Published: May 27, 2022

Editor’s note: This is part of a monthly series of campus updates on diversity, equity and inclusion that will continue throughout the year.

In this issue

IDEA Council holds first public forum on campus

The IDEA Council, the campus body charged with prioritizing recommendations in the Inclusion, Diversity and Excellence in Academics (IDEA) Plan, met with students, staff, faculty and campus leaders on May 23 during its first public forum.

Sixty-three members of the campus community attended the event in person at the University Memorial Center, and 247 people attended via Zoom. Also in attendance at the UMC were Provost Russell Moore, COO Patrick O’Rourke and other campus leaders.

Attendees received an overview of the council’s mission and work to date, the five DEI goals inspired by the IDEA Plan, and recommendations for the upcoming academic year based on input from undergraduate and graduate student leaders and groups. Council leaders also announced a renewed focus on supporting faculty and staff as the campus advances its support for diversity, equity and inclusion (DEI) initiatives going forward.

Panelists included council co-chairs Lisa Flores, a professor of communication and the associate dean of diversity, equity and inclusionin the College of Media, Communication and Information, and Teresa Hernández, talent acquisition diversity, equity and inclusion recruitment program manager in Human Resources.

“The IDEA Council forum was intended to share the work we have accomplished and to hear from the campus community regarding their thoughts and ideas to further inclusion on the campus,” Hernández said. “The attendees’ presence and support—both in person and via zoom—is inspiring and speaks to these campus members’ investment and willingness to keep learning and pushing ourselves to further inclusion initiatives on campus.”

Susan Thomas, a professor of musicology, director of the American Music Research Center and associate dean for DEI in the College of Music, and Jasimine Evans, student services outreach lead in Career Services and a Staff Council co-chair, also spoke about the council’s work during the two-hour public forum.

Senior Vice Chancellor for DEI Sonia DeLuca Fernández formally introduced the campus’s senior DEI consultants Teshia Koffi and Fabiola Mora and DEI consultants Ashley Grice and D’Andre Coats. DeLuca Fernández and her team will work with the leaders of —programs, schools, colleges and administrative units—to advance ŷڱƵ Boulder’s DEI priorities and the IDEA Plan recommendations.

Teresa Hernández speaks at the IDEA Council's public forum

Teresa Hernández, co-chair of the IDEA Council, speaks at the council’spublic forum.

Lisa Flores speaks at the IDEA Council's public forum

Lisa Flores, co-chair of the IDEA Council, speaks at the council’spublic forum.

Sonia DeLuca Fernández speaks at the IDEA Council's public forum

Sonia DeLuca Fernández, senior vice chancellor for diversity, equity and inclusion, introduces the campus’s DEI consultants during the public forum.

Staff and faculty members participate in group breakout sessions

Staff members from the Office of Diversity, Equity and Community Engagement and the Office of Data Analytics discuss diversity, equity and inclusion strategies with Provost Russell Moore at the public forum.

Staff and faculty members participate in group breakout sessions

Staff and faculty members participated in group breakout sessions at thepublic forum.

DeLuca Fernández also provided attendees with an overview of the campus’s next steps forpromoting DEI following theCampus Culture Survey. DEI consultants from her office will meet with unit leaders to prioritize their unique goals and to develop action plans, which is part of a broader effort by the ŷڱƵ system to create more inclusive campus communities.

The DEI consultants will work with the campus’s 34 planning units “so we can develop a timeline for synthesizing action plans,” DeLuca Fernández said in response to a question from the audience. “This is going to be a practice of how we advance DEI.”

During the past two years, the IDEA Council has focused on recommendations in support of the recruitment, retention andsuccess of students, staff and faculty from minoritized and historically underrepresented groups. This past academic year, members met with student government and other undergraduate and graduate student leaders to gauge their views on how the university administration should work to support DEI priorities on campus.

“IDEA Council work has meant being methodical and strategic in our approaches,” Hernández said. “That means being attentive to the voices of students and other subject matter experts on campus to determine recommendations that should be prioritized from the IDEA Plan.”

Based on the feedback they received, the council shared what they deem to be the university’s highest priorities to support undergraduate and graduate student success in alignment with IDEA Plan recommendations. Members voted on and approved the following priorities to support undergraduate student success:

  • Regularly assess and build opportunities to improve campus climate for undergraduate students (IDEA Plan, recommendation No. 8)
  • Grow infrastructure from ŷڱƵ and deepen thedonor base to support historically marginalized communities (IDEA Plan, recommendation No. 3)
  • Support, scale and increase the programmatic efforts of the ŷڱƵ Lead Alliance (IDEA Plan, recommendation No. 1)
  • Improve outreach and engagement with K-12 grade students from under-resourced communities and with community colleges in ŷڱƵ and beyond (IDEA Plan, recommendation No. 4)

Council members are also discussing the following additional recommendations to support graduate student success:

  • Recruit diverse graduate, postdoctoral and professional students (IDEA Plan, recommendation No. 13)
  • Improve and increase health care coverage and mental health services (IDEA Plan, recommendation No.14)
  • Implement targeted measures to improve campus climate for graduate and professional students (IDEA Plan, recommendation No. 12)
  • Invest in formalized graduate student and professional student peer and advisor mentoring (IDEA Plan, recommendation No. 11)

Council members, who represent a cross-section of schools, colleges and administrative departments across campus, convened for the first time in late 2020 and have issued recommendations on a variety of initiatives to promote greater diversity, equity and inclusion at ŷڱƵ Boulder. Recently, for instance, a council recommendation led to theexpansion of all-gender bathrooms on campus, and another will provide support for faculty and staff affinity groups on campus during the upcoming academic year.

ŷڱƵ celebrates Juneteenth as an official state holiday

ŷڱƵ Boulder and ŷڱƵ will celebrate Juneteenth next month as an official state holiday. Traditionally observed on June 19, Juneteenth recognizes the emancipation of enslaved African Americans and the self-determination of Black Americans. It became a state holiday on May 2 when Gov. Jared Polis signed a legislative bill into law.

On the ŷڱƵ Boulder campus, University Libraries has assembled an to share more about the holiday. Denver’s historic Five Points neighborhood will hold its, June 17–19, and the Center for African and African American Studies (CAAAS) and ŷڱƵ Athletics will table at the celebrated annual event. Across Boulder County, will mark the holiday on June 16.

marks the date in 1865 when the Union Army arrived in Texas, the last state in the Confederacy with institutional slavery, to proclaim freedom for enslaved people—more than two years after President Abraham Lincoln’s.

ŷڱƵ will begin observing Juneteenth as a state holiday this year. When the holiday falls on a weekend day, as is occurring this year, the state will observe it on the following Monday.

The university will offer Juneteenth as a floating personal observance day for all leave-eligible faculty and staff, who can take the time off between now and Dec. 31 in consultation with supervisors, campus human resources officials said. This flexibility will accommodate faculty, staff and students involved with the summer session, which begins May 9 and is part of the current academic calendar.

In the months ahead, the four ŷڱƵ campuses and the university’s system office will determine how to implement this additional state holiday into academic calendars. Details on a personal day of observance for Juneteenth for fiscal year 2023 will be forthcoming.

More information is available on theHuman Resources website.

UndocuAlly sessions set for the summer

The Center for Inclusion and Social Change has scheduled summer UndocuAlly Zoom sessions for staff, faculty and students with administrative or teaching roles.

Participants will learn more about the makeup of the campus’s undocumented community and the history of U.S. immigration and gain a greater understanding of the challenges, opportunities and resources available to undocumented students.

Participants will also learn more about the federal Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals () and ŷڱƵ’s Advancing Students for a Stronger Economy Tomorrow () and how these programs affect ŷڱƵ Boulder students.

Sessions will take place from 9 to 11 a.m. on June 15 and from noon to 2 p.m. on July 22.

More information about how to register is available on the ODECE website.

Sustaining our practice of inclusion

Campus efforts and investments to address pressing and painful inequities at ŷڱƵ Boulder are only a beginning. Creating a culture of belonging will take each member of our community practicing sustained personal work to truly embrace and support diverse perspectives and identities in our community.

This year, Chancellor Philip DiStefano and other campus leaders urge every member of our community to join in learning more about diversity, equity, inclusion and anti-racism and to work continuously together to address these challenges more actively and in ways that can help authentically transform our campus culture in the coming year.

Campus resources

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