ERG Listening Session Recap
/From the ERG Council Chair Keisha Clark and Co-chair Ben Parmentier:
For those of you that did not make the ERG Listening Session on July 8, here is what your colleagues want you to know:
There was an overwhelming agreement that the ERG Listening Sessions need to continue. We want our leaders to know that we are listening to the way they communicate and what they prioritize. It is important to separate protestors from property and lamentation from looting. There was much disappointment that the organization that we are proud to work for was tardy to the table. Black colleagues as well as their White counterparts want to talk about what is happening in their own business units. The workforce is calling for training on these important subjects to better educate themselves on the current issues. There is a real fear of retaliation for speaking out about injustices and safe spaces need to be cultivated. Black colleagues shared lived experiences such as praying that their children and spouses make it back home safely from the store and celebrating that their children made it to adulthood alive. Black people are fatigued teaching and telling their stories repeatedly.
It is time to take our D&I Strategic Plan to the next level. If we want to make data driven decisions to invest in this work, we can consider tracking metrics on promotability, upward mobility, and leadership presence. Not all stories will fit into a quantifiable lens, however the quality of the experience holds much value. BLACK LIVES MATTER.
Unforgettable testimonies:
“As a Black father, it chokes me up to have to have a talk with my three year old daughter about why she may be treated differently in this world because of the color of her skin. This is a burden that Black parents share that White parents do not.”
“My husband is always going to the hardware store on weekends for his many projects around the house. As a Black mother, it hurts to have your child wonder if her Dad is going to make it back home.”
“I told my boys they can’t pierce their ears and I tell my husband that he cannot either to set the example. Anything that will draw attention to you, I want to minimize. I consider it an accomplishment that my children made it to adulthood.”
The below resources are shared for your information, which include some mentioned in the listening session and chat:
Your Black Colleagues May Look Like They Are OK - Chances Are, They're Not
What it really means to be an anti-racist, and why it's not the same as being an ally
Suggested reading/viewing:
1619 Podcast on ITunes
Slave Patrols by Sally E Hadden
13th on Netflix
The New Jim Crow: Mass Incarceration in the Age of Colorblindness by Michelle Alexander
How to Be Anti-Racist by Ibram Kendi
White Fragility by Robin DiAngelo
Black Like Me by John Howard Griffin
Race: The Power of Illusion on PBS