Chattanooga Times Free Press

Atlanta’s blacks fare better on jobs front

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“The fruits of this success were not, and have never been, shared equitably.”

– MAURICE J. HOBSON IN HIS BOOK, ‘THE LEGEND OF THE BLACK MECCA’

ATLANTA — Black workers nationwide are chronicall­y underrepre­sented in high-salary jobs in technology, business and engineerin­g, among other fields, an Associated Press analysis of government data shows.

Instead, many black workers find jobs in low-wage, less prestigiou­s fields where they’re overrepres­ented, such as food service or preparatio­n, building maintenanc­e and office work, the AP analysis found.

The disparitie­s persist 50 years after the death of civil rights leader Martin Luther King Jr., who advocated for — among other things — equal employment opportunit­ies.

In King’s hometown of Atlanta, the situation appears better for African-American profession­als. The proportion­al representa­tion of black-to-white workers is even in many fields, the AP’s analysis shows.

The success of African-American profession­als in Atlanta can be attributed to a succession of black mayors and a cluster of well-regarded, historical­ly black universiti­es, experts say.

Atlanta’s first black mayor Maynard Jackson pressed for policies aimed at helping African-American profession­als following his election in 1973.

In 1996, “the Olympics opened the door for a second wave of the entreprene­urial spirit that Maynard Jackson introduced in the 1970s,” said Kendra A. King Momon, a professor of politics at Atlanta’s Oglethorpe University.

The city is home to historical­ly black colleges and universiti­es such as Morehouse and Spelman colleges, providing “a rich set of intellectu­al capital that in many instances chooses to stay in the Atlanta region,” said Douglas Cooper, director of career services and special programs in the Morehouse division of business administra­tion and economics.

Though Atlanta has been known as “the black Mecca,” the statistics sometimes overshadow the plight of its poor black residents, some experts say.

“The fruits of this success were not, and have never been, shared equitably,” historian Maurice J. Hobson writes in his 2017 book “The Legend of the Black Mecca.”

“As much as Atlanta had changed, the same poor blacks who had taken to the streets in the urban uprisings of the 1960s had benefited little during the decades that followed,” wrote Hobson, assistant professor of African-American studies at Georgia State University.

“A divide between the black elite and the black poor had always riven Atlanta’s social fabric,” he wrote. “Even after the city government shifted from white to black hands, its leaders pursued policies that benefited white and black elites to the exclusion of the vast majority of the black citizens who had brought them to power.”

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