This article originally appeared in BlackPressUSA.com.
I have questioned the word "minority" and
caused a few high-brow eyebrows to be raised at my exposure
of the games they have been playing on Black businesses. Now they
are conducting a stealth move away from one demeaning term to one
that is more palatable. More and more they use the term "small" when
it comes to slicing up the public contracting pie. I have no problem
with that word, as opposed to the word, "minority," with
which I have a tremendous problem. However, I do want those who use
it to define it. And I do want those who are classified as "small" to
know what it really means in their particular business circles.
We have seen all sorts of terms used to
describe Black businesses, i.e., minority, small, disadvantaged,
underutilized, but there has been no confusion about the term used
for white females; they call their businesses "women-owned." Unfortunately,
we have seldom looked into the real meaning of those terms nor have
we been advantaged by them. The latest okey-doke is the term "small." Black
business owners will do yourselves a favor by learning just what
is considered "small" as you compete in your local
Small Business Program.
Where I live, a Small Business Enterprise
Program was established as a solution to blatant discrimination found
in our Croson Study. The discrimination was race-based, but the solution
was race-neutral. Go figure. When the definition of "small" was
written into the law, it stated, in so much bureaucratic gobbledygook,
that the guidelines used to determine "small" would be
taken from the Small Business Administration’s (SBA) definition.
The city made one significant change in
addition to those guidelines, however. It raised the level of net
worth that one owner of a small business could have from $325,000
to $750,000, thus, enlarging the so-called playing field to include
even larger "small business" owners. This criterion is
in addition to the SBA’s definition, which allows a small business
to earn millions in annual revenue and employ hundreds of people.
With most Black business owners, especially
those in construction trades, having far less in annual revenue,
oftentimes no employees, and a much lower net worth, the chances
of them competing and winning contracts just got slimmer. To make
matters even worse, our Small Business Enterprise Program, which
calls for 30% of the business to go to "small" (there’s
that word again) businesses, includes everyone. That’s right. Even
white males can participate in the Small Business Program now. Let’s
get this straight. White males get the 70% and then they can get
in on the 30% as well. They can even start front companies for their
wives and daughters and get even more of the 30% that way as well.
What a deal! And guess what. We have black (small "b")
city council persons who approved this silly program.
Charlotte, North Carolina, is struggling
with the same kind of ridiculous system, according to an article
I read
in the Charlotte Post, "Minority firms lag on public projects – County
contract goals missed, just like city’s." The article
discusses the race and gender neutral program adopted by Charlotte
and the inequities in that program. For instance, of $55.9 million
in construction contracts awarded on a new uptown arena, 15% went
to "small" businesses (which includes white males); but "minority-owned
companies (which includes Hispanics, Asians, and every other ethnic
group) received just 3% while women-owned companies (White women)
got 8%."
Here’s the kicker. Eddie Mobley, V.P. of the Metrolina
Minority Contractors Association, said, "They’re not even trying.
They’re always saying we are going to help women and Blacks. They shouldn’t
even say women. It’s the Black businesses that are getting zero." He’s
right, but the first problem is the definition of "minority." If
it’s Black we are talking about, why not say that? Stop playing this "minority" charade
and follow the lead of a group in Cleveland, Ohio. Their name is the "Black
Trades Council of Ohio, Inc." Is there any doubt or confusion
about who they are and for whom they are fighting?
Missouri and Maryland are fighting similar
issues as well. But another good example can be found in Harlem.
According to an article in the San Francisco Bay View, "Harlem
fights back for construction jobs and contracts," Jim Haughton,
founder of Harlem Fightback, says, "Nepotism and cronyism are
worse than I have seen it in 40 years."
Jim Heyliger, president of the Association
of Minority Enterprises of New York, said of the $500 million spent
on the clean up of the World Trade Center site, "not one dime
was given to a Black or Hispanic contractor."
Haughton also says that of $9 billion per
year in contracts, less than 1% goes to minority contractors, in
a city "that has a 62% minority population." Herein lies
another problem. How can 62% be a minority of anything? That
must be some of that "fuzzy math" George Bush was talking
about during his debates with Al Gore.
It’s all in the definitions, folks. Until
Black people decide who we are and stop being apologetic and ashamed
of it, and stop being afraid to stand up for Black rights instead
of "small" rights and "minority" rights and "women’s" rights,
we will always get the smallest portion of the proverbial economic
pie. Stop playing in the minority and small business games. You cannot
win. Can’t you see that from looking at the past?
James Clingman is the founder of
the Greater
Cincinnati African American Chamber of Commerce and
served as its first Executive Director and President. Jim also
writes
a weekly syndicated newspaper column, Blackonomics,
circulated via the National Newspaper Publishers Association. Watch
for his column in your local newspaper. He is an Adjunct Professor,
Univ. of Cincinnati, Dept. of African American Studies on "Black
Entrepreneurship". He is the author of numerous books including
the new book, Black O Knowledge.