Is it good to be a woman in Nevada?
These were among reactions to the
"This disastrous legislation once again makes being a woman a pre-existing condition,"
The
The group that organized the Women's March on
At the January march, the Jezebel blog snapped a photo of a black man carrying a sign that read: "Women's Rights are Human Rights." Asked how he felt threatened by a Trump presidency, he said: "I don't know if I feel personally threatened, but it's revealing a lot of truths about the country that people might not have wanted to recognize."
In the wake of second-wave feminism's work from the 1960s through the 1980s, American girls grew up with what
And the group carrying the banner has always been small, Goodwin says, whether you go back a century or look at political engagement beyond the occasional march in a hand-knit pussy hat. But Trump's administration has shaken the perception of where women stand. More and more people are examining the reality.
"Better woke now than never," Goodwin says.
WHERE
The Status of Women in the States is an ongoing national data project of the
Here's how states in the West ranked nationwide for opportunities and support for women:
Political participation Grade is a composite index based on these indicators: voter registration and turnout, representation in elected office and an index of women's institutional resources.
Nevada: D-, #42;
Employment and earnings Grade is a composite index based on these indicators: median annual earnings of women who work full-time/year-round, gender-based earnings ratio among full-time/year-round workers, women's labor force participation and the percent of employed women in managerial or professional occupations.
Nevada: D, #41;
Work and family Grade is a composite index based on four indicators. Three relate to work-family policy: paid leave, dependent and elder care, and child care. The fourth is the gender gap in labor force participation of parents of children younger than 6.
Nevada: C-, #23;
Poverty and opportunity Grade is a composite index based on these indicators of women's economic security and access to opportunity: health insurance coverage, college education, business ownership and poverty rate.
Nevada: D, #39;
Reproductive rights Grade is a composite index based on these indicators: mandatory parental consent or notification laws for minors receiving abortions, waiting periods for abortions, restricting public funding for abortions, percent of women in counties with at least one abortion provider, pro-choice governors or legislatures,
Nevada: B, #17;
Health and well-being Grade is a composite index based on these indicators: mortality rates from heart disease, breast cancer and lung cancer, incidence of diabetes, chlamydia and AIDS, average number of days per month that mental health was not good or activities were limited due to health status, and suicide mortality rates.
Nevada: D, #40;
THE GENDER PAY GAP
The Equal Pay Act was signed into law in 1963 by President
The
While the gap has narrowed, the rate of change indicates it won't close nationally until 2059, according to the IWPR. Based on the rate of progress between 1959 and 2013, Nevada women could see equal pay sooner, by 2044.
Here's a look at median average earnings across the Western states in 2015:
Nevada, #11 Men:
EMPLOYMENT SNAPSHOT
According to 2014 data from the
IWPR's 2015 report ranked Nevada 16th in the nation for the number of women-owned businesses, as it's close to 30 percent. But in terms of female workers in managerial/professional positions, a similar percentage landed the state dead last.
POLITICAL SNAPSHOT
The
--Women hold close to 40 percent of the seats in the 2017
--In 2012, 56.2% of Nevada women were registered to vote (national rank, 49), and 45.4% made it to the polls (national rank, 46).
EDUCATION SNAPSHOT
Education is one area in
Given how crucial STEM (science, technology, engineering and math) education is to Nevada's economic development strategy, there is some focus on increasing female participation in school, exemplified by the Northern Nevada Girls Math and Technology Program, offered since 1998 through
When it comes to higher education, Nevada women are on par with men, just over 22 percent of both groups holding a bachelor's degree or higher, according to a 2015 report from the
*Of the 60-member charter class of the
HEALTH SNAPSHOT
--Per capita state and local government expenditures for health programs, 2012: National,
--Percent of state and local government expenditures used for health programs, 2012: National, 3.3 / Nevada, 2 = 41st
--Percent of population not covered by health insurance, 2014: National, 10 / Nevada, 13 = 6th
--Estimated per capita
--Percent change in state
--Rate of physicians per 100,000 population, 2013: National, 326 / Nevada, 226 = 47th
--Rate of primary care physicians per 100,000 population, 2013: National, 100 / Nevada, 71 = 49th
--Percent of adults who participate in weekly aerobic physical activity, 2013: National, 50.8 / Nevada, 53.6 = 17th
--Percent of adults who smoke, 2013: National, 19 / Nevada, 19.4 = 24th
--Percent of adults overweight, 2013: National, 35.4 / Nevada, 38.6 = 1st
Meanwhile, the
Poverty, which can contribute to conditions that affect a woman's mental and physical condition, afflicts 26% of the 128,000 or so households in
The number of incarcerated women is rising in
*
You're a newcomer to
I have my moments. I remember walking on the Strip for the first time. You just look at your feet and there are the fliers (of escorts). I've spent some time in different cities, but I've never seen anything like that. If I had been here even five years ago, I don't know if I would have been able to handle just the environment of Vegas. I think I'm very aware that I'm in Sin City but with a different message.
Let's talk about that message. What do you hope "Magic Mike Live" achieves?
In a way, the goal is to reverse the paradigm, to flip male revues on their head. But it was really important to (creator and director)
There is a line between appreciation and objectification. That's the thing. We don't want to objectify these men. We don't want to be the female version of the men who've harassed and catcalled us. So, what's the next step up? ... I am protective over the men just as men in my role have been protective over women in the past. ... It's about not coming at it from a lower sexual place but a sacred sexual place, respecting men as a god to our goddess.
Have the male performers gotten on board with that approach?
A lot of them have come to me of their own accord, wanting to foster that conversation. To ask, how do I keep it sacred? What does that mean? I can feel when I am going from a place of need or validation versus the expression of authenticity. There's been some fantastic conversations. I think that's the purpose of the show -- to start asking the questions.
It sounds like you have all put a lot of thought into the show.
In comedy school, we would say, "Assume your audience is the smartest." Too often people think we need to water it down for the crowds so everyone can understand. I wholly disagree with that. This show is getting such a good response, and in my opinion it's because we didn't play to the lowest common dominator. We're finding that everyone is ready for that. We are making waves, but it's not anything people didn't want and weren't already demanding.
What feedback have you heard?
I just read one (Instagram message) that was, like, "Thank you so much. We thought it would be sleazy and grimy, but everyone left feeling empowered and sexy and as highbrow as something like this can be." They're not expecting anything more than a typical revue, and they're leaving feeling sexually empowered rather than gross.
I'd say there aren't many productions, especially here in
It's been a big focus of the creative team to create a place where women can go into that bubble. It's sad it's a bubble. Perhaps it will spread. Maybe one day you don't have to go to "Magic Mike Live" to feel like this. ... One of (Channing's) big notes for me was, "I want them to go on the same journey as you. Experience the show through you." There is a moment where I turn into the emcee and I give them permission to do that. And I mean it. I'm on that journey myself. I am truly through this show discovering my own sexual empowerment and finding out what I think is slimy, what I think is empowering, where is our universal line.
Do you think now is the right time for a show like this?
I think culturally we're in a major shift in consciousness. If we hadn't done this show right now, I think we'd be behind the eight ball in a matter of months. I feel the world is primed for a takeover with this new understanding.
That's an optimistic outlook, especially if you look at a lot of news at the national level.
We can look at all that and say, "I'm terrified." To the best of my ability, I attempt not to do that. I genuinely believe the great resistance comes before the greatest changes, the dark before the dawn. I think men are respecting me more in my immediate surroundings than they ever have. I'm really feeling a reverence from men. So, I could take it outside of myself and look at the global state of affairs and think we're screwed, but in my personal life I feel more honored and more supported. Trump and all this other crap? When massive amounts of change happen, those threads of darkness hold on even tighter. --
*
Before
Why did you choose to practice law?
My original goal was to teach eighth graders to love "Beowulf." I tried that, and I thought, there has to be something better that I can do. That's when I decided that maybe I could practice law. I talked to a lawyer in the church my father was pastor of. He said, "You really ought to think about this because it's something you can use in many different ways. You will meet a lot of people in law school that you may become lifetime friends with. It's a way to really have impact." The more he talked about what he saw was the plus, the more I thought, maybe I'll do that.
Then I went to the dean of students at the
I went to the
What was your experience in law school?
There were five women in my class. Now women at the
What was it like working for the city attorney in
The city attorney was named
How did you become involved in this landmark case?
There was a group of women who were graduate students at the
I knew Judy from a women's liberation group. Judy told me, "We feel like we might be prosecuted as accomplices (to women getting abortions)." Back then, abortion was only legal to save the life of the woman. Nobody knew what that meant. The doctors would basically not do procedures.
Judy one day said to me, "We are concerned about our own legal standing. We think we should have a case that would test
There was a hospital called
Judy said to me, "What would you charge us to do this case?" I said that I really thought it would be better if she got a lawyer who was more experienced. I had never done a case in federal court. ... (After doing some research), I told Judy that I would work on the case for free. She said, "You are our lawyer."
What was the process in getting Roe v. Wade to the
First the case went through a three-judge federal court in
There's a procedural policy in law that says if a three-judge court rules that they would not give an injunction because they believe a locally elected official would abide by the judgment of a three-judge federal court, then you have a straight appeal to the
We got notice that the court decided to take the case. That was at a time when all the justices of the
What was it like putting together your argument? What were you thinking? What were you feeling?
I felt that it was a responsibility. I knew there were women who were pregnant who didn't want to be. I thought that I had to do whatever I could legally to try to be sure women could make the choice and not the government.
Did you believe there was a chance you could win even though the
I thought we had a chance because in 1965 there had been a case called Griswold v.
Describe what happened after the
I knew a doctor in
Did you ever consider yourself a hero for women?
I think people do what they can. That was something that I was willing to try to do. It never occurred to me that 46 years later that I would still be talking about it.
How should younger people get involved in issues of reproductive rights?
First,
Is it your mission today to spread that message?
I do a lot of speeches on college campuses trying to talk about why we need cooperation from younger people. There are a lot of younger women in particular who are becoming very active. If you look at the marches that were held not long ago, in most places they had plenty of people participating.
At the march in
How do you feel about the fact that abortion is still so politically charged and that there are states still trying to make having the procedure difficult?
I'm not going to try to change one person's mind unless they're a state legislator. But I would talk to a person about the time when abortion was illegal. That didn't stop abortions from happening. It just made it much more difficult, much more expensive and often much more dangerous. There are always going to be people who are in the opposition. That's why we have to have more people in the pro-choice category and to try to protect
Have you talked with pro-life advocates or sympathized with their point of view?
I can certainly understand that they believe differently than I do. But that's not a reason why their viewpoint should prevail. I really believe the individual should make the decision.
People ask me if the
What keeps you going?
What stiffens the spine is opposition. --
*
Historian
Nevada women were granted the right to vote in 1914, six years ahead of the country. Why so?
Suffrage became adopted by multiple parties that were at play in Western states -- labor parties, socialist parties, farmer/worker parties, the populists -- all of those groups recognized the value of collaborating to get political goals accomplished. In older states in the East and the Midwest, the political party system might have been more rigid. So there was a flexibility there politically in terms of structure that enabled women organizing in the West to have an earlier impact.
Did other factors allow some Nevada women to achieve things that were considered exceptional?
I think Nevada's size has allowed individuals to stand out and accomplish things in a way that wouldn't have happened even in a larger Western state.
I'm thinking of some women who actually came to Nevada during the mining boom.
So the size, particularly in
... Another pioneer that I really like to promote is
What about the progress made by women of color earlier in the 20th century?
Leadership evolved out of the
There was a 1971 consent decree that was finally a legal, court-mandated compromise between unions and hotel-casinos to employ African Americans. That created a number of openings. What was interesting for the women in our study is that it didn't change their job status a whole lot -- they might get into the casino, but they were still a cook or a maid or a secretary or, in a few rare cases, in publicity offices. So it took another consent decree a decade later to make that same court-mandated request for opening up that employment to women and those of Hispanic origin. So that's a very real and lively history here.
Your book, "Changing the Game: Women at Work in
I made a claim that women in
There was a change in society going on at the time. It was the dancers and choreographers and producers who wanted to pursue their professional work, or the educators like
Did that trend continue over the past two decades?
It continued. There are women entering professions like law and medicine here, and the city is bringing in people from all over the country with similar kinds of higher educational backgrounds. What saddens me is that our support for education is still so low in this state. Because that, from my position, is something that has to be in place for people to prosper. Not exclusively, but largely. ... Higher education gives you more control and more opportunity as well as a higher salary.
Despite the early success with suffrage, the Equal Rights Amendment did not pass in
They were able to pass a pro-choice amendment into the state constitution. You would have to change the constitution to change this particular provision that protects women's right to choose in the state. It's the best-kept secret, and in a way they wanted it that way because it was political mobilization through religious institutions that defeated the ERA, according to those who have written about it. So they wanted to at least get part of it through.
You have long been involved in the Nevada Women's Archives, an initiative launched in the 1990s to collect the personal papers of Nevada women who've had an impact. How do you reconcile that desire to document the distinct experiences of women without perpetuating the "otherness" that contributes to struggles for equality?
I think it's a dilemma of the third-wave generation. Women who came of age in an era where equality was at least perceived to be a thing. Women who were able to do sports in school, get into college without discrimination, get their fellowships if they wanted to go into advanced education, get into law school, get into med school -- that was a norm that was won, and those women had a perception of acting equal. So did
*
Chef
How would you describe your professional journey?
I'm in a dominated male, white profession, especially when I started. Not that that was any sort of a hindrance or a handicap for me, but it was what it was, and it is what it is. So, you have to work three times as hard, you know? ... In the kitchen, you hold your weight. You carry your own weight. So was it a challenge? I don't know. Did it make me who I am today? Absolutely.
What is the mission of Chow to the Core?
If I ever get the opportunity to do anything in the community or the world, there are three things that are important to me: kids and dogs, because they don't have a choice, and I feel like in
So, my first thing was the dogs. I do a little rescue thing with the pit bulls, so we'll train them up and then we gift them.
My next thing was the kids. I had Eat, and I was sitting there and I was thinking, I have this beautiful restaurant, what am I supposed to do? ... I literally woke up one morning and I go: Kids! It's a perfect little culinary school. ... My first (Chow to the Core) class was about how to fill out an application, what you wear to an interview, how you shake someone's hand and look them in the eye. People don't teach those things anymore today, and these kids are already underserved and start at the back of the pack. So I thought, wouldn't it be great to give them a little head start? I also thought, if they work with me two or three years, by the time they get out of high school whatever they decide to do with their life they can always be employable because now they have the experience. ... It's an honor and it's a responsibility.
And Vegas Women Connect?
I thought it would be really cool if we had a gathering of women, all different kinds of women -- grandmothers and daughters and sisters and mothers and lawyers and doctors and waitresses and artists, and just get us all in a room and talk about not so much what we do, but who we are, and see if we can connect and help one another.
It's been fantastic. We just have all these interesting, innovative women who share their journey into who they are, a little bit of what they do, but mostly about how they got where they're at. Their struggles, you know?
What struggles have you faced as a woman?
I'm kind of odd in that area. I don't really look at myself as facing struggles as a woman or a black woman or a gay black woman or anything like that. I look at it as life. I try not to be a victim in my journey on the planet. I change my perspective and look at it as a challenge. I thank God every day for the challenges as opportunities to grow. I really do, it sounds freakin' cheesy, but that's how I survive -- with a positive attitude. Otherwise, I could sit in a corner and shrivel up and be a victim. I don't choose to be a victim. I write my own check.
Who were the inspirational women in your life?
My mom, for sure. My mom was just a really good home cook, and a nice human in general, so she was very influential and very kind and loving. ... I like
What advice would you give young women?
Find something you love to do and don't worry about money. I think people are so caught up about money. I think we were put on this planet to find whatever our gift is and to share that with the world. Some people make a lot of money doing that and some people don't, but at the end of the day I'm rich no matter how much money I made, even when I was making
There's guys that were way ahead of me and that were my bosses, and they're still working for somebody. None of them own three restaurants, none of them are doing what I'm doing or had the opportunities I've had. ... There's no secret to it except hard work, and even after hard work you're not promised. You've got to work hard because that's who you are. -- Camalot Todd
*
LAS
Only 13 percent of all municipal chief administrators -- city and county managers, basically -- in
Three out of four chief administrative officers in the valley are female:
Fretwell, who is leaving in July to become senior vice president of Switch, says that to bring more women into leadership, organizations must provide more opportunities. "As leaders," she says, "it's incumbent upon us to really try and create a culture where people thrive." --
*
A
Is it tough being a woman in the music world?
I feel like being a woman in the music world has an empowerment in itself, because you have a voice that people are listening to. You can use that to show how powerful a woman can be. ... I'm definitely not the typical blonde-haired, blue-eyed, tiny girl -- that's been a challenge that I've come across. ... The sense now is that it's about sexualizing a young woman that's coming up in the industry. I have friends who are writers that are gorgeous women, but are writing for other people that don't really have talent because they're beautiful and can have tons of followers on social media. So that's something I struggle with every day as a bigger woman, and as a biracial woman.
Sometimes I come to a point where I'm like, I'm never going to look like that -- can I push and share my music at the same level? Are they going to want to hear it? But then there are people like
I'm working on my confidence, but it is so many different women doing it and it gets competitive at the end of the day.
Is that competitiveness good or bad?
Depends on the situation, sometimes it makes you better and hungry and expanded. Sometimes it can hurt a woman as well. I'm sensitive, so it can push you down a little bit. It's about a balance of healthy competitiveness. ... It's knowing who you are, being confident and having thick skin. You can't care what people think or say.
Talk a little bit about being a bi-racial woman in America right now
What are you? That's always the biggest question. ... I've learned to heighten it. I'm taking pride in it. So, I'll get piercings and tattoos -- you want to see different? I'll show you different.
I feel blessed for being bi-racial and thriving in the industry, because that overpowers all the insecurities I have in my weight. And connecting to the
Tell me about your song, "
It's this woman-empowerment song that I wrote when I was feeling crappy and bad and just went through a breakup. ... I was at home and had just bought this rose gold jewelry, and my best friends commented and said, "Be rose gold." At first I was like, what should this be about? I started looking up things that describe rose gold, like changes in the light, intensifies with age. Sounds like a woman too. -- Camalot Todd
*
You're a newcomer to
I have my moments. I remember walking on the Strip for the first time. You just look at your feet and there are the fliers (of escorts). I've spent some time in different cities, but I've never seen anything like that. If I had been here even five years ago, I don't know if I would have been able to handle just the environment of Vegas. I think I'm very aware that I'm in Sin City but with a different message.
Let's talk about that message. What do you hope "Magic Mike Live" achieves?
In a way, the goal is to reverse the paradigm, to flip male revues on their head. But it was really important to (creator and director)
There is a line between appreciation and objectification. That's the thing. We don't want to objectify these men. We don't want to be the female version of the men who've harassed and catcalled us. So, what's the next step up? ... I am protective over the men just as men in my role have been protective over women in the past. ... It's about not coming at it from a lower sexual place but a sacred sexual place, respecting men as a god to our goddess.
Have the male performers gotten on board with that approach?
A lot of them have come to me of their own accord, wanting to foster that conversation. To ask, how do I keep it sacred? What does that mean? I can feel when I am going from a place of need or validation versus the expression of authenticity. There's been some fantastic conversations. I think that's the purpose of the show -- to start asking the questions.
It sounds like you have all put a lot of thought into the show.
In comedy school, we would say, "Assume your audience is the smartest." Too often people think we need to water it down for the crowds so everyone can understand. I wholly disagree with that. This show is getting such a good response, and in my opinion it's because we didn't play to the lowest common dominator. We're finding that everyone is ready for that. We are making waves, but it's not anything people didn't want and weren't already demanding.
What feedback have you heard?
I just read one (Instagram message) that was, like, "Thank you so much. We thought it would be sleazy and grimy, but everyone left feeling empowered and sexy and as highbrow as something like this can be." They're not expecting anything more than a typical revue, and they're leaving feeling sexually empowered rather than gross.
I'd say there aren't many productions, especially here in
It's been a big focus of the creative team to create a place where women can go into that bubble. It's sad it's a bubble. Perhaps it will spread. Maybe one day you don't have to go to "Magic Mike Live" to feel like this. ... One of (Channing's) big notes for me was, "I want them to go on the same journey as you. Experience the show through you." There is a moment where I turn into the emcee and I give them permission to do that. And I mean it. I'm on that journey myself. I am truly through this show discovering my own sexual empowerment and finding out what I think is slimy, what I think is empowering, where is our universal line.
Do you think now is the right time for a show like this?
I think culturally we're in a major shift in consciousness. If we hadn't done this show right now, I think we'd be behind the eight ball in a matter of months. I feel the world is primed for a takeover with this new understanding.
That's an optimistic outlook, especially if you look at a lot of news at the national level.
We can look at all that and say, "I'm terrified." To the best of my ability, I attempt not to do that. I genuinely believe the great resistance comes before the greatest changes, the dark before the dawn. I think men are respecting me more in my immediate surroundings than they ever have. I'm really feeling a reverence from men. So, I could take it outside of myself and look at the global state of affairs and think we're screwed, but in my personal life I feel more honored and more supported. Trump and all this other crap? When massive amounts of change happen, those threads of darkness hold on even tighter. --
*
Before
Why did you choose to practice law?
My original goal was to teach eighth graders to love "Beowulf." I tried that, and I thought, there has to be something better that I can do. That's when I decided that maybe I could practice law. I talked to a lawyer in the church my father was pastor of. He said, "You really ought to think about this because it's something you can use in many different ways. You will meet a lot of people in law school that you may become lifetime friends with. It's a way to really have impact." The more he talked about what he saw was the plus, the more I thought, maybe I'll do that.
Then I went to the dean of students at the
I went to the
What was your experience in law school?
There were five women in my class. Now women at the
What was it like working for the city attorney in
The city attorney was named
How did you become involved in this landmark case?
There was a group of women who were graduate students at the
I knew Judy from a women's liberation group. Judy told me, "We feel like we might be prosecuted as accomplices (to women getting abortions)." Back then, abortion was only legal to save the life of the woman. Nobody knew what that meant. The doctors would basically not do procedures.
Judy one day said to me, "We are concerned about our own legal standing. We think we should have a case that would test
There was a hospital called
Judy said to me, "What would you charge us to do this case?" I said that I really thought it would be better if she got a lawyer who was more experienced. I had never done a case in federal court. ... (After doing some research), I told Judy that I would work on the case for free. She said, "You are our lawyer."
What was the process in getting Roe v. Wade to the
First the case went through a three-judge federal court in
There's a procedural policy in law that says if a three-judge court rules that they would not give an injunction because they believe a locally elected official would abide by the judgment of a three-judge federal court, then you have a straight appeal to the
We got notice that the court decided to take the case. That was at a time when all the justices of the
What was it like putting together your argument? What were you thinking? What were you feeling?
I felt that it was a responsibility. I knew there were women who were pregnant who didn't want to be. I thought that I had to do whatever I could legally to try to be sure women could make the choice and not the government.
Did you believe there was a chance you could win even though the
I thought we had a chance because in 1965 there had been a case called Griswold v.
Describe what happened after the
I knew a doctor in
Did you ever consider yourself a hero for women?
I think people do what they can. That was something that I was willing to try to do. It never occurred to me that 46 years later that I would still be talking about it.
How should younger people get involved in issues of reproductive rights?
First,
Is it your mission today to spread that message?
I do a lot of speeches on college campuses trying to talk about why we need cooperation from younger people. There are a lot of younger women in particular who are becoming very active. If you look at the marches that were held not long ago, in most places they had plenty of people participating.
At the march in
How do you feel about the fact that abortion is still so politically charged and that there are states still trying to make having the procedure difficult?
I'm not going to try to change one person's mind unless they're a state legislator. But I would talk to a person about the time when abortion was illegal. That didn't stop abortions from happening. It just made it much more difficult, much more expensive and often much more dangerous. There are always going to be people who are in the opposition. That's why we have to have more people in the pro-choice category and to try to protect
Have you talked with pro-life advocates or sympathized with their point of view?
I can certainly understand that they believe differently than I do. But that's not a reason why their viewpoint should prevail. I really believe the individual should make the decision.
People ask me if the
What keeps you going?
What stiffens the spine is opposition. --
___
(c)2017 the Las Vegas Sun (Las Vegas, Nev.)
Visit the Las Vegas Sun (Las Vegas, Nev.) at www.lasvegassun.com
Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.



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