1977 National Women’s Conference Plan of Action success?

The plan of action adopted at the 1977 National Women’s Conference featured 26 resolutions, or planks, on the following topics:
By a topic by topic breakdown how successful have each of these been?
Arts and humanities: Women should have equal opportunities in federal posts and equal access to arts grants.
Battered women: A national clearinghouse must be created to support local organizations helping battered women and working to prevent domestic violence.
Business: More government contracts to women-owned businesses, which numbered less than one percent in 1977.
Child abuse: More prevention, treatment and protective services.
Child care: Care must be low cost and high quality.
Credit: The Equal Credit Opportunity Act must be enforced to make sure that women are no longer denied credit on the basis of gender.
Disabled women: Equal access to education, training, employment and child custody rights.
Education: More women in leadership positions and in textbooks. Title IX must be enforced.
Elective and appointive office: More representation of women.
Employment: More job opportunities and less discrimination.
Equal Rights Amendment: The ERA must be ratified.
Health: Health insurance benefits must include family planning and other concerns relevant to women.
Homemakers: Must be covered under Social Security and have greater economic security, especially in the event of divorce or the death of a spouse.
Insurance: Eliminate practices that deny women coverage on the basis of gender.
International affairs: Increase the number of women in the departments of state and defense, aid women in developing nations and promote nuclear disarmament.
Media: More women in media jobs, especially in leadership positions.
Minority women: Eliminate discrimination, support affirmative action, guarantee tribal rights and prevent deportation of mothers of American-born children.
Offenders: Improve health services and educational and vocational training.
Older women: Help older women live with dignity.
Rape: Expand the definition of rape to include married men who abuse their wives and reduce legal burdens on victims.
Reproductive freedom: Support Roe v. Wade, promote family planning and allow Medicaid payments for abortion.
Rural women: Create a federal rural education policy and expand ownership rights for farm wives.
Sexual preference: Implement legislation to eliminate discrimination on the basis of sexual preference and repeal state laws restricting private sexual behavior between consenting adults.
Statistics: Federal agencies should collect and analyze data in ways that assess the impact on women.
Women, welfare and poverty: Improve social security and retirement systems, raise minimum wage, provide child care and focus on welfare and poverty as major women’s issues.
Continuing committee of the conference: Create a committee to follow up on recommendations and take steps to convene a Second National Women’s Conference.
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Some of it has been achieved. Discrimination in lending has mostly disappeared, the federal government does a lot of gender based analysis, there are laws prohibiting discrimination on the basis of sexual orientation, and Title IX is generally enforced.
But a lot of things haven’t happened.
-The ERA wasn’t passed.
-There are many health plans that cover Viagra (!) but not birth control. Which is frankly, ridiculous since childbirth costs insurance a fortune, but companies have learned they can force women to pay for it.
-Women pay more for health insurance.
-Child care is very expensive in the US and gets less government funding than it does in other Western countries.
-Homemakers do not get social security.
-Rape is rarely prosecuted and even when offenders are convicted, they generally serve less time than small scale drug dealers.
-Roe v Wade has been severely curtailed in the last 30 years.