For The First Time In History, North Carolina Has 6 Black Female Police Chiefs
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/entry/for-first-time-in-state-history-north-carolina-has-six-black-female-police-chiefs_us_59b6a5c7e4b06e4604a1fd68?ncid=inblnkushpmg00000009
Six black women currently hold the title of police chief in North Carolina, marking the first time this has happened in state history, according to WRAL.
Among them are Raleighs Cassandra Deck-Brown, Durhams C.J. Davis, Morrisvilles Patrice Andrews and Fayettevilles Gina Hawkins, all of whom spoke to the local station last week about their experiences being women of color in leadership positions within the force. The women opened up about whats it like being in the male-dominated field and the obstacles theyve overcome. Women only make up 13 percent of the police force in America, according to the National Center for Women and Policing.
Weve broken a glass ceiling, Deck-Brown told WRALs Lena Tillett. So, becoming chief, the honor is knowing that somebody else has that opportunity to get there.
The women, who said they often feel the need to do more to prove their abilities to men who may doubt them, have over 100 years of experience among them. Andrews, who was sworn in to her position in Morrisville last year, was the fourth black female police chief appointed in her area. Others, like Hawkins, who began as Fayettevilles police chief in June, became the first woman and first minority in the city to do so.