Dayton, Ohio

The Black Wall investigated Dayton, Ohio using one simple standard: outcomes. Not speeches. Not political parties. Not diversity slogans. Not ribbon cuttings. Not downtown development projects. Outcomes. Under the Black Wall system, politicians are graded based on measurable conditions affecting Black residents in five core categories: Housing. Education. Policing/Public Safety. Healthcare. Wealth/Economic Mobility. And here is the reality: Black residents in Dayton still rank near the bottom or last across nearly every major quality-of-life category compared to Whites, Asians, and in many cases Hispanics. DAYTON RACIAL OUTCOME RANKINGS. HOUSING: 1. White 2. Asian 3. Hispanic 4. Black. EDUCATION: 1. Asian 2. White 3. Hispanic 4. Black. WEALTH / HOUSEHOLD INCOME: 1. Asian 2. White 3. Hispanic 4. Black. POVERTY EXPOSURE, lowest poverty: 1. Asian 2. White 3. Hispanic 4. Black, highest poverty exposure. PUBLIC SAFETY / VIOLENT CRIME EXPOSURE, lowest exposure: 1. Asian 2. White 3. Hispanic 4. Black, highest exposure. HEALTHCARE / LIFE EXPECTANCY OUTCOMES: 1. Asian 2. White 3. Hispanic 4. Black. That means despite years of political leadership, development projects, and public promises, Black communities in Dayton still disproportionately absorb poverty, violent crime exposure, housing instability, shortened life expectancy, educational underperformance, and wealth stagnation. Under the Black Wall system, this matters more than rhetoric. Because if Black residents still rank last, then the system itself is still failing them. DAYTON BLACK WALL POLITICAL GRADES. Mayor Jeffrey J. Mims Jr., F. Commissioner Shenise Turner-Sloss, F. Commissioner Chris Shaw, F. Commissioner Matt Joseph, F. Commissioner Darrell L. Fairchild, F. The reason every grade remains failing under the Black Wall system is because the system asks one brutal question: Did Black residents stop ranking last? If the answer is no, the grade remains failing. The Black Wall system does not reward new studies, new task forces, downtown revitalization projects, new slogans, media appearances, or speeches that fail to materially improve Black conditions. Traditional politics often rewards effort. The Black Wall rewards measurable outcome change. If Black residents remain last in wealth, last in educational attainment, highest in poverty exposure, highest in violent crime exposure, and heavily concentrated in unstable conditions, then leadership cannot receive passing grades simply because programs were announced. Under the Black Wall system, representation alone is not success. Intentions alone are not success. Speeches alone are not success. Only measurable condition improvement counts. And in Dayton, the measurable gaps are still severe.


