WASHINGTON (AP) -- Patricia Ireland, a prominent women's rights
advocate, has been dismissed after six months as chief executive of the
YWCA of the U.S.A.
Dorris Daniel-Parkes has been named interim director by the National
Coordinating Board of the YWCA, the organization said.
"We have the deepest admiration for Ms. Ireland's dedication to
women's issues and social justice, but the YWCA has proved to be the
wrong platform for her to advocate for these issues," board
chairwoman Audrey Peeples said in a press release.
A spokesman for the YWCA did not immediately return a phone call
Monday night about the dismissal Thursday, first reported in this week's
Newsweek magazine.
Ireland, a former president of the National Organization for Women,
was named YWCA's chief executive in April. At the time she said
she planned to bring new energy into the 145-year-old organization,
increasing its national prominence and political activism.
Ireland said members of the board had met with her in New York and
first asked for her resignation, The New York Times quoted her as saying
in a story for Tuesday editions. She said she declined because she
did not want to give the impression she had "jumped ship."
"I was uncharacteristically speechless," Ireland said.
"There had been no notice."
Ireland speculated that her dismissal may have come from two things,
the Times said. In recent years the YWCA had been more focused on
restructuring than on advocacy, she said, and her enthusiasm for
advocacy might have "raised some disquiet in some quarters."
Ireland also said reported opposition from conservative groups after
her appointment "set this relationship off on a somewhat difficult
course."
Founded in New York in 1858 as the Young Women's Christian
Association, the YWCA now has more than 300 branches in the United
States providing child care services, educational programs, employment
training, job placement and shelter for women and families. It
recently moved its headquarters to Washington.
Ireland spent a decade as NOW's outspoken president, helping lead
opposition to Clarence Thomas' Supreme Court nomination and spearheading
efforts to preserve abortion rights. She has also worked as a
Washington lobbyist and adviser on equal employment opportunity issues.
Daniel-Parkes has been with the YWCA for more than 15 years.
She most recently served as the group's former director of human
resources.
------
On the Net:
http://www.ywca.org