Diversity & Inclusion
DEI / POC in Tech / Women in tech

Report ranks DC as 4th most STEM-diverse city, but we’re not sure why

Gender diversity is strong here, but the racial diversity of the D.C.-area STEM workforce is seriously lacking.

The Technoir 2.0 pitch contest, held in December, helped promote entrepreneurs of color in the District. (Photo by Lalita Clozel)

D.C.’s STEM workforce ranks fourth in the country for its diversity, according to a survey by personal finance website SmartAsset. Yet, it’s far from racially diverse.
The high ranking is mainly due to the share of women in the local technology and science workforce. (The diversity score is based on an average of gender and racial diversity indicators.)
In the District women have taken 42 percent of these jobs. That’s the biggest proportion compared to all 10 most STEM-diverse cities, according to SmartAsset’s analysis of U.S. Census Bureau data.
Read the report
When it comes to racial diversity, though, D.C. is lagging far behind cities like Memphis, Stockton, Calif., or Baltimore. White men and women hold 65 percent of STEM jobs here, a higher proportion than San Francisco, Dallas, Los Angeles, New York and New Orleans, per SmartAsset. (Side note: Silver Spring’s STEM workforce is 79 percent white.)
African-Americans have 27 percent of D.C.’s STEM positions; but according to the Census Bureau’s 2013 numbers, they compose nearly half of the District’s population.
Typically well represented in these industries, Asians constitute only 6 percent of the city’s science and technology jobs. Hispanics or Latinos, who represent about 10 percent of District residents, also hold 6 percent of these positions.

Engagement

Join the conversation!

Find news, events, jobs and people who share your interests on Technical.ly's open community Slack

Trending

DC daily roundup: April's biggest DMV funding stories; VCs head to Hill and Valley Forum; AI lobbying tripled

DC daily roundup: DMV innovation's movers and shakers; DDOT's social media troll; facial recognition tech at DCA and BWI

DC daily roundup: An athletic tech acquisition; a reflection on summer 2020's equity promises; data center taxes

DC daily roundup: Auxa Health's seed raise and Nasdaq shoutout; the $500M Tech Hubs race; TikTok ban's impact on the marginalized

Technically Media