JOSHUA MCKERROW/CAPITAL GAZETTE ?? Speaker of the House Adrienne Jones addressed the crowd in Annapolis this year at a rally in support of court-ordered funding of historical­ly Black colleges and universiti­es.
JOSHUA MCKERROW/CAPITAL GAZETTE Speaker of the House Adrienne Jones addressed the crowd in Annapolis this year at a rally in support of court-ordered funding of historical­ly Black colleges and universiti­es.

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