States Look Beyond Quotas to Promote Minority Firms
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States Look Beyond Quotas to Promote Minority Firms
By Alison L. McConnell
Last fall, Maryland officials created a television show called
Ultimate Business Makeover that gave minority-owned companies a
shot at boosting their competitiveness.
The reality TV program, produced by the states Office of Minority
Affairs, selected two lucky winners for an overhaul of their
marketing strategies, management style and office space. The show,
whose pilot episodes aired in October and November, is one example
of the innovative ways states are promoting business ownership
among minorities and women while avoiding the legal snares that can
entangle traditional preference or set-aside programs.
Since the 1960s, states and the federal government have
experimented with goals or requirements that induce government
agencies to set aside some portion of contracts for minority or
female business owners. But those programs have met legal
challenges with mixed results, leading states to devise other sorts
of solutions to promote minority and female entrepreneurs.
Colorado has stayed away from set-asides, but officials make a
special push to help minority-owned firms do business with the
state. Wisconsin, like Maryland, has a preference system for state
contracts but a new initiative from Gov. Jim Doyle (D) aims part of
his Grow Wisconsin drive at minority business development.
Last year, in addition to the TV show, Maryland strengthened its
already-existing set-aside program by toughening rules that require
state agencies to reserve an ambitious 25 percent of contracts for
minority-owned businesses.
Marylands new law effective Oct. 1, 2004 was inspired by the
findings of a commission created by Gov. Robert Ehrlich (R) in 2003
that noticed contractors taking advantage of a loophole and
dropping minority-owned supply firms once the contract was awarded,
a problem Special Secretary of Minority Affairs Sharon Pinder
called contract amnesia.
There were a few contractors who would forget about the folks they
had named, she said. Under the new law, contractors must list the
minority-owned firms they will use on initial proposals for state
jobs.
But legal challenges to racial set-aside laws may inhibit the
growth of programs like Marylands. Preference goals or laws that
require state agencies to use a certain percentage of minority- or
women-owned businesses in their work have come under fire in more
than 100 state and local courts since 1989, according to Franklin
M. Lee, attorney and former chief counsel for the Minority Business
Education and Legal Defense Fund.
In the case of Croson v. City of Richmond, the U.S. Supreme Court
in 1989 struck down as unconstitutional Richmonds preference law,
which required 30 percent of the citys construction spending to go
to minority contractors. The court ruled that states must prove
minorities were being shut out of contracts, according to Ian
Pulsipher of the National Conference of State Legislatures.
They have to prove that there is a disparity between procurement
for minorities and non-minorities, a difference in what contracts
theyre getting, he said.
Since then, contractors usually white males who have been passed
over for jobs have challenged set-asides in court. The legal
challenges in many cases have been successful, according to George
La Noue, professor of political science at the University of
Maryland-Baltimore County and director of the Project on Civil
Rights and Public Contracting.
Some [programs] are completely shut down, some are modified, some
become race-neutral small business programs, La Noue said.
In a handful of cases, though, courts have upheld programs in which
a state or city proved that existing racial discrimination made
set-asides necessary.
As a result, some states have steered clear of the programs
altogether and devised creative ways to assist fledgling firms
without making themselves vulnerable to lawsuits.
Colorado, for instance, has a minority business department in the
governors office but does not regulate a set-aside program for
state contracts.
Colorado would rather go ahead and teach people to be competitive
as opposed to saying, Heres something well go ahead and buy from
you, said John Cisneros, small business coordinator for the
Colorado state purchasing office. We teach them how to fish rather
than give them the fish.
In Wisconsin, top officials aggressively are trying to make more
minority-owned firms economically viable. As a part of Doyles
statewide economic initiative, the state is releasing more funds to
support minority entrepreneurship, said Cory L. Nettles, Doyles
secretary of commerce.
Now, Nettles said, the state buys down loan rates to get start-up
capital to minority firm owners and encourages major Wisconsin
operations to consider smaller, unknown subcontractors for
jobs.
We try to make deals happen when they might not otherwise happen,
he said. If the state economy is going to be successful, we cant
afford to leave any talent parked on the sidelines.
Wisconsin also has participation goals for state-funded projects
and is meeting them on jobs such as the $145 million Marquette
Interchange Project in downtown Milwaukee. Twenty-five percent of
the work on that road construction project is being completed by
minority firms, according to Tony Hozeny, communications director
for the Wisconsin commerce department.
But some say set-aside programs such as Wisconsins will fade.
Set-asides were a political solution of a particular political era,
said La Noue of the University of Maryland. They were attractive
because they became a sort of racial patronage that was politically
acceptable. Overwhelmingly, the minority businesses didnt get a
dime out of them. It never solved what the real problems
were.
La Noue said North Carolina is the only state with pending
litigation challenging the constitutionality of a minority business
program. Its unlikely that more states will adopt new preference
programs, he said. Theyre very difficult to defend, the existing
ones, he said.
Attorney Lee said that in the absence of further rulings from the
Supreme Court, the legal issues surrounding set-asides remain
unsettled. At least for the near future, there will continue to be
minority business programs at the state and local level. Litigation
will continue.
In the United States, businesses are classified by federal, state
and local authorities according to their majority interest-holder.
If a woman or minority holds 51 percent or more of a firms stock,
it qualifies for certification as a female- or minority-owned
business enterprise.
At least 27 states have minority business certification and
development programs, according to NCSL. It does not track
set-aside or preference programs.
In 1997 the last time the U.S. Census Bureau collected data on
business ownership less than five percent of businesses were owned
by minorities in 14 states (Idaho, Iowa, Kentucky, Maine,
Minnesota, Montana, Nebraska, New Hampshire, North Dakota, South
Dakota, Vermont, West Virginia, Wisconsin and Wyoming). At the top
of the list, more than 20 percent were owned by minorities in six
states (California, Florida, Hawaii, Maryland, New Mexico and
Texas).
Source: Stateline.org.
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© 2008 Penton Media Inc.
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