The Middletown Press (Middletown, CT)

Venus, Serena join King in push for equal pay

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A day before playing in the 2005 final at the All England Club, Venus Williams addressed a meeting of the Grand Slam Board, urging Wimbledon and the French Open to offer equal pay to male and female players.

“I said: ‘All of our hearts beat the same. When your eyes are closed, you really can’t tell, next to you, who’s a man and who’s a woman.’ And (I asked them) to think about their daughters and their wives and sisters. How would they like them to be treated?” Williams recalled. “Sometimes, we lose track of, and don’t even realize, our own bias and our own prejudice. And we have to confront ourselves.”

The following afternoon, she won one of her seven major singles championsh­ips. About 1 1⁄2 years later, Wimbledon announced it would indeed offer the same prize money to men and women in all rounds of the tournament, and the French

Open soon followed suit, eliminatin­g the pay gap at the four majors.

Now, Williams and her sister Serena are adding their names and voices to the push for equal pay across all types of jobs that the Billie Jean King Leadership Initiative (BJKLI) is championin­g.

The two current tennis stars are joining the advisory board of the group founded by the former player, and

Tuesday’s announceme­nt was timed to coincide with Equal Pay Day, which approximat­es how far into a new year a woman must work to earn what a man made by the previous Dec. 31.

“Venus, in particular, helped us get equal prize money in the majors. She was amazing. She really got Wimbledon to make the big step,” King said in a telephone interview. “Venus has always had the courage to step up. And Serena’s the same way. They step up. I mean, Serena is not afraid to say whatever is on her

mind.”

Added King: “They’ve been through a lot themselves, so they totally understand what’s going on. The two of them have transcende­d sports. The BJKLI is not about sports. It’s about every industry. To try to get equal pay for equal work, and that means across the board, from CEOs down to entry level.”

It was a pretty easy sell for King to add the Williams siblings, owners of a combined 30 Grand Slam singles titles, along with another 14 they’ve won together in doubles.

“We always put our hands up for Billie. We love her. She has a tremendous history, not just in women’s tennis, but in leading rights for people, in general, no matter who they were,” Venus Williams said. “Billie could be at the point in her life now where she could say, ‘Hey, I’m going to sit back and enjoy my life.’ But she’s still working hard for others. And that’s a prime example for every single person. Your work on this earth never ends, as long as there is inequality.”

 ?? Stephen Chernin / Associated Press ?? Billie Jean King is flanked by Venus, left, and Serena Williams at the Billie Jean King Cup exhibition on March 2, 2009, at Madison Square Garden in New York.
Stephen Chernin / Associated Press Billie Jean King is flanked by Venus, left, and Serena Williams at the Billie Jean King Cup exhibition on March 2, 2009, at Madison Square Garden in New York.

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