Number of Women Serving on Detroit Federation Board Barely Increases AMY J. MEHLER Staff Writer SHIRLEY HARRIS LINDA LEE MICHELLE PASSON T he number of Detroit women who serve as officers and board members of the city's Jewish Welfare Federation has barely increased in the last five years. Women occupy 14 of the 99 seats on the JWF board of governors, the Federation's top body of lay leadership. Five years ago, women held 13 of 93 board positions. Despite these numbers, Federation staffers such as Michelle Passon, director of leadership development, believe that women's in- volvement is growing and breaking new ground. "Even though there's been little growth (for women) on the board of governors, it doesn't mean that other areas of leadership in the Federation are under- represented," she said. Mrs. Passon, who in 1986 conducted her own survey of women's leadership roles in the local Federation, found women had zero member- ship on the finance com- mittee and held 1 percent of committee chairs compared to 43 percent of Federation committees nationally. Despite these findings, Mrs. Passon said the status of women is better today, pointing to an increase in the number of women presi- dents of Federation agencies and to the increase of women members on Federation's executive committee. "For the first time in the Jewish Welfare Federation's 64 years of existence, there are three women presidents of agencies," Mrs. Passon said. "This would have been unheard of even 10 years ago." Linda Lee is president of the Jewish Community Center, Linda Z. Klein heads the Jewish Vocational Ser- vice and Janet Levine is president of Federation Apartments. There are 12 agencies in all. In 1970, Mrs. Passon said, two out of 18 members of the JWF executive committee were women. In 1986, five out of 21 member were wo- men. Today, six of the 35 committee members are women. Mrs. Passon also cited the number of women recipients of the annual Fred M. Butzel Memorial Award for Com- munity Service, the highest honor the Jewish Welfare Federation bestows. Of the last 39 honorees, eight have been women. Women occupy only 14 of the 99 seats on Detroit's board of governors, the Federation's top body of lay leadership. Five years ago, women held 13 of 93 board positions. During the mid-1980s, Mrs. Passon said more was done to promote women in non-traditional leadership roles. "The path to leadership for any aspiring lay person is through the Allied Jewish Campaign — in areas of fi- nance and major gifts — not through the Women's Divi- sion or educational and ser- vice oriented boards and committees," she said. Shirley Harris, vice presi- dent of United Jewish Charities and whose vol- unteer career with the JWF spans almost 40 years, said she notices more and more women with professional business credentials coming into the ranks of Federation leadership. "Women have established their rights," she said. "They are asked to join committees with increased frequency, and they sit on them." Mrs. Harris, the first woman in Federation to co- chair a division in the gen- eral Campaign, feels there's a good representation of women in the Federation. Mrs. Harris has also held positions in women's en- dowment fund-raising, gen- eral fund-raising, and this year sits on a new JWF con- trol advisory planning com- mittee which authenticates requests for monetary grants. Linda Lee, the first woman president of the JCC since 1941, said the JWF has a way to go before it fills its top echelons with women. "Women seem to roll up their sleeves and take care of the nitty-gritty," she said. "Women aren't that hung up on titles. Maybe if we had been more insistent, we'd have achieved higher posi- tions sooner." Mrs. Lee, who was recently named a Heart of Gold reci- pient by United Way, is one of three women on a Federa- tion strategic planning committee with a total membership of 17. "They then added 36 addi- tional spots for subcom- mittees," she said, "but wo- men only held 10 of those positions. "There are still com- mittees with dispropor- tionate (low) numbers of women," she said. "There are certainly enough capable women, but we can't expect changes over night." Mrs. Passon said change was her goal when she first conducted her survey. It was prompted by an earlier study that revealed a perception that women who work in Jewish federations were less involved in areas such as fi- nance, budget and business. THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS 27