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Related: About this forumNYT Editorial Board: Californians, Vote Yes on Prop 16
Source: New York Times
Californians, Vote Yes on Prop 16
Banning any consideration of race, gender or ethnicity in public university admissions and public contracting was a mistake with big consequences.
By The Editorial Board
The editorial board is a group of opinion journalists whose views are informed by expertise, research, debate and certain longstanding values. It is separate from the newsroom.
Oct. 27, 2020, 7:46 p.m. ET
Black and Latino people have been hit hardest by Americas recent one-two punch of public health and economic crises. Theyve been hospitalized for Covid-19 at quadruple the rate of white Americans. Their businesses have struggled to get the support they requested from the governments Paycheck Protection Program. As of August, the unemployment rate for African-Americans was nearly double that of white Americans.
Amid these widening disparities, California voters are weighing a measure that could be a big help to women, Black and Latino students and business owners. Proposition 16 aims to reverse Proposition 209, a measure that California passed 24 years ago banning consideration of race, gender or ethnicity in public university admissions and public contracting. California was the first state to try to ban affirmative action, and others including Michigan, Arizona and Washington later followed suit.
Recent research reveals the far-reaching effects of Prop 209. Black and Latino enrollment in the University of California system declined immediately. The measure most likely deterred more than 1,000 Black and Latino students from even applying to the University of California system each year, according to research by Zachary Bleemer, an economist at Berkeley. The research describes a cascade effect in which the Black and Latino students who were rejected from elite schools then enrolled in less selective universities, crowding out others and precluding some students from attending college at all.
The impact of the ban on affirmative action has been particularly visible in the medical field. Latinos comprise 40 percent of Californias population but roughly only 6 percent of its practicing physicians. Drs. Gloria Sanchez and David Hayes-Bautista, from the U.C.L.A. School of Medicine, attribute this shortfall largely to Proposition 209, which substantially cut the number of Latino U.C. medical school graduates. During the pandemic, as Spanish-speaking Latino patients have been sickened at high rates, they have also sometimes struggled to find physicians who can communicate with them.
-snip-
Banning any consideration of race, gender or ethnicity in public university admissions and public contracting was a mistake with big consequences.
By The Editorial Board
The editorial board is a group of opinion journalists whose views are informed by expertise, research, debate and certain longstanding values. It is separate from the newsroom.
Oct. 27, 2020, 7:46 p.m. ET
Black and Latino people have been hit hardest by Americas recent one-two punch of public health and economic crises. Theyve been hospitalized for Covid-19 at quadruple the rate of white Americans. Their businesses have struggled to get the support they requested from the governments Paycheck Protection Program. As of August, the unemployment rate for African-Americans was nearly double that of white Americans.
Amid these widening disparities, California voters are weighing a measure that could be a big help to women, Black and Latino students and business owners. Proposition 16 aims to reverse Proposition 209, a measure that California passed 24 years ago banning consideration of race, gender or ethnicity in public university admissions and public contracting. California was the first state to try to ban affirmative action, and others including Michigan, Arizona and Washington later followed suit.
Recent research reveals the far-reaching effects of Prop 209. Black and Latino enrollment in the University of California system declined immediately. The measure most likely deterred more than 1,000 Black and Latino students from even applying to the University of California system each year, according to research by Zachary Bleemer, an economist at Berkeley. The research describes a cascade effect in which the Black and Latino students who were rejected from elite schools then enrolled in less selective universities, crowding out others and precluding some students from attending college at all.
The impact of the ban on affirmative action has been particularly visible in the medical field. Latinos comprise 40 percent of Californias population but roughly only 6 percent of its practicing physicians. Drs. Gloria Sanchez and David Hayes-Bautista, from the U.C.L.A. School of Medicine, attribute this shortfall largely to Proposition 209, which substantially cut the number of Latino U.C. medical school graduates. During the pandemic, as Spanish-speaking Latino patients have been sickened at high rates, they have also sometimes struggled to find physicians who can communicate with them.
-snip-
Read more: https://www.nytimes.com/2020/10/27/opinion/california-prop-16-affirmative-action.html
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NYT Editorial Board: Californians, Vote Yes on Prop 16 (Original Post)
Eugene
Oct 2020
OP
Bobstandard
(1,688 posts)1. This one was a no brainer
Im an ag guy. Almost all of the field and related labor where I live is Latinix. I regularly work with men and women who are way smarter than me whos labor horizons are wildly proscribed by the kind of incipient racism that Steinbeck wrote about and that flourishes around here today. I know their kids, many of them. They deserve more than an even break. Im hoping that this legislation goes at least a little way to providing them at least that.
Hey Jared, howd you get into NYU again? Oh, yeah. Lucky you.