IISC Brings Equity to RI Planning Process

December 17, 2015 4 Comments

Sustainable City Network publishes about best practices for Leaders in Government, Education, and Healthcare. Recently they featured IISC Senior Associate Cynthia Sila Parker, reflecting on Rhode Island’s 2-year planning process, which incorporates equity goals.

Infusing Equity into the Urban Planning Process

Rhode Island Shares Experiences and Lessons Learned

Link to article

If you want to include equity concerns in your long-range planning, your process might be as important as your results.

That’s what the Rhode Island Office of Statewide Planning discovered when it incorporated equity goals into its two-year plan for the first time.

Rhode Island is one of many states whose laws require comprehensive plans for areas such as housing and economic development. Detailed planning also is required to win grants, such as the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development grant that funded the plan. But equity was a new requirement, and one that didn’t readily fit in with the usual way of doing things.

At the 2015 Growing Sustainable Communities Conference held recently in Dubuque, Nathan Kelly, a consultant with Horsley Witten Group, and Cynthia Silva Parker with the Interaction Institute for Social Change, described some of the successes, insights and unexpected pitfalls of the planning process, which began in 2013 and is still in development.

“To apply for a grant, to create a request for proposals, to hire consultants, to set timelines, to put all of your ducks in a row and then say, ‘Oh, by the way, we’re going to try to address social equity,’ it’s like trying to put a sweater on an octopus,” Kelly said.

What is equity? In the simplest terms, it means fairness, which is not necessarily the same thing as equality.

“It’s not about everybody getting the same thing,” Parker said. “It’s about everybody getting what they need in order to improve the quality of their situation.”

One difficulty in including equity goals in planning is that the people who need them most can be hard to involve. Traditionally, planners involve stakeholders by inviting them to public meetings and asking them to read and comment on plans. This can be a time-consuming process, and people who work multiple jobs and lack transportation and child-care options are unlikely to show up at the library for a three-hour meeting.

And even if they’re able to offer their time, they may not be willing.

“Trust is the No. 1 thing, ‘Why are you asking, and will it make a difference,’” Parker said. “When we got started, there was a bit of interesting community jargon: ‘Planning Fatigue.’ People were tired of being asked to come to meetings, asked to share their vision, asked to draw another picture of a beautiful community, and then nothing is going to happen, or it’s going to take 15 years and they’re going to say, ‘We don’t even remember that we were part of that.’”

Once these unheard voices are brought into the process, there can be one more difficulty: getting the more privileged participants to hear them.

“If you bring these people together and you say, ‘Oh, come be different, just like us! Look different, but don’t think differently, don’t act differently, don’t frame issues differently, don’t have different solutions,’ that’s the un-inclusive version of diversity,” Parker said. “You want to make space for people to show up and be who they are.”

The Rhode Island group put together a Social Equity Advisory Committee (SEAC) to guide the process and critique the suggestions from an equity point of view. To make sure discussions were open and useful, they began with 11 guidelines for discussion:

1. Safe place: Disagreement is fine, but harsh criticism can shut down conversation.

2. Anonymity: A meeting is a safe place to explore without worrying about what happens outside the meeting.

3. General interruption about oppression/teachable moments: It may be necessary to stop conversation briefly to explain to someone who has inadvertently said something offensive.

4. Listen.

5. One microphone: No side conversations.

6. Everybody has a voice.

7. Step up, have your say, step aside.

8. Use technology respectfully: Take cell phone conversations out of the room.

9. Clarify definitions: Explain your terms.

10. Common language: Avoid jargon.

11. Land the plane: Be brief and don’t ramble.

Racism in particular is a difficult topic to talk about, but it’s impossible to discuss equity without addressing it too.

“It’s important to think and talk about racism not principally on that micro level where we’re often tempted to think about it … but on the macro level,” Parker said. “How do we engage our institutional practices? Who is eligible for programs? What are the requirements for jobs? What are ways in which we inform contractors that contracts are available?”

Barriers can exist without anyone having bad intentions, and those barriers are often invisible to those in more privileged positions.

The committee had to work to bring the residents most affected into the process, to locate them and gain their trust, to educate them on the decisions that had to be made and the limits that surrounded them, and to give them time and space to talk.

But there was another level of education happening at the same time: making sure that members of the planning community understood what equity was and why it was important.

“Some of this is completely foreign to major decision-makers at the state, county and city level,” Kelly said. Committee members had to “develop that understanding that this is important, that it’s the right thing to do. I found myself saying, ‘When we’re writing plans, we’re supposed to be writing them for everybody, right?’”

Naturally there were disappointments along the way. Some communities were difficult to hear from and some suggestions were widely supported but not practical within the political reality of the state. One indication of success, though, was that parts of the finished plan were substantially different from what they would have been without the committee’s efforts. For instance, the final plan included a goal to “foster an inclusive economy that targets opportunity to typically underserved populations,” including not only marginalized races and classes but the homeless, the disabled and the formerly imprisoned. These guidelines, Kelly said, would probably not have existed if the plan had been developed through a more traditional process.

Another indication of success? Ironically, the ongoing tension of the process.

“There was a very interesting moment where the planners were getting pushed from this side by the equity committee and from the other side by the more traditional business concerns,” Parker said. “I thought, we must be doing something right if nobody’s happy with us.”

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4 Comments

  • Jen Willsea says:

    Thanks for sharing these important lessons, Cynthia!

  • Curtis Ogden says:

    Great stuff, Cynthia! Thank you.

  • Michael Blanger says:

    Hello- Thank you for your article.
    Your article states the following:
    “What is equity? In the simplest terms, it means fairness, which is not necessarily the same thing as equality.
    “It’s not about everybody getting the same thing,” Parker said. “It’s about everybody getting what they need in order to improve the quality of their situation.”

    I cannot find any dictionary that defines “equity” as, “It’s not about everybody getting the same thing.” In fact, it means that everybody gets the same thing!

    Am I missing something?

    • Maggie says:

      Hey, Michael… Loosely, I think people often talk about equity as trying to get to the same (or similar) outcome for everyone… a typical example is three people trying to watch a baseball game, but theirs a fence in the way… the adult can see over the fence, one kid is just below the fence and one is very tiny… equality gives them each a box to stand on making the adult very tall, the middle kid able to see over and the little one still below the fence. Equity is then giving them each what they need to see over the fence. The adult needs nothing, the middle kid one box, the little kid two boxes. Now they all have an equal shot at watching the game and participating… so equity is giving each person what they need (which might be different) to access the same materials. I think about this often as a teacher… sometimes I’m giving kids different things… I have to read questions out loud to some kids for me to access what they know while others can do it independently. They both have to show their knowledge, but may need different supports to be able to do so for example bc they have different obstacles that have been in the way.

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