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FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
August 28, 2003
Contact:
David Littlefield, TCWF
(818) 702-1925
POLL RESULTS ASSESS CALIFORNIANS' RESPONSES
TO RACIAL PRIVACY INITIATIVE
Voters React to Arguments For and
Against Proposition 54, “Classification by Race, Ethnicity, Color or National Origin”
Woodland Hills — California voters respond
differently to arguments for and against Proposition 54, according to
results of a Field Research Corporation public opinion poll commissioned
by The California Wellness Foundation (TCWF). Poll questions were designed
to discover the extent of voters’ knowledge about arguments for and
against Proposition 54 and its effects. The poll, conducted in English and
Spanish, surveyed a random sample of 629 registered voters, 448 of whom
were deemed likely to vote in the October 7, 2003 recall election.
Analysis and complete tabulations of results are available by clicking
here.
“The California Wellness Foundation is concerned about special health
problems and differences in health outcomes experienced by underserved
Californians,” said Gary L. Yates, TCWF president and CEO. “We were
interested to learn what California voters thought about collecting racial
and ethnic data, as this information is often used in public health
studies.” For example, research surveys by Los Angeles County
include racial and ethnic questions addressing access to health care, health
insurance status, use of health care and preventive services, and disease
management efforts. The survey results have been used by the county to
tailor its public health efforts to respond more effectively to the
differing needs of its many ethnic communities. Similarly, reports from the
California Health Interview Survey, conducted by researchers at the
University of California – Los Angeles, include the incidence of various
diseases broken down along ethnic lines, access to care for immigrant
children, health care issues for Latinos, and racial disparities in health
care for young children.Although the scope of the Racial
Privacy Initiative (RPI) prohibitions and exemptions are by no means clear,
it may be that agencies would be prohibited from collecting racial and
ethnic information such as is collected in these surveys.
Likely voters were asked whether
various arguments in support of or against the proposition would impact
their vote. The poll used five positions taken by each side in the official
ballot arguments. “The poll indicates that arguments used by
those in favor of the proposition and those opposed vary in potential impact
on voter opinion,” said Mark DiCamillo, senior vice president of Field
Research Corporation. The California Wellness Foundation
takes no position on the RPI. The questions in the poll were based on the
arguments for and against the RPI, as contained in the official ballot
arguments. None of the questions were designed to influence participants’
views on racial privacy in general or the RPI in particular. Rather, the
questions were designed to discover what participants honestly think about
collecting racial and ethnic data, the state of their knowledge about the
RPI and what would be its effects. In addition to the
possible recall of Governor Gray Davis, California voters will decide on
Proposition 54 on October 7, 2003. Commonly referred to as the Racial
Privacy Initiative, the proposition would prohibit state and local
governments in California from using race, ethnicity, color or national
origin to classify persons. The California Wellness
Foundation is an independent, private foundation created in 1992, with a
mission to improve the health of the people of California by making grants
for health promotion, wellness education and disease prevention. The
Foundation prioritizes eight issues for funding: diversity in the health
professions, environmental health, healthy aging, mental health, teenage
pregnancy prevention, violence prevention, women’s health, and work and
health. It also provides funding for special projects that fall outside the
eight health issue areas. Since its first year of operation, TCWF has
awarded 3,267 grants totaling approximately $412 million. It is one of the
state’s largest private foundations, making an average of $40 It is one of
the state's largest private foundations, making an average of $40 million in
grants each year in pursuit of its mission. # # #
Note to reporters & editors: "The" in The California Wellness Foundation name is part of the Foundation's legal name. Please do not drop or lowercase the "T."
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