A nonprofit publication of the Kentucky Center for Public Service Journalism

Ashli Watts: Kentuckians must face some harsh realities if we are to achieve racial equity


Although 2020 was the most difficult year many have ever experienced, it is safe to say that many lessons were learned throughout the course of such a challenging year. As we reflect over the last twelve months, Americans have endured a global pandemic, economic turmoil, political divisiveness, and racial unrest. As overwhelming as all of this can seem, I have learned that some of life’s biggest lessons can be revealed in our darkest times.

This past summer, we saw our Commonwealth struggle with racial unrest as Kentuckians hurting from the pain of long-standing, systemic racism took to the streets to protest, particularly in our largest city, Louisville. As the leader of Kentucky’s largest business association, I watched as calls for racial equality unfolded and quickly realized the business community had a role to play in the discussions to create lasting, meaningful change. It is time for Kentucky to embrace significant, sustainable changes in racial equity, diversity, and inclusion to allow all Kentuckians to reach their full potential.

Ashli Watts is president and CEO of the Kentucky Chamber of Commerce.

The Kentucky Chamber of Commerce pulled together a group of civic, business, and education leaders to discuss how we could be proactive in creating meaningful change to achieve racial equity. The group worked over several months to determine where to start and what we could do – not just putting words on paper or giving an inspirational quote-but to take real action.

Out of this workgroup came Achieving Equity to Build a Stronger Kentucky: A Report of the Kentucky Chamber of Commerce Task Force on Racial Inequality, which was released this week. Our report highlights how racial equity, diversity and inclusion in our Commonwealth will frame the path to progress for individuals, businesses, communities and the state specifically in the areas of education, criminal justice reform, and economic empowerment.

We spent months collecting data and research to illustrate realities of inequality across the Commonwealth and recommend changes to achieve greater equity. And much of this work starts with transparency. To truly fix the inherent racism that has plagued our system for generations, we must face the ugly realities.

And trust me, the realities were ugly. We learned that the academic performance of Black students declines after they enter school. Kentucky’s 2015 Kindergarten Readiness Screener showed 44.5% of Black students and 52.7% of white students were prepared for kindergarten. However, by 2019, just over 31% of Black students scored proficient on elementary school reading tests; 59.3% of white students scored at that level.

We learned while 8.5% of Kentucky’s total population is Black, the percentage of Black inmates in Kentucky prisons ranged from 23.86% in 2014 to 21.80% in 2018—more than two and half times the makeup of the population at large.

We learned that Black workers in the U.S. earn 30 percent less per hour on average than white workers and that 24% of Black Kentuckians live in poverty, compared to 15% of white Kentuckians.

And there are many more shocking, crystal-clear examples of the blatant inequity across all facets of our Commonwealth. As we dug further into the data, it was clear we have much work to do. One of the first action items coming from this report was evident early on- to achieve true success, we must have the cornerstone of transparency and accountability across all of the state’s public and private institutions, policies, and programs.

Learning from the lessons of the past year, Kentucky has an unprecedented opportunity to build a stronger future by making deliberate, sustainable reforms to overcome the racial inequality that has hampered our progress for so many generations. This is serious work and will require the commitment, energy, and ongoing attention of employers, business leaders, policymakers, elected officials, educators, and committed citizens across the Commonwealth.

I pledge to you that this report is just the beginning of the work by the Kentucky Chamber and the group of leaders who guided its development to advocate for needed reforms to rid the state of the stain of inequity that diminishes all of us.

Much work needs to be done, and we know it will not be achieved overnight. We must take the lessons of the last year and turn them into action. We are Kentuckians, united we stand, divided we fall, and though divides remain in our Commonwealth, we must do the work to ensure equity for all.


Related Posts

4 Comments

  1. Kevin LeMaster says:

    This sounds a lot like the argument that “I can’t be a racist because I have a black friend.”

    • Kevin LeMaster says:

      Nobody has ever claimed that America is “full of racists”. It’s just that there an awful lot of them. The fact that Obama and Harris achieved greatness does not mean that life isn’t different for the vast majority of African Americans in this country.

      • Willie says:

        Life is different for a large majority of Americans whether they be black, brown, white, whatever. We have a wealth/poverty issue, not a race issue. All Lives Matter.

      • Joe says:

        Richard is right. African American families are kept poor and divided due to their complete lack of family structure. Maybe pass some massive tax breaks for African American families that actually keep a household together and raise their children.
        To a degree I think the government wants to keep them divided and hungry to keep their dependence on government and hence votes. It’s human nature to keep the hand that feeds in place. and since the inner city schools have literally become one star daycares with zero education, that points to the governments cognizant choice to keep the young black youth uneducated and dependent.
        A perfect comparison is the Hispanic community. The democrats are supposedly the party of minorities, but Hispanics in this last election have leaned heavily republican. That is due to the fact they have a very tight family structure, most of them choose to work, and they share in most fundamental American values.

Leave a Comment