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Press Release on Legal Action on Minority-Owned Businesses

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For Immediate Release February 17th, 2021  

Contact: Jessicah Pierre, Director of Strategic Communications 

Phone: (617) 401-1470

Email: comms@becma.org

Business Advocacy Groups File Discrimination Complaint Against The City Of Boston On Behalf Of  Minority-owned Businesses Unlawfully Shut Out From Public Contracts 

BOSTON, MA — Today, the Black Economic Council of Massachusetts (BECMA), the Greater  Boston Latino Network (GBLN), and Amplify Latinx filed a civil rights complaint against the  City of Boston in response to gross racial disparities in public contracting under the Walsh Administration. Lawyers for Civil Rights filed the complaint, under Title VI of the Civil Rights Act,  with the U.S. Department of Justice (DOJ) and the U.S. Department of Transportation (DOT)  alleging that the City of Boston has engaged in a pattern of discrimination against Black- and  Latinx-owned businesses by maintaining a public procurement system that unlawfully excludes  these businesses from equal contracting opportunities.  

The City of Boston commissioned a disparity study in 2018 to assess the demographics and  circumstances surrounding the recipients of public contracts under the Walsh Administration.  The recently completed study found that just 1.2% of the $2.1 billion spent in public  contracts went to Black- and Latinx-owned businesses — despite the fact that such  businesses are available in much greater numbers to do the work that the City requires. The  City spent less than half a percent — or $9.4 million — with Black-owned businesses  alone. The stark racial disparities — over which the City has direct control — demonstrate  deliberate and intentional discrimination against Black- and Latinx-owned businesses on the  part of the City, according to the complaint. 

Complainants outline how the findings of the disparity study constitute compelling evidence of  discrimination, with Black and Latinx business owners confirming the many ways in which the  City’s “old boys’ network” unfairly excludes them from contracting opportunities:  

As the study’s rigorous statistical analysis demonstrates — and personal testimonials can  confirm — Black- and Latinx-owned businesses are ready, willing, and able to perform the type  of work that the City needs, but the Walsh administration simply did not contract with them.  

According to the disparity study, Black-owned businesses were unfairly denied over $70 million  in contracting opportunities over the five year study period. That is over $70 million that could — and should — have gone to Black-owned businesses to help close the opportunity and wealth  gaps in historically disadvantaged communities. 

“The study reveals what BECMA members and community leaders have been saying for  decades: The City of Boston does not value Black businesses or the Black community,” said  Segun Idowu, President and CEO of BECMA, the lead complainant in the case. “Mayor Martin  J. Walsh and his administration have failed to deliver fair and equitable procurement for Black owned businesses, as well as for other minority-owned businesses. Bold leadership is required  to immediately correct this systemic problem.” 

“The intentional concentration of contract awards with favored white-owned businesses  exacerbates and compounds contracting disparities along racial and ethnic lines that have long 

persisted in Boston,” says Rosario Ubiera-Minaya, Executive Director of Amplify Latinx,  another complainant. “This harm poses a real economic cost to our Black and Latino  communities, and the City must act immediately to correct these inequities.” 

“The lack of progress is shameful and unlawful,” says Ivan Espinoza-Madrigal, the Executive  Director of Lawyers for Civil Rights. “The disparity study confirms an intentionality surrounding  the municipal contract apartheid system that currently only benefits white people. There is a  strong aversion to diversity and equity inhibiting progress in Boston.”  

“GBLN has long called for fair and proportionate representation of community members in the  City’s government and contracts. As a result of the City’s contracting practices, GBLN and its  members have been forced to pour extensive resources into advocating for small businesses  

and working to lift Latinx families out of poverty,” said the Greater Boston Latino Network, another complainant in the case. 

The Complaint explains that the gross inequities confirmed by the disparity study amply  demonstrate that a race-conscious procurement program is long overdue and must be  implemented with urgency to cure the deep injustices embedded in Boston’s public contracting.  The complaint calls for immediate federal intervention and oversight to compel the City to enact  race-conscious measures to break down the discriminatory barriers to equitable contracting  opportunities. The complaint also calls for the creation of a community-driven remediation  process based on the needs identified by the small business communities injured and harmed  by the City. 

The full complaint will be available here: http://lawyersforcivilrights.org/our-impact/economic-justice/legal-action-supporting-small-businesses-in-boston/

MEDIA CONTACTS
Jessicah Pierre (BECMA)  Tel: (617) 401-1470 
Rosario Ubiera-Minaya (Amplify Latinx) Tel: (978) 880-6009 
Ivan Espinoza-Madrigal (Lawyers for Civil Rights) Tel: (617) 988- 0624

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About BECMA: The mission of the Black Economic Council of Massachusetts, Inc. (BECMA) is to advance the economic well being of Black businesses, organizations that serve the Black community and Black residents of Massachusetts. With a growing membership of businesses, students, and individuals, it has a mandate to connect Black businesses to lucrative opportunities and to advocate on the policy and community level for Black business interests. Learn more at www.becma.org

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