"We broke away as a country from England to get away from this notion of aristocracy, this notion of princes and kings, but we have them today they're called the billionaires," said Dr. Scott Myers-Lipton, co-principal investigator and professor emeritus at San Jose State University.
The San Jose State Human Rights Institute studied 190 statistics from more than 100 recent studies conducted on Silicon Valley.
The hope after each year's report was that progress would eliminate income inequality and discrimination.
Instead, the 2024 Silicon Valley Pain Index found they got worse.
"There hasn't been the large-scale change that I thought that we thought when we started," said Myers.
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Some key highlights show:
"Behind every statistic is a human, every number represents a human being whose life matters," said Dr. Imee Almazan, interim superintendent for the Alum Rock Union Elementary School District.
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Second Harvest of Silicon Valley says it's now serving 500,000 clients each month, up 40,000 from the previous year.
"How is it that in a place with such great wealth and prosperity, one in six of our neighbors rely on Second Harvest to put food on the table?," said Leslie Bacho, CEO of Second Harvest Food Bank of Silicon Valley.
The institute's goal is to put pressure on elected officials and organizations to address the issues highlighted in these annual reports.
Since 2020, some policies have passed through legislative hurdles and are on their way to taking effect, including a guaranteed income for thousands of homeless high school seniors and funding for more affordable rental homes.
The hope now is still that those who can make change, listen.
"We know the patterns, and we know the areas that are getting worse, we highlighted them in that report," Myers-Lipton said. "So we're saying, 'Respond to this need.'"
The institute said it will have the report sent to every local elected official and nonprofit leader by the end of Tuesday.