Michael McCray (on mic), Lawrence Lucas (arms folded) and others at rally.
(Image by Ward Jordan) Details DMCA
During a federal
news radio show, on October 16, 2012, U.S. Secretary of Agriculture Thomas "Tom"
Vilsack told listeners how the U.S. Department of Agriculture
(USDA) is addressing a legacy of discrimination claims. According to Vilsack, USDA engages in "better
workforce training, more accountability and a deeper look at its data" to reduce
agency complaint levels.
Some may find the timing of Vilsack's taking to the airwaves a bit suspect. Afterall, his discourse on the gentler side of USDA which actively "trains" employees to be "sensitive to people of all races, in all regions of the country," broadcasted just days after a group of women filed a class action complaint of harassment and discrimination against him.
Who knows? Perhaps Secretary Vilsack's sound bites proclaiming "better days at USDA" played well to
an unwitting audience unfamiliar with the Department of Agriculture's long-standing
oppressive culture. One thing for certain
--- Vilsack's chorus painfully rang out bitter notes to the thousands of
minorities, women and customers like the African-American farmers who were victimized
and remain targets of the USDA's biased programs and policies.
Earlier this year various advocacy groups,(such as the USDA Coalition of Minority Employees, Occupy EPA, The Coalition For Change, Inc.(C4C), No FEAR Coalition, Acorn8, Network for Women's Equality and others gathered in front of the Dr. Martin Luther King memorial to bring attention to USDA's persistent failure to hold officials "accountable" for bullying, discrimination and retaliation.
Group members say Secretary Vilsack's articulated
accountability measures are weak. According
to Mr. Lawrence Lucas, President-USDA Coalition of Minority Employees, "Secretary
Vilsack's accountability plan consistently fails to impose mandatory discipline
on USDA officials who either violate civil rights laws or who harass employees like Ms. Alicia Dabney."
USDA fired Ms. Dabney, a Native American who once served as a GS-4 apprentice firefighter with the U.S. Forest Service, after she reported an attempted sexual assault and complained of on-going harassment (such as being spit on and forced to urinate in her male co-workers presence.)
"It has been clear to me for quite
some time that they would find any way possible to fire Alicia. If they didn't
discredit her and fire her, they would have to fire the good old boy
firefighters she made charges against," says Lesa Donnelly, Vice President-Coalition of Minority Employees."
Last year Senator Charles Grassley petitioned the Chair of the Committee on Agriculture to hold a hearing on the reported wide spread abuses of civil rights throughout the USDA system. According to Mr. Lawrence Lucas, no such hearing has been held. "Civil rights is worst now, than under the Bush administration. After 150 years, USDA remains the last plantation," says Lucas.