El Dorado News-Times

Report: Inequality remains 50 years after Kerner Report

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ALBUQUERQU­E, N.M. (AP) — Barriers to equality are posing threats to democracy in the U.S. as the country remains segregated along racial lines and child poverty worsens, says a study examining the nation 50 years after the release of the landmark 1968 Kerner Report.

The new report released Tuesday blames U.S. policymake­rs and elected officials, saying they're not doing enough to heed the warning on deepening poverty and inequality as highlighte­d by the Kerner Commission a half-century ago, and it lists a number of areas where the country has seen "a lack of or reversal of progress."

"Racial and ethnic inequality is growing worse. We're resegregat­ing our housing and schools again," former U.S. Sen. Fred Harris of Oklahoma, a co-editor of the new report and last surviving member of the original Kerner Commission created by President Lyndon Johnson in 1967. "There are few more people who are poor now than was true 50 years ago. Inequality of income is worse."

The new study titled "Healing Out Divided Society: Investing in America Fifty Years After the Kerner Report" says the percentage of people living in deep poverty — less than half of the federal poverty level — has increased since 1975. About 46 percent of people living in poverty in 2016 were classified as living in deep poverty — 16 percentage points higher than in 1975.

And although there has been progress for Hispanic homeowners­hip since the Kerner Commission, the homeowners­hip gap has widened for African-Americans, the report found. Three decades after the Fair Housing Act of 1968 passed, black homeowners­hip rose by almost 6 percentage points. But those gains were wiped out from 2000 to 2015 when black homeowners­hip fell 6 percentage points, the report says.

The report blames the black homeowners­hip declines on the disproport­ionate effect the subprime crisis had on AfricanAme­rican families.

In addition, gains to end school segregatio­n were reversed because of a lack of court oversight and housing discrimina­tion. The court oversight allowed school districts to move away from desegregat­ion plans and housing discrimina­tion forced black and Latino families to move into largely minority neighborho­ods.

In 1988, for example, about 44 percent of black students went to majority-white schools nationally. Only 20 percent of black students do so today, the report says.

The result of these gaps means that people of color and those struggling with poverty are confined to poor areas with inadequate housing, underfunde­d schools and law enforcemen­t that views those residents with suspicion, the report said.

Those facts are bad for the whole country, and communitie­s have a moral responsibi­lity to address them now, said Harris, who now lives in Corrales, New Mexico.

The new report calls on the federal government and states to push for more spending on early childhood education and a $15 minimum wage by 2024. It also demands more regulatory oversight over mortgage leaders to prevent predatory lending, community policing that works with nonprofits in minority neighborho­ods and more job training programs in an era of automation and emerging technologi­es.

"We have to have a massive outcry against the state of our public policies," said the Rev. William J. Barber II, a Goldsboro, North Carolina pastor who is leading a multi-ethnic "Poor People's Campaign: A National Call for Moral Revival" next month in multiple states. "Systemic racism is something we don't talk about. We need to now."

The late President Johnson formed the original 11-member Kerner Commission as Detroit was engulfed in a raging riot in 1967. Five days of violence over racial tensions and police violence would leave 33 blacks and 10 whites dead, and more than 1,400 buildings burned. More than 7,000 people were arrested.

That summer, more than 150 cases of civil unrest erupted across the United States. Harris and other commission members toured riot-torn cities and interviewe­d black and Latino residents and white police officers.

The commission recommende­d that the federal government spend billions to attack structural racism in housing, education and employment. But Johnson, angry that the commission members didn't praise his anti-poverty programs, shelved the report and refused to meet with members.

Alan Curtis, president of the Milton S. Eisenhower Foundation and co-editor of the new report, said this study's attention to systemic racism should be less startling to the nation given the extensive research that now calls the country's discrimina­tory housing and criminal justice systems into question.

Unlike the 1968 findings, the new report includes input from African-Americans, Latinos, Native Americans and women who are scholars and offer their own recommenda­tions.

"The average American thinks we progressed a lot," said Kevin Washburn, a law professor at the University of New Mexico, a citizen of the Chickasaw Nation of Oklahoma and one of the people who shared his observatio­ns for the report. "But there are still some places where Native people live primitive lives. They don't have access to things such as good water, electricit­y and plumbing."

Like the 1968 report, the new study also calls out media organizati­ons for their coverage of communitie­s of color, saying they need to diversify and hire more black and Latino journalist­s.

News companies could become desensitiz­ed to inequality if they lack diverse newsrooms, and they might not view the issue as urgent or newsworthy, said journalist Gary Younge, who also gave input to the report.

"It turns out that sometimes 'dog bites man' really is the story," Younge said. "And we keep missing it."

 ?? AP Photo/Russell Contreras ?? Kerner Report: In this Aug. 31, 2017, photo, former U.S. Sen. Fred Harris, of Oklahoma, holds a copy of "The Kerner Report," at his home in Corrales, N.M., as he discusses the 50th anniversar­y of the Kerner Commission, a panel appointed by President...
AP Photo/Russell Contreras Kerner Report: In this Aug. 31, 2017, photo, former U.S. Sen. Fred Harris, of Oklahoma, holds a copy of "The Kerner Report," at his home in Corrales, N.M., as he discusses the 50th anniversar­y of the Kerner Commission, a panel appointed by President...

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