Thursday, April 13, 2017
Healthcare Justice, Medicare For All
Friday, April 7, 2017
Being Ladylike Does Not Require Silence
Tuesday, April 4 was Equal Pay Day, a
reminder that American women are paid less than men at work. It’s
shameful that it still takes an extra three months, 94 days to be exact, for a
woman working full time to earn what a man makes in a year. On the
average, women make just 80 cents to the dollar of what their male counterparts
earn. In NC, women make 82 cents to a man’s dollar. What's even more
infuriating is that for women of color, the gap is even larger: Black women
make just $0.63 compared to white men with the same job, while Hispanic women
make just $0.54. When women aren't paid fairly, it doesn't just shortchange
them. It hurts their families, their children and our economy.
Leave It To Beaver |
Yes, we have come a long way, but we still have so far to
go. Women dominate nursing, but men make more. Male janitors earn more than
female maids and housekeepers. When
females enter a male dominated field, all salaries begin to drop. The US
women’s national soccer team could have their winningest season and the men
have their worst season and the men would make more. The gender pay gap
increases as women climb the corporate ladder, get more education and more
experience. On March
27, Trump took women’s rights backwards again and revoked the 2014 Fair Pay and
Safe Workplaces order. By overturning
the Fair Pay order, Trump has further made women more vulnerable to work place
abuse and salary discrepancies
Betty Ford |
In an October 1975 speech, Betty Ford said: "Many
barriers continue to the paths of most women, even on the most basic issue of
equal pay for equal work…the wage discrepancy between men and women is a
problem for our whole society, not just the individual woman…. The first
important steps have to be to undo the laws that hem women in and lock them out
of the mainstream of opportunities…My own support of the Equal Rights Amendment
has shown what happens when a definition of proper behavior collides with the right
of an individual to personal opinions. I do not believe that being First Lady
should prevent me from expressing my views. I spoke out on this important
issue, because of my deep personal convictions. Why should my husband's job or
yours prevent us from being ourselves? Being ladylike does not require
silence."
On Equal Pay Day, U.S. Senators Mark
R. Warner and Tim Kaine joined U.S. Senator Patty Murray (D-WA) to reintroduce
the Paycheck Fairness Act and the Fair Labor Standards Act, legislation to
address the gender pay gap and strengthen the Equal Pay Act of 1963
guaranteeing that women can challenge pay discrimination and hold employers
accountable. In March, Nevada approved the ERA, bringing us two states shy of finally ratifying the amendment. We cannot be silent. We must contact our
legislators in support of both these legislations. The National Organization
for Women has chapters in every state with 70 local chapters. They need you. Men
and women are both welcome as members. Women’s March groups have formed across
the country to address a wide range of issues. Now is not the time to be silent. As Helen
Reddy sang in the 70’s, “hear me roar", we must be heard.
And Happy Birthday to Betty Ford, born this day, April 8, in 1918. Thank you for inspiring a generation of women to stand up and be heard. We will not be silent.
Useful Websites:
https://www.nytimes.com/2016/03/20/upshot/as-women-take-over-a-male-dominated-field-the-pay-drops.html?_r=0
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