Archive for August, 2007

Discrimination Lawsuit - After 13 Years, City Loses.



Photo from Anti-Racist Parent

I don’t know how many Bostonians caught the article in this Saturday’s Boston Globe about the lawsuit brought against the city of Boston (Trustees of Health and Hospitals of the City of Boston) by five African-American women for the city’s horrible and discrimatory job layoff procedures. If you haven’t read the article, you might want to. I haven’t been able to find much info about the case online and as far as I can tell no one is blogging about it. What shocked me, aside from the fact that the case dragged on for 13 years (the layoffs occurred in 1994), was the degrading way in which Gloria Coney, Belinda Chambers, Victoria Higginbottom, Marlene Hinds, and Betty Smith were treated by Boston’s Healthy Baby/Healthy Child program in Hyde Park. And, as if it wasn’t bad enough that the women were treated like criminals the moment they lost their jobs, they were treated like criminals because of their race and their gender. (Also laid off was Christopher Navin, a white male.) The below is from Findlaw:

Marjorie Perkins, the program director of the Healthy Baby/Healthy Child Program, was in charge of the layoffs. She learned on or before June 30, 1994, that there would have to be layoffs in the program. After Perkins chose the employees who were going to be laid off, she requested assistance from THH’s management in carrying out the layoffs. The director of labor relations, Teri McNamara, was sent to assist her. On numerous occasions, Perkins and McNamara discussed the manner in which the layoffs were to be conducted.

Coney and Hinds were laid off on July 19, 1994, when Perkins and McNamara called them into Perkins’s office and informed them that they were being laid off effective immediately, and that they should collect their belongings and leave within thirty minutes. In full view of their coworkers and Hinds’s daughters (who happened to be at the office), McNamara and two other employees monitored Coney and Hinds as they packed their things. The monitoring was such that Hinds’s daughters thought their mother was being observed to prevent stealing. Perkins and one of the employees examined Coney’s belongings as she packed, including an inspection of her lunch bag. She was told that the monitoring was to ensure she did not take anything issued by THH. Coney refrained from using the restroom because she felt she would be watched. She asked for special permission to return the following day to collect the rest of her things. She was allowed to do so, again under the supervision of an employee. Coney did not have an opportunity to say goodbye to her coworkers, some of whom cried and asked if she was being arrested.

Higginbottom, Chambers, and Smith were not at work on July 19. On July 20, they were summoned to Perkins’s office, informed that they were being laid off effective immediately, and sent to pack their belongings. They were monitored in a fashion similar to the scrutiny Hinds and Coney had endured. Notably, Smith did not have an opportunity to collect all her belongings and left photographs and certificates in the office. In addition, McNamara pulled papers out of Chambers’s hands as Chambers packed and “order[ed] Chambers around.” Chambers’s officemate cried as Chambers packed. McNamara also refused to allow Chambers to contact her clients to tell them she would not make her appointments that day. Finally, after several requests, McNamara permitted Chambers to take the telephone numbers of some of her clients home to contact them later.

These layoff procedures stand in stark contrast to the treatment Navin received upon his termination. Navin was given a month’s advance notice of his layoff. He was allowed to come to the office at his convenience to receive his termination notice. After being told that a particular employee whom he knew from another job was to give him his notice, he requested that it be a different employee, and his request was granted. Navin was not monitored as he cleaned out his desk and he was permitted to walk around the building freely to say goodbye to his coworkers. A week later, he returned to the office, but was asked to leave because there had been allegations of discrimination concerning the layoffs.

Thankfully, the SJC concluded on Friday that the “trustees had ‘a discriminatory hierarchy in who would be spared from the layoff procedure, with white males at the top, women below them, and African-American women at the bottom’” and the women FINALLY won their case. All I can say is that THH should be ashamed of their ridiculous unwillingness to just admit that they were wrong and pay the piper. Congratulations ladies. You deserve it.

From the Pen of Rick Steves…

“The best travel is on a shoestring . . . not just meeting people but needing people.” — Rick Steves

Who would have thought that the cheesy Rick Steves would hit the travel nail so squarely on the head! (Sorry to be snarky, but he is a bit cheesy, don’t you think?) So… today I was thinking I might follow in the footsteps of the ubiquitous guidebook guru Mr. Steves and scribble down a few lines during my trip. As I never do anything that I haven’t googled first, I went web hunting for few travel writing pointers. Within a few mouse clicks I was reading an article by Steves suggestively entitled How to Be a Travel Writer. Well, cheesy Mr. Steves delighted me with his story, which energetically expressed how his career evolved as a natural extension of his intense passion to share the experience of travel with others. Not just as a writer, but as a traveler. His unrelenting desire to teach about travel came before the writing, not the other way around. (Of course, plenty of travel writers counsel budding travel writers to put the writing first.) Unfortunately, for professional travel writers who haven’t made it like Steves, the job of travel writer sounds like a grueling way NOT to earn money. And then there is the low prestige factor. According to Susan McKee, “As a professional travel writer, I occupy a place in the journalistic hierarchy somewhere just above pond scum.” Ouch! Good thing that I am thinking about doing this for fun only. Although…I stumbled across an ezine for solo travelers,Connecting, which pays $25 upon publication of an 800 to 2,000 word article. Yeah, you read that right. $25.
: ) That’s why the best travel is on a shoestring…

(The above photo is of a coffeehouse in Cambridge, MA, not France. ; ) Looks a bit French though doesn’t it?)

Languedoc Trip Prep Begins!

The guidebook arrived! Woo hoo! The first week of my trip I will be in Languedoc, a former French province that is now the régions of Languedoc-Roussillon and Midi-Pyrénées. I am very excited because this will be my first time visiting this part of France, with the Mediterranean Sea in the west and the Rhone River to the east. Since I’ll be new to this area my guidebook is my new best friend : ) . After a week in Languedoc, I will be volunteering for 2 weeks in in Provence with Sabranenque, a non-profit organization dedicated to the preservation of rural Mediterranean habitats using traditional building techniques.

To celebrate my six-week count down I’ve begun visiting some Languedoc blogs. Two of my favorites are..

St Bloggie de Riviere. Written by a British, mid-age, single mom, living in Montpellier, France. If you read my blog entry on dark chocolate you might enjoy Sarah’s post on the recently resurrected Cadbury dark chocolate bar Bourneville.

A Languedoc Blog. Written by Alex who moved to France with his wife after their children had “flown the nest.” Alex’s post about a day trip to Carcassonne – a journey to see Joe Cocker in concert with a quick pit stop at Ikea – reminded me just how small this world is!

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