Racial Disparities Report by RI ACLU Called "Extraordinary" by Community Leaders

GoLocalProv News Team

Racial Disparities Report by RI ACLU Called "Extraordinary" by Community Leaders

Ray Rickman
Rhode community leaders have called the RI American Civil Liberties Union's report entitled "The School to Prison Pipeline in Black and White," which asserts that that "significant and persistent racial disparities exist" in the state, both extraordinary, and disappointing. 

"Steve Brown and RI ACLU have done something extraordinary. It's an organization that regularly is gutsy, out front, and goes where other people don't go," said former State Representative and Deputy Secretary of State Ray Rickman. "They don't mince words.  They just called the government racist."

The ACLU issued the following statement, along with their report (which can be found here):

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"Data has long shown that black Rhode Islanders are disproportionally suspended from school, stopped and searched by police, arrested, and incarcerated. When this data is compiled, as it is in today’s report, it becomes clear that the disproportionate singling out, scrutinizing, and punishing of black Rhode Islanders is a persistent and far-reaching problem and one that contributes to the school-to-prison pipeline, a systematic pattern of pushing students, especially minorities, out of the classroom and into the criminal justice system."

Response, Suggestions

"I'm disappointed but not surprised," said Jim Vincent, President of the NAACP Providence Branch.  "This reaffirms what we've been hearing for years. We know that kids are disciplined and suspended just on race.  Racial profiling  -- we've had a few studies even before this. Every study reaffirms what we know, and that is we still have racism here in Rhode Island."

"First and foremost, we need to acknowledge that these studies are truthful. They're well sourced and fact based.  So let's accept the fact that we're in a crisis.  Wall Street 24/7 said we're the 3rd worst state in the county for blacks -- and the criteria they looked at weren't even based on the ACLU facts," said Vincent.   "Maybe if they had access to the ACLU report we'd really be the worst."

Jim Vincent
"We're in dire straights in Rhode Island in terms of African Americans," continued Vincent.  "We need leadership on all levels to address this issue.  We'll work with anybody to work on how blacks live in Rhode Island -- and compare that with how whites live in Rhode Island- education, employment, incarceration, home ownership --we need to start talking about it in terms of crisis."

The ACLU offered suggestions based on its findings.  

"The ACLU urged the state and local leaders, particularly law enforcement agencies and school districts, to help stop the school-to-prison pipeline by regularly examining racial impact of their policies and procedures and developing plans to reduce any racial disparities. The ACLU also continues to support strong, comprehensive racial profiling legislation and legislation limiting the use of out-of-school suspensions."

Rickman said that he had a number of steps the state could take immediately to address disparities, which included health disparities.  

"We know for fact that black women discover breast cancer later, more often in stage 3 and 4, and die. White women get it at stage one and two and more often live," said Rickman. "It comes down to factors such as time -- black women are often working several jobs, and might not have insurance. Why don't we take 1% of the health department's money and open an office of minority health.  And women of color can walk in once a month and get tested.  There are twenty more things like this we could be doing."


Male African American Leaders in RI - 2015

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