Deborah Perry: 13 Who Made a Difference in RI in 2013

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Deborah Perry: 13 Who Made a Difference in RI in 2013

An advocate women throughout Rhode Island: YWCA of Northern RI Executive Director Deborah Perry.
The Executive Director of the YWCA of RI, Deborah Perry has been advocating for women across the state for years based on the YWCA's mission of eliminating racism, empowering women and promoting peace, justice, freedom and dignity for all.

In April, Perry and the YWCA hosted its 5th Annual Women Holding Office celebration, where it recognized Susan Farmer and Kathleen Connell with the Isabelle Ahearn O'Neill Award, who was Rhode Island's first female legislator. Farmer was the first female elected to statewide office of Secretary of State, and Connell was the third, following Arlene Violet's distinction of being the second woman elected statewide -- and first woman elected to Attorney General in any state. Farmer, who was in attendance at the event, passed away in September after a courageous battle against cancer.

Perry said of the event, "It was an honor and pleasure for YWCA Rhode Island to thank all women involved in the political process regardless of party, politics or background for their voice, courage, vision and leadership - and to be able to thank and recognize the pioneers who led the way - Susan Farmer, Arlene Violet, Kathleen Connell. You could feel the energy in the room, the power of women coming together as a force and the YWCA in action - eliminating racism, empowering women."

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In September, GoLocal reported that Rhode Island was ranked the 14th best state for women, according to the Center for American Progress -- and Perry offered her views:

This recent reports shows that while 27.4% of our state legislature is female, only 1.6% of all elected seats are held by minority women, and we have no women in Congress. Politics is still mainly an "all-boys" club. It's been that way for a long time...too long. Rhode Island has only sent one woman to Congress, ever, and she left office in 1991," referring to Claudine Schneider, who served in the U.S. House of Representatives for four terms starting in 1981.

Perry pointed to the work the YWCA is doing to help improve the number of women holding elected office in the state.

We hold our annual Women Holding Office to honor women holding elected office and to encourage others to engage in the political process, we hold trainings on how to run for office or participate in campaigns and host voter registration drives, we have partnered with Operation Clean Government and served as a member of its candidate school planning committee, and we advocate for issues that matter to women, their families and their communities.

Perry added, "But we can't do it alone, we need more women walking the halls of power in order to change the status quo, in order to bring about change that is important to women and women's lives."


13 Who Made a Difference in RI in 2013

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