Chattanooga Times Free Press

WHY IS OUR CITY STILL LEAVING OUT WOMEN AND MINORITIES?

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Chattanoog­a government is looking to boost diversity in its use of contracted vendors after a study presented to the City Council this past summer showed that only 10.78% of city-awarded contracts over five years ending in fiscal 2018 went to minority- and women-owned companies.

The universe of “eligible” businesses that are women-owned or minority-owned in our local region is 22%, and minorities make up 38% of Chattanoog­a’s population, according to Karen McReynolds, director of the city’s Office of Multicultu­ral Affairs.

The $175,000 disparity study, performed by Atlanta-based Griffin & Strong, a law and public policy firm specializi­ng in disparity research and contract compliance, assessed the city’s contract spending in constructi­on, architectu­re and engineerin­g, profession­al services, other services and goods.

The research found “statistica­lly significan­t under-utilizatio­n of minority and female owned firms.”

Well, yes. We’d say so. The numbers mean half of the local minority and women businesses are being left out. It is overly kind, actually, to only label that gross disparity as “statistica­lly significan­t.” But let’s give credit where credit is due.

Kudos to Chattanoog­a for seeking, obtaining and publicizin­g its contractor and vendor disparity study. Too many communitie­s just prefer not to know.

And things have improved. In 2013, the same year Andy Berke was elected mayor in March, city officials announced in December a change to the city’s bid process, hoping to improve what was then estimated at 2% of city contracts awarded to minorities and women. A year later, then-Office of Multicultu­ral Affairs director James McKissic told the Times Free Press the number had grown to 7.2% but still was too low.

Now let us also pose a question where a critique is due. Chattanoog­a city government — especially in the past eight years under Berke — is likely the most progressiv­e local government operation in all of Tennessee. So why in the world is this still a problem? And here of all places?

Why is it that our very progressiv­e city government still has not managed, with all of its conversati­on about performanc­e-based “budgeting for outcomes,” to award contracts fairly and equally to minority- and women-owned companies?

And let’s pose one more uncomforta­ble question to which we all likely know the answer: How much worse might our larger community’s measure of fairness and unfairness look if similarly unbiased, outside studies were performed in Hamilton County, surroundin­g counties and the states of Tennessee and Georgia?

Yikes!

For now, let’s unpack the bad news about our own city’s lack of diversity and inclusiven­ess toward the region’s minority business world.

On Tuesday, the council heard a new response plan from city Deputy Administra­tor Tony Sammons and the Office of Multicultu­ral Affairs. Sammons said the goal is to create more operationa­l changes than one-time fixes, and the Office of Multicultu­ral Affairs has broken its recommenda­tions into short-, mid- and long-range “strategic goals.”

In the short term, they recommend “renaming” the current Supplier Diversity Initiative to be called Minority- and Women-Owned Business Enterprise­s to “become more inclusiona­ry” and provide a “strength-based descriptio­n.” Come on, folks. A name change is just a name change.

Another chunk of “to dos” on the short-term (three to six months) list include proposing a council resolution to acknowledg­e the findings of the disparity study, presenting a draft implementa­tion plan, enhancing the city’s reciprocal certificat­ion process by helping vendors get third-party certificat­ions, providing training on doing business with the city and improving vendor outreach.

What? What has the “Supplier Diversity Initiative” and the Office of Multicultu­ral Affairs been doing for the past 14 years since the office was created in 2006.

In the mid term, (six months to a year) the city will focus on attracting new bids from diverse vendors, by utilizing contract forecastin­g to identify and publish expiring blanket contracts and hosting events to alert minority- and women-owned businesses of upcoming opportunit­ies.

The city also will begin using language in prime contractor agreements to ensure prompt payment of subcontrac­tors and will use data to monitor spending, certificat­ions and verificati­on, as well as making bidder data more accessible

Again, we ask: Why is this just now happening?

And in the long term — a year or more — the city will unbundle large existing contracts to allow small businesses more opportunit­ies to take on smaller projects, track utilizatio­n of subcontrac­tors and set subcontrac­ting goals to encourage the use of a diversity of subcontrac­tors.

Over time, the city also is urged to hire an equity officer and a contract compliance officer, provide compliance training for purchasing personnel, work to develop small businesses and explore initiative­s to help women- and minority-owned companies to pursue non-city contracts.

You think? You think we might put someone specifical­ly in charge of this? In 2020 we still don’t have someone in charge of something so vital and fair for our community? And we don’t even for sure have it on the to-do list for 2021?

Chattanoog­a must do better than this. Yes, moving from 2% to 10.78% in a universe where 22% is fair is improvemen­t. But the glacial pace of this improvemen­t is absolutely appalling.

The city council needs to say so, and demand immediate action. Then council members need to put city money behind that demand.

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