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NAWJ WASHINGTON DRAWS YOUNG WOMEN TO PIERCE COUNTY TO INSPIRE THE NEXT GENERATION TO PURSUE CAREERS IN LAW

Written by Jenna Hanchard, K5 News Seattle|August 17, 2017|News

In Washington state, like many other places in the country, there is what is known as the “gavel gap,” where the racial and gender make-up of the judicial branch don’t reflect the people who walk into the courtroom.

Pierce County Judge G. Helen Whitener is trying to change that.

Whitener received a grant from the National Association of Women Judges to host a day-long workshop called The Color of Justice. She organized the networking event for about 80 young women between 11 and 18 years old in Pierce County Thursday.

“Initially it was to be just a small thing in my courtroom – just 20 to 24 girls – and it just blew up,” she said.

Whitener’s goal is to encourage more women of color to become judges.

“If you don’t have different perspectives, the interpretation of the law will be skewed. The society is diverse and the law needs to be perceived through diverse eyes,” she said.

Whitener refers to herself as “Ms. Diversity.”

“I’m a black individual. I’m a woman. I’m an immigrant. I’m disabled. I’m an LGBT, I’m a lesbian. I’m married to a woman,” Whitener said. “Those are all parts of me, but those are all parts of the law as well.”

She wanted that diversity to also be reflected in the crew she assembled Thursday.

“I look around at my colleagues and I see so many powerful women of color, and that really excited me, so imagine what that does for a young girl,” said State Supreme Court Justice Mary Yu, who attended the event.

Yu is the first woman of color to sit on the State Supreme Court.

“We need to look like the community that we serve. Until we do I don’t think we can be as just as we want to be,” she said.

Justice Linda Lee, as well as King County Superior Court Judge Veronica Alicea Galvan, were in also in attendance.

“We have to be able to have institutions that are representative of the people that we serve,” said Galvan.

For Whitener, she hoped the Color of Justice event would be a day where more young women see themselves in the judges, but she also hoped to also push the envelope about the importance of perspective.

“As a judicial officer my personal views have to take a back seat to my interpretation of the law. It has to be balanced, but perspective is important, and perspective matters. I matter, and my voice needs to be heard,” said Whitener. “The scales of justice is a white woman holding a sword in one hand and then a scale, but she also has a blindfold, and my position is it’s time for the judiciary to take off the blindfold. The blindfold prohibits us from seeing each other, and we’re not seeing each other. A lot of the issues we're having today is because we’re not seeing people. We’re not seeing each other as human being.

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For more information contact District Director Judge Karen Donohue at nawj@nawj.org.  Visit NAWJ’s website at www.nawj.org.

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