HomeMy WebLinkAbout2022-04-14-LHRC-min
Town of Lexington, Human Rights Committee Meeting
Thursday, April 14, 2022
Virtual
8:32 a.m.-9:53 a.m.
Present Members: Tanya Gisolfi [TG] (Chair), Monami D. Roy [MDR] (Vice Chair,)
Stephanie Hsu [SH] (Clerk), Cleveland Coates [CC], Christina Lin [CL], Cleveland
Coates [CC], Christopher Barry [CB], (Police), Larry Freeman [LF] (LPS
Representative)
Meeting called to order at 8:32 AM, Quorum was present at 8:30 AM
1. Intro – Autism Awareness and Acceptance Month
2. Minutes,
a. February Motion to approve with/out changes made by MDR Seconded by
CC Voted Unanimously
b. March Motion to approve with/out changes made by SH, Seconded by
MDR Voted Unanimously
3. Co-Sponsorship Request for My American Story CALex
Discussion: Cosponsored last year
Motion to approve with/out changes made by TG, Seconded by CL, Voted
Unanimously
4. Report 2022 MLK Day Community Conversation on Race – The Purpose of
Education Presentation
a. Presented by Christina Lin and Gwen Wong
b. 2021 – LHRC Declared Racism is a Public Health Crisis
c. Honoring Dr. King’s Legacy by advocating for Racially Inclusive
Curriculum
d. Dr. Jackson – (https://www.wpi.edu/people/faculty/djackson2) was a force
in both oration and substance
i. “An education system that results in a marginalized people with
subordinated sense of self or inflated elitism by those in the majority
must be regarded as immoral.” - Rev. Dr. Jackson
ii. Small example of a pervasive lie -- George Washington’s
replacement teeth were from enslaved people, not wood as we were
all taught.
iii. Important to add in diversity of perspectives and lived experiences
iv. Discussion of Pedagogy of “Problem Posing Education” – Freire
where the students are not merely fed information but part of the
teaching (e.g., comparison of Boston Tea Party and today’s protests)
v. Myriad of one-word reactions (negative to positive) to Dr. Jackson’s
talk. This reflects the diversity of audience that attends the
Conversation on Race which
vi. Range of comments of what and how students are learning -- I think
the “banking method” and how that method of learning can move
from generation to generation was really interesting
vii. Impact of this system on students -- How has learning about the lack
of representation of traditionally underrepresented racial and ethnic
groups affected your views of the ways in which US education
institutions and systems uphold racism?
e. Some Key Breakout room thoughts
i. REPRESENTATION MATTERS in our curriculum –
disproportionate representation of European (e.g., in exploration);
Whose stories are told and who gets to tell the stories. Why are
some stories and people marginalized?
ii. Awareness - individual LEARNING – interest in more community
conversations on this and associated issues
iii. Awareness - institutional CHANGES -- how do we diversify the
“sage on the stage”
iv. Access to education 1) Under resourced community 2) But in other
privileged communities like Lexington, lack of access to AP courses
f. Discussion on what individuals can do to move the needle – advocate for:
i. How will you ensure you are held accountable?
ii. Increase BIPOC/ALANA voices
iii. What obstacles might interfere with you achieving your goal? – One
teacher highlighted limitation of time
iv. Listening and respecting and removing barriers to BIPOC/ALANA
students voices
v. Too much segregation in social groups
vi. More diverse authors
vii. Need continuous advocacy for accountability and change
g. Student feedback
i. “I hadn't really thought about how racism affected my education, so
the conversation was eye-opening. “
ii. “I am learning U.S history is very Eurocentric.”
iii. BIPOC student feedback – “We did Asian book, Indigenous book,
Black book, but these units are disparate. White student says “I don’t
see myself anymore”
h. Evolution of Community Conversation on Race – 10 years
i. 10 years ago – being there to be seen
ii. Now CCR the MLK event with the highest attendance
iii. Anchor point – people look forward to it
iv. Community investment in the event
i. Organizing team Value
i. 10 years of operational knowledge
ii. Facilitator community trained
iii. Impact of LHRC – grabbed a group of very engaged people in town
to ask questions and how to listen to answers gone from fear zone
and going towards to growth zone
https://www.surgeryredesign.com/#contact-section
iv. No one was afraid to talk – that is a lot of progress
v. Lots of interest of advocacy and investment
vi. Important to continue to build on that investment and engagement
j. Noted learning resources will be on LHRC website
k. Lots of Town Depts (library, human services, etc..) engaging in this work
l. Huge # of volunteer hours over many months to present this program
m. Shout out to LPS work on this topic
n. LHRC Membership Comments on presentation
i. TG gives shoutout to CL and Gwen Wong as key lights on this work
ii. LF – really enjoyed the conversation on race, and topic was unique,
loved student involvement, was a table facilitator, students were
vocal and added a lot
iii. TG suggested that we need to think about childcare so more people
can attend
iv. SH – appreciated the presentation; amazing facilitator training; also
appreciated student involvement; overlap with student perspectives
from No Hate November; sparked something in her own son who
attended
v. CL – noted Fair Housing Month – not about economics but about
demographics
vi. MDR expressed gratitude for presentation, presenters and progress
and noted that her son who attended also appreciated this
presentation and the larger work
vii. Eileen Jay (SC liaison) – loved the presentation, appreciated moving
from fear into learning and was still waiting for growth. On the
education side, what’s wonderful is that the students are asking for
this. LPS is doing the work on the curriculum. We need a way for
the cultural groups to ensure work with LPS to ensure that
curriculum is authentic.
5. Member Updates
a. CC – attended SB, Minuteman Cane committee, White Tricorn selection
committee; awards given on Patriots Day
b. SH – SEPAC - -Cracking the Code on reading (https://lexsepta.org/event-
4782421) ; In line with Fair Housing Month – along with Housing
Partnership Board to highlight a recent conference
(https://lexsepta.org/event-4782421); Noting progress on working groups
on Effects of Pandemic on Persons with Disabilities and
c. LF – mentioned change in afterschool providers and people may want to
attend School Committee meetings
d. CL – Attended SEPAC presentation A Different Key – movie on autism
acceptance, highlighted massive spectrum, we need to be more accepting of
people to make the space for ASD; we are denying ourselves the
opportunity to learn
e. CB talked about Autism Patches are now available at the Lexington Police
Station. All proceeds collected will go to Verge Inclusive Athletics’; LPD
Officer Chaisson attended the SEPAC Resource Fair to connect with the
Special Education community
f. MDR noted with appreciation LPD’s engagement but expressed
disappointment at the overall community’s recurring lack of sensitivity to
the struggles of families who want their kids with disabilities to be
included. Noted specifically that comments on Facebook and by public
commenters at School Committee meetings showed a disregard for the
feelings and experiences of those families and a lack of interest in
supporting inclusion of all children
6. Possible Time Change Discussion
TG - Put off until in person vs hybrid is decided but noted that later meetings may
give access to elementary school parents, but earlier meetings may give more
access to people who go to the office
7. Logo Discussion
a. TG – Do we need logo and MI mentioned a service to determine a logo
b. SH – says yes
c. MDR – need to follow legal rules and also look at what Human Services
did, and we should think about next steps if others want this.
8. In Person Meeting Discussion
a. Final discussion put off
b. Keep May remote
c. LF – OWL system for hybrid meetings used at School Committee– good
experience; continued hybrid is another level of inclusion; suggested to
having afternoon meetings for those who cannot access morning meetings
d. Chair + quorum must be in person for hybrid meetings
e. SH – thinks that we should meet in person – perhaps June
f. Eileen Jay (SC liaison) noted to check the use of OWL at the Community
Center as so far, they have only used it at the Select Board meeting room.
9. No Unexpected Items Not Reasonably Anticipated in Advance
10. Next Meeting May 12, 2022, on Zoom, 8:30 am
11. Adjourn SH motioned, CC seconded
12. Public Comments for Items Not on the Agenda
Public comments are allowed for up to 6 minutes. Each speaker is limited to 2
minutes for comment. Members of the Committee will neither comment nor
respond, other than to ask questions of clarification.
Attachments:
CALex request for co-sponsorship