Study Finds Racism In New Orleans' Bourbon Street Bars
Friday, April 22, 2005 at 02:30PM
TheSpook
New Orleans bar tab bias? Blacks charged $9, whites $7.50 [more]
Head to New Orleans' famed Bourbon
Street any hour of the night or day and you'll find music, booze and a
party atmosphere. If you're black, you run a better than even chance of
also finding discrimination, harassment and price gouging, according to
a new study. A study conducted by the Greater New Orleans Fair Housing
Action Center shows that blacks who go for a drink along Bourbon Street
have a 50-50 chance of either having to pay more or being forced into
ordering a minimum number of drinks. The study was done in the wake of
the death of a black Georgia Southern student who suffocated after a
scuffle with white bouncers outside Razzoo Bar and Patio. The
organization paired black and white men -- dubbed mystery shoppers --
of the same type, body style, dress and manner, sent them into 28
Bourbon Street bars within minutes of each other to evaluate the
treatment they received. In 57 percent of the bars, the black men
received less favorable treatment than their white counterparts. In 40
percent of the bars, the black men were charged more for drinks. In 10
percent, they were told there was a drink minimum which they would have
to buy, while the white men weren't. In 7 percent of the bars, the
black men were told they would have to meet a dress code, while the
white men dressed in the same fashion were not. Names of the bars in
the study were not released. They will be notified of the findings and
invited to workshops in May that will stress not only the laws but
sensitivity training. "Why all the fuss over a little discrimination in
nightclubs and bars?" said Fair Housing Action Center spokeswoman Diana
Dunn. "Why? Because we don't want any more young black men killed in
the French Quarter." [more]
Article originally appeared on (http://brownwatch.com/).
See website for complete article licensing information.