Statements of Support

  • “Racial inequities persist across the board, when it comes to criminal justice, health, life expectancy, and educational attainment—and equal pay is no exception. Women of color carry a double burden of both sexism and racism,” said Cook County Board President Toni Preckwinkle. “At the current rate of change, Black women will have to wait until 2124 for equal pay. Latina women will have to wait until 2233. I am grateful to the organizers of Equal Pay Day Chicago for moving the official date to Latina Equal Pay Day: we need to center equity in all the issues where racial disparities persist, and ensure that women of color achieve the same equality someday—and hopefully someday sooner than 2233.”

    Toni Preckwinkle, Cook County Board President

  • “Nationally, 71 percent of households with children rely on women’s income for their economic well-being, and so many of the people on the front lines of this coronavirus crisis are women—, disproportionately black and brown women,” said Cherita Ellens, CEO of Women Employed. “They are healthcare workers, grocery clerks, cleaners, child care providers, food service workers, and caregivers. Their jobs are low paid, and many don’t have access to paid sick time or paid family and medical leave. In this moment, we have the power to act and use a gender-equity lens in creating new public policy and corporate solutions that ensure women and their families aren't left behind even more.”

    Cherita Ellens, CEO of Women Employed

  • "Pay equity is at the forefront of all of our minds. Year after year, women and people of color are not making the wages they deserve. At a time when we are in a world crisis that is going to bankrupt millions it is again the women and children that will suffer most. We can not continue to stand on the sidelines watching folks work hard every day and not be paid their fair share. WE WILL stands with our coalition partners fighting for pay equity."

    Alexandra Eidenberg, WE WILL Founder

  • "If we want to move our economy in the right direction, we need to close the gender wage gap that persists in the United States. Over a 40-year career, women earn $80,000 less than men for doing the exact same work. Those are lost earnings that could have been used to support a household, put children through college or save for retirement. It’s time to end this disparity."

    Susana A. Mendoza, Illinois Comptroller

  • “The average wage gap number we hear so often doesn’t tell the whole story. On the 10th annual equal pay event that our coalition has organized, we seek to lift up all women in this movement for pay equity.”

    Barb Yong of Golan Christie Taglia LLP and Chair of the Equal Pay Day Coalition

  • “When we discuss the gender wage gap, it is important to recognize the true barriers Latinas face. By rallying on this day, we put the experiences of women of color at the forefront. Every woman deserves a fighting chance to help their families thrive.”

    ​Linda Xóchitl Tortolero, President & CEO of Mujeres Latinas en Acción

  • "Student debt is another threat to economic security. Women seek advanced degrees as a way to bridge the pay gap, but find themselves deeper in debt. Women hold nearly two-thirds of the outstanding student debt in the United States as of 2019."

    Ruth Holst, president of the Chicago branch of the American Association of University Women (AAUW)

  • “Equal pay is more than just the money women earn, it’s about the increase in choice, justice, opportunity, and empowerment that extends far beyond individual women themselves and into so much of our society. This is a global fact. UN Women, through the support of UN Women USA Chicago, joins in the fight for equal pay.”

    Elizabeth Toms, President, UN Women USA Chicago

  • “The COVID-19 outbreak has only made more clear what we already know, that paying women equitably and providing paid sick time, is essential to the economic vitality of our region and our country. The Equal Pay Day Rally is a way to bring awareness and remind everyone that pay equity and paid sick leave are not just a women’s issue – these issues affect us all.”

    Felicia Davis, President and CEO, Chicago Foundation for Women

  • “Women earn 80 cents for every dollar earned by a man, a gap that is even wider for women of color. NCJW advocates for measures that would help close the gap, including updating and strengthening the Equal Pay Act, barring retaliation against workers who disclose their own wages to co-workers, and prohibiting employers from seeking a job applicant’s salary history. The COVID-19 outbreak adds new fears of illness, job layoffs, and economic insecurity. For over 125 years, NCJW has fought for women, children and families. NCJW will never stop fighting for pay equity.”

    Debbie Vietinghoff, President, National Council of Jewish Women Chicago North Shore