Orange County NC Website
EQ transit equity. <br /> transit • equity <br /> etu 4(t <br /> s not imply sameness . <br /> ilt on proportionality <br /> u <br /> Aquit and based on need — the <br /> transportation needs of some <br /> Etter t n groups are more significant <br /> than others , even if they are <br /> not the majority of those using <br /> i ? transportation <br /> This section provides an overview of the concept of "transit equity," its origins in the Civil <br /> Rights Movement, and the commitments needed to ensure ALL citizens benefit from <br /> investments in public transportation. <br /> ronsit equity and transitjustice may be recent s <br /> additions to the transportation lexicon but . <br /> they are not new concepts to marginalized or <br /> socially vulnerable groups. For residents identifying <br /> in COLORED <br /> as Black,African American,or People of Color,transit '- <br /> FWAITINGROOM <br /> equity and transitjustice hold even deeper meaning <br /> because they are inextricably linked to the history PRIVATE. •. .PROPERTY <br /> NG <br /> Nfi <br /> of the American Civil Rights Movement when the <br /> public battles forcing the end of legal segregation ' <br /> were waged on two primary fronts - lunch counters <br /> rf <br /> and transit vehicles. ' <br /> Most Americans are familiar with Rosa Parks' I ` <br /> strategically publicized refusal to relinquish her seat <br /> to a white rider on a bus in Montgomery, Alabama <br /> in 1955. But Parks" story is just one element of a <br /> 45 <br /> sustained, organized campaign to end segregation At the bus station in Durham,"1940 by Jock Delano.Library of Congress <br /> on public transportation and in other public and <br /> private settings. In fact, the first organized transit <br /> boycott in the South occurred over two years before about the author. <br /> Parks"protest, in Baton Rouge. <br /> Content ••th the "Equity Connections" and this <br /> The legal basis for racial segregation was initially chapter were adapted from a reportauthored • Orange County <br /> codified when Homer Plessy was charged with by - past president of <br /> boarding a "whites only" railroad car, violating New University,an award-winning - • - • an activist anthropologist <br /> Orleans" "Separate Car Act" of 1890. Plessy fought who has committed her life and -r to helping o - <br /> his case all the way to the US Supreme Court who the world. She holds the PhD and MA in Anthropologyand the <br /> ruled that segregation based on race was not Masters of - English, both from the University <br /> unconstitutional if each race was provided facilities of Massachusetts <br /> ng - Principal <br /> that were ""separate but equal" (Plessy v. FergusonSolutions • • _ specializeshelping <br /> 1896). The "separate but equal doctrine" upheld others • immediate , • sustainable emerging , <br /> nd <br /> and enforced legal discrimination and segregation urgent offers support expert <br /> long into the 20th century, until it was overturned in witness, leadership consultant and guru, speaker/facilitator, <br /> 1956 (Gayle v. Browder) as a direct result of Parks' writer/editor, executive coach, researcher/evaluator, and diversity <br /> direct action and the subsequent Montgomery Bus <br /> Boycott.. _• <br />