Michele Eve Sandberg
Audio By Carbonatix
From winning the right to vote and entering the workforce to shattering a few glass ceilings and declaring International Women’s Day as March 8, women have made tremendous strides in gaining equality. But there’s still a long way to go.
That’s according to the Women’s Fund Miami-Dade, which has identified key issues preventing Miami women from achieving full equality.
“We [focus on] areas we must build on to advance women and girls both locally and nationally,” Kathy Andersen, executive director of Women’s Fund Miami-Dade, says. “We’ve served about 75,000 women and girls since we began 26 years ago.”
The nonprofit, which last year celebrated its silver anniversary, has supported almost 500 programs through funding of close to $4 million over the past 25 years. The problems the organization specializes in are diverse, ranging from sex trafficking to equal pay. But they have one thing in common: All affect the lives of women living in Miami-Dade County.
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In October 2018, the fund tackled domestic violence because “one in three women locally and nationally will experience it,” Andersen says. The campaign took over Metrorail stops and bus shelters and posted billboards emblazoned with the help line to report domestic violence “because our community needs to know what number to call.”
November’s focus was homelessness. The fund works with the Homeless Trust to assist mothers, LGBTQ youth, and women without homes.
Mental health and suicide were the issues in December, because suicide is the second leading cause of death in girls and young women aged 10 to 24. “Girls are attempting suicide at twice the rate of boys,” Andersen says.
Sex trafficking was the focus this past January and February. Digital billboards throughout the tri-county area and a bus wrap in Miami Beach read, “Stolen for sex: This could be your daughter.” The statistics are disturbing: Andersen cites a finding that 67 percent of the sex-trafficking victims encountered by the Miami-Dade State Attorney’s Office are locals, not victims brought here from elsewhere. Florida also leads the nation in trafficking, she says.
Perhaps that’s why the theme for International Women’s Day 2019 is #balanceforbetter. “We’re stronger together, so we need to come together and have conversations about changing workplace practices and policies in order to [ensure women are] paid and progress equally,” she says. Negotiating salaries from day one and then again at each yearly review is vital, she adds. “Women need to stop competing and come together. We need to find our voices and realize we’re not alone.”
Correction: An earlier version of this story incorrectly described the Women’s Fund’s funding history.