Pressley, Warren, Lee Re-Introduce Anti-Racism in Public Health Act

WASHINGTON – Today, Congresswoman Ayanna Pressley (MA-07), Senator Elizabeth Warren (D-MA), and Congresswoman Barbara Lee (CA-12) reintroduced the Anti-Racism in Public Health Act of 2023, legislation that would declare racism a public health crisis, create a National Center for Anti-Racism, and establish a Law Enforcement Violence Prevention Program at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. The bill would help expand research and investment into the public health impacts of structural racism and make it a requirement for the federal government to actively develop anti-racist health policy.

Last year, Rep. Pressley, Boston Mayor Wu, and Boston Public Health Commissioner Dr. Bisola Ojikutu celebrated a first-of-its-kind, $493,000 federal grant to help Boston address the public health impacts of structural racism, which was directly informed by the Anti-Racism in Public Health Act. The lawmakers previously introduced the Anti-Racism in Public Health Act in September 2020.

“Until we confront structural racism as the public health crisis that it is, our communities – particularly our Black, brown, and Indigenous neighbors – will continue to be denied access to quality health care and racial disparities in health outcomes will persist,” said Congresswoman Pressley. “We need robust, comprehensive research on the public health impacts of structural racism and police brutality, and policy solutions to bring an end to these disparities once and for all. Our Anti-Racism in Public Health Act is the type of responsive legislation needed to help dismantle centuries of racism in our public health system. We have a mandate to deliver, and our communities deserve nothing less.”

“Centuries of structural racism have created deep disparities in health outcomes for Black and Brown communities that have gone unaddressed for far too long,” said Sen. Warren. “The Anti-Racism in Public Health Act will tackle these disparities head-on and declare racism the public health crisis that it is.”

“From asthma to maternal mortality to police brutality, the data shows communities of color experience higher health disparities in nearly every facet of life,” said Congresswoman Lee. “Centuries of structural racism have created an alarming public health crisis—one that demands a structural solution. Our bill, the Anti-Racism in Public Health Act, will require the federal government to begin actively developing anti-racist health policy, create a National Center for Anti-Racism at the CDC, expand federal research and investment into the public health impacts of structural racism, and more long-overdue action to remedy systemic injustice.”

In addition to allowing for comprehensive research of the impacts of structural racism on public health, the Anti-Racism in Public Health Act would: