2016-07-06 Diversity Commission AgendaOr E1)f�
0
ur
;90 19qo
AGENDA
Edmonds Diversity Commission
Edmonds Senior Center
220 Railroad Ave, Edmonds, WA 98020
Wednesday, July 6, 2016
6:OOPM — 7:30PM
6:00 P.M. -
CALL TO ORDER
1 minute
1. Roll Call
1 minute
2. Approval of Agenda
3 minutes
3. Approval of June 1, 2016 Meeting Summary
5 minutes
4. Public Comment
10 minutes
5. Report from the City
• Introduction of Misha Carter
20 minutes
6. Edmonds Arts Commission
10 minutes
7. Community Outreach: Parade Debrief
10 minutes
8. Community Outreach: Commission information cards
5 minutes
9. Community Outreach: Work Plan Update
• Refugee and Immigrant Forum Update
• Workgroups
10 minutes
10. Report to City Council
15 minutes
11. Community Updates
Adjourn —
• Next regular meeting: August 3, 2016, 6PM
Guiding Principles
To ensure we meet our responsibilities as a Commission, we agree to:
start and end our meetings on time
demonstrate our respect for our fellow Commissioners, the City of Edmonds, and the citizens we represent by: being present, being prepared, actively
listening, participating in meetings, completing our individual assignments, and holding ourselves accountable
"step up and step back"
establish goals and action plans that are results oriented
establish subcommittees as needed
engage in courageous, honest, and open dialogue when faced with difficult issues or questions
utilize the "Ouch Rule" (assume positive intent; resist the temptation to be offended)
embrace the education opportunities presented through the Commission meetings
strive to make decisions by consensus. In a case where consensus cannot be reached after a reasonable attempt has been made, the Chairperson may call for a
majority vote.
DRAFT
CITY OF EDMONDS
DIVERSITY COMMISSION
June 1, 2016
The Diversity Commission meeting was called to order at 6:00 p.m. by Mario Brown at 220 Railroad
Avenue, Edmonds.
COMMISSIONERS PRESENT
Ed Dorame — Vice Chair
George Basioli
Diana White
Gayle Ketzel
Patricia Valle
Tung Bui
Mario Brown — Chair
Maria Montalvo
Councilmember Adrienne Fraley-Monillas,
ex officio
Roll Call: Call to order at 6:00 p.m.
COMMISSIONERS ABSENT
Adam Khan
STAFF PRESENT
Patrick Doherty, ED/CS Director
Cindi Cruz, ED/CS Program Coordinator
Michele Rastovich, Diversity Commission
Coordinator
2. Approval of Agenda: The agenda was approved as submitted by consensus.
3. Approval of Meeting Summary of May 4, 2016: By consensus, summary minutes were
approved.
4. Public Comment: Carol Schillios, Fabric of Life, briefly introduced the Fabric of Life shop
in downtown Edmonds and some of their events (Attachment 1).
Laura Johnson and Emma Johnson also joined Commission audience.
5. Report from City: Patrick reminded Commissioners that not all bios have been received, and
that they cannot be posted on the City website until all are available. Notifications of the
survey have gone out to 2200 randomly chosen Edmonds households to encourage
participation. The basic report, available to City in mid -August, will include comparisons to
other similar communities. A 20-40% response rate, considered to be statistically significant,
is expected by the survey company. Some questions are specific to discrimination and will
provide valuable information to City and to the Commission.
6. Capacity Building: Best Practices of Inclusive Communities: Michele presented a brief
overview of the first four of nine principles of welcoming and inclusive communities outlined
in Walking the Walk: Principles for Building Community Capaci , for Equity and Diversity
(Attachment 2).
Draft Meeting Summary
Diversity Commission
June 1, 2016
Page 1
DRAFT
7. Capacity Building: City Demographics: Patrick presented US Census demographic
information. A brief discussion included: Edmonds population increased to 40,343 in 2014
from 39,515 in 2000; housing affordability and aging could be a factor in future
demographics; Edmond School District demographics include a geographic area much larger
than the City of Edmonds; census data does not reflect the diversity of the many people who
do not live in Edmonds, but who come here to work or do business; the service, health care,
retail jobs available in Edmonds often do not pay enough to live in Edmonds; growth is
predicted to be about 3500 in future. The Commission will continue to learn more about the
demographics of our community as more information becomes available. Social Security
Administration and Snohomish County were suggested as possible resources.
8. Community Outreach: Parade Plan Update: Patrick displayed proposed banner proposal.
There was discussion about making the City logo/image more evident. Patrick and Diana will
work on that, and the banner was accepted as proposed. Patrick and Tung will to meet to
discuss logistics of parade invites, an invitation will be included on the Facebook page, and
Diana will invite school diversity groups.
9. Community Outreach: In -Person Community Survey Proposal: Moved to next agenda.
10. Community Outreach: Commission Information Cards: Gayle presented information
cards created by City of Lynnwood Diversity Commission and proposed creating the same
type of card for Edmonds. The card lists Commission sponsored events, details the purpose of
the Commission, and is displayed around the community. Mario, Patrick and Gayle will work
on the messaging for a similar Edmonds card, and George will investigate the printing costs.
The discussion will be continued at the July meeting. The need for a Commission logo was
also discussed, and will be included in a future meeting agenda.
11. Community Outreach: Proposed presentation by Refugee and Immigrant Forum: Van
Dinh Kuno is available on June 29 for a meeting, but since so many Commissioners will not
be available on that date, it was agreed that Michele will get some more proposed dates and
send out a Doodle Poll to determine Commissioner availability. Based on poll results, the
Commission authorized Ed and Mario to select a date. A Wednesday evening, 6pm — 8pm in
the upstairs room of the Senior Center is preferred. Commissioners are most interested in
hearing about demographics, struggles immigrants and refugees encounter when they arrive
in this county or our community, barriers, and how we can assist in overcoming those
barriers. It was agreed that this should be an event open to the community, with targeted
invitations going to local leaders and elected officials, first responders, educators, and local
business through the Chamber and service clubs.
12. Discussion: Work Plan Recommendation: Michele presented the amended work plan with
projects and timelines and asked if proposed projects could be approved in general, with
details to be determined by work groups. The proposed projects were approved and Michele
will coordinate meetings outside of the regular Commission meetings to develop
recommendations. Commissioners volunteered for work groups as follows:
Youth Voice: Community Forum: Leadership Forum:
George Maria Mario
Diana Ed Adrienne
Adrienne (as available) Maria
Draft Meeting Summary
Diversity Commission
June 1, 2016
Page 2
•j_]ZiA Wy
13. Report to City Council: It was suggested that reporting to Council after the parade would be
best, and that two Commissioners, other than the Chair and Vice Chair, would be the most
appropriate presenters. Patrick will coordinate Commissioner availability with the Council
calendar for later in July and Tung, Maria, Pat and Diana were interested in presenting
depending on their schedules
14. Community Updates: Adrienne reported the ribbon cutting for the 228th and Highway 99
crossing had a ribbon cutting with a diverse group of attendees. The City Spray Park opened
and is receiving regional attention on the Parent Map. The Highway 99 Sub Area open house,
the Waterfront Access open house, and the City of Edmonds Memorial Day service were all
well attended. Ed reported the Greater Seattle Business Association (GSBA) has awarded
$410,000 in scholarship to forty-five LGBT youth and would like to meet with Diana about
increasing Edmonds School District participation. Maria described the art work she recently
visited in Providence RI, representing artists from diverse community groups, and it was
agreed that such a project would be an interesting local conversation. Diana attended a World
Day for Diversity event, hosted by Snohomish County Human Rights Commission and the
Lynnwood Diversity Commission at the Edmonds Senior Center, and noted that the Human
Rights Commission may be a likely partner for us. Diana also reported that Edmonds School
District is working with the Tulalip Tribes to build on the Since Time Immemorial model to
insure that the Native perspective is represented appropriately in curriculum. George reported
that Uber recently settled with the National Federation for the Blind for $225,000 in a law
suit about denying rides to passengers traveling with a service animal.
15. Adiourn: 7:35 PM — Next regular meeting: July 6, 2016, 6 PM
Draft Meeting Summary
Diversity Commission
June 1, 2016
Page 3
•j_]ZiA Wy
Attachment 1
Carol Schillios, Founder
Schillios Consulting Group
Volunteer -run Fabric of Life Fair Trade Boutique
Schillios explained that Fabric of Life would be sponsoring a Hijab Day event where non -
Muslims wear Muslim Hijab scarf during a normal day then come together to debrief their
experience.
The goal of the event is...
To hold an event that creates awareness, education and acceptance of Muslim cultural norms.
To bring attention to the Muslim practice of covering and dispel mis-perceptions.
To open a gentle conversation to undo media fear -mongering about all Muslims being terrorists.
To build peaceful dialogues of understanding about cultural diversity.
During a pre -event meeting, participants will learn about Muslim culture, understand Muslim
women's covering philosophies and share strategies for responding to potential reactions.
The event will take place Saturday August 13 & Monday August 15. The media will be invited
to cover the event and debrief the experience and write about what happened.
Draft Meeting summary
Diversity Commission
June 1, 2016
Page 4
•j_]ZiA Wy
Attachment 2•
PRINCIPLES FOR BUILDING COMMUNITY Capacity for Equity and Diversity
1. Draw upon the Assets of Diverse People and Groups
Build upon the assets of your own ethnic group and value the strengths and resources of
people from other backgrounds.
2. Build Trust and Personal Relationships
Nurture trust and personal relationships across boundaries of race, language. culture and
class.
3. Treasure and Develop Cross -Cultural Leadership
Value the knowledge and skills of people who understand and draw upon their own group
history, culture and language, and are able to work effectively and respectfully with other
groups.
4. Recognize Multiple Realities and Identify Common Ground
Work to develop a deeper understanding of the different value systems, perspectives, ways
of doing things and challenges that exist for the various groups within a community. At the
same time, foster opportunities for people to identify common values, goals and needs
across differences of race, language, culture and class.
S. Promote Community Self -Determination
Support the right of people to be involved in deciding what happens in their community,
whether their communities are defined by geography or collective interest.
6. Fight Exclusion
Fight to ensure that people are not kept out of the decision making process because of
racism, classism, language bias and cultural domination.
7. Stand Up Against Bias
Strategically address individual behaviors, institutional practices and public policies that
result in an unequal distribution of goods, services and power.
8. Support Ongoing Growth around Equity and Diversity
On a regular basis, deepen understanding of race, language, culture, class and equity and
increase knowledge about working with people of diverse backgrounds.
9. Take Stock
Hold yourselves accountable to the different ethnic, racial, cultural, linguistic economic
groups in your communities, and regularly asses how well you are addressing issues of equity
and diversity.
Walking the Walk: Principles for Building Community Capacity for Equity and Diversity
Hedy Na-Lin Chang, California Tomorrow, 2000
Funded by Annie E. Casey Foundation, California Wellness Foundation,
And Charles Stewart Mott Foundation
Draft Meeting Summary
Diversity Commission
June 1, 2016
Page 5