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Unannotated Code of Maryland (Last Updated: May 16, 2014) |
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STATE FINANCE AND PROCUREMENT |
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DIVISION II. GENERAL PROCUREMENT LAW |
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TITLE 14. PREFERENCES |
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SUBTITLE 3. MINORITY BUSINESS PARTICIPATION |
§ 14-301.1. Legislative findings[Section subject to termination by § 14-309 of this subtitle]
Latest version.
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The General Assembly finds the following:
(1) the State of Maryland wishes to provide all of its citizens with equal access to business formation and business growth opportunities;
(2) the elimination of discrimination against minority- and women-owned businesses is of paramount importance to the future welfare of the State;
(3) the General Assembly has received and carefully reviewed the disparity study entitled "The State of Minority- and Women-Owned Business Enterprise: Evidence from Maryland" commissioned by the General Assembly and published on February 17, 2011 (the Study), and finds that the Study provides a strong basis in evidence demonstrating persistent discrimination against minority- and women-owned businesses;
(4) based on its review of the Study, the General Assembly finds that:
(i) there are substantial and statistically significant adverse disparities between the availability and utilization of minorities and women in the private sector in the same geographic markets and industry categories in which the State does business;
(ii) the State would become a passive participant in private sector racial and gender discrimination if it ceased or curtailed its remedial efforts, including the operation of the Minority Business Enterprise Program;
(iii) there are substantial and statistically significant adverse disparities for all racial and ethnic groups and nonminority women combined in all major contracting categories in State procurement;
(iv) there are substantial and statistically significant adverse disparities for all individual racial and ethnic groups and for nonminority women in most major industry categories in State procurement;
(v) there is ample evidence that discrimination in the private sector has depressed firm formation and firm growth among minority and nonminority women entrepreneurs; and
(vi) there is powerful and persuasive qualitative and anecdotal evidence of discrimination against minority and nonminority women business owners in both the public and private sectors;
(5) as a result of ongoing discrimination and the present day effects of past discrimination, minority- and women-owned businesses combined continue to be very significantly underutilized relative to their availability to perform work in the sectors in which the State does business;
(6) minority prime contractors also are subject to discrimination and confront especially daunting barriers in attempting to compete with very large and long-established nonminority companies;
(7) despite the fact that the State has employed, and continues to employ, numerous and robust race-neutral remedies, including aggressive outreach and advertising, training and education, small business programs, efforts to improve access to capital, and other efforts, there is a strong basis in evidence that discrimination persists even in public sector procurement where these efforts have been employed;
(8) this subtitle ensures that race-neutral efforts will be used to the maximum extent feasible and that race-conscious measures will be used only where necessary to eliminate discrimination that was not alleviated by race-neutral efforts;
(9) this subtitle continues and enhances efforts to ensure that the State limits the burden on nonminority businesses as much as possible by ensuring that all goals are developed using the best available data and that waivers are available whenever contractors make good faith efforts; and
(10) State efforts to support the development of competitively viable minority- and women-owned business enterprises will assist in reducing discrimination and creating jobs for all citizens of Maryland.