Race and Community
Your Community
The community in which I have lived for the past several years of my life is Sioux Falls, South Dakota, a relatively agricultural community that combines some major metropolitan features with a distinctive suburban flair. Traditionally, this community has not been noted for its racial diversity, as the vast majority of its residents are Caucasian. According to the United States Census Bureau's information as of 2009, 87.9% of all Sioux Falls residents were Caucasian, while the next highest population group, the population of American Indian and Alaskan Native persons, merely constitutes 8.5% of the city's residents (State and County, 2009). The percentages of populations are comparatively non-existent following the aforementioned group, as 2.9% of the city's inhabitants are Hispanic or Latino in origin, 1.2% of people reported their ethnicity as being Black, .9% of residents are Asian and .1% of the city's inhabitants are native Hawaiian or some other variation of Pacific Islander (State and County, 2009). It should be noted, however, that such infinitesimal percentages are in part attributed to the fact that 1.5% of those responding to this population survey reported that their ethnicity consisted of two or more races.
The lack of diversity in Sioux Falls is underscored by the relative differentiation of housing locations with which the respective racial groups are separated. Dissimilarity of the residential integration and neighborhood characteristics of Sioux Falls indicates that approximately half of minority groups live within their own enclaves (Diversity Data, 2010). This statistic is greatest for the American Indian population, which has a 45.5% rate of dissimilarity, while Hispanics and Blacks, respectively, have a 42% rate and Asian and Pacific Islanders (which comprise 1% of the city's population), have a 32% rate of dissimilarity (Diversity Data, 2010). As these figures indicate there is some dispersal among the races in community dwelling, but there is also a fair amount of separation in housing choices, or in the lack thereof.
As a Caucasian living in Sioux Falls I can confirm that Whites are the predominant racial group in the city, and that they typically enjoy all of the social and economic benefits such a majority would have in this environment. As far as the treatment of other based on their race, I would say that people are not so much treated differently as that in certain social settings (as well as in monetary or business practices and engagements) people of varying ethnicities are fairly rare to see. When one sees such groups in settings which are predominantly comprised of Caucasian people, the minorities are not necessarily treated any differently than others, although in some cases people may tend to look at them a little longer than they would at another Caucasian.
Challenges
Unfortunately, there are a substantial amount of challenges which people of minority ethnic groups face while living in Sioux Falls. It may even be possible that a substantial amount of these challenges are directly related to the lack of diversity within the city. The economic challenges faced by such minority groups are considerable, and there is no shortage of statistical information to buttress such an assertion. Among the most salient examples proving this point is the fact that in a city in which the poverty rate is 7%, the burgeoning numbers for the various minority groups are exceedingly high. The poverty rate for Caucasians is merely six percent, while the same static for American Indians is almost eight times higher at 47% (Diversity Data, 2010). Blacks and Hispanics have roughly a 28% rate of poverty (Diversity Data, 2010). These figures are all the more stark when one pauses to consider that again, the Sioux Falls population consists of only 8.5% American Indians, yet this ethnicity determines roughly half of the city's poverty rate.
Several different media have confirmed that the incidence of poverty among children is particularly devastating in Sioux Falls. Fortunately, there are a number of community organizations which have undertaken the arduous task of ameliorating such a pressing problem, as the following quotation from a South Dakota children's advocacy newsletter readily demonstrates. "South Dakota Voices for Children in late 2008 brought together key stakeholders to identify cornerstones and develop recommendations to combat childhood poverty and shift public policy. That work is the subject of a report "A Common Good," which was released mid-summer in Sioux Falls and Rapid City and is also available online at sdvoicesforchildren.org. The five cornerstones are economic security, housing, health and nutrition, education, and building public will (Lift SD Families, 2009)."
If I could change any inequities in Sioux Falls...
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