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RASE Commission to launch community leadership phase of implementation plan

The county of Monroe and city of Rochester have launched an updated website for the Commission on Racial and Structural Equity (RASE) ahead of the Community Leadership phase of its implementation plan.

“The work of the Commission on Racial and Structural Equity continues, as we now enter the critical phase of working to engage our community members in implementing select recommendations from the report,” said County Executive Adam Bello in a statement. “Implementing these recommendations and dismantling structural inequities takes the efforts of all of us. I am so thankful to our nonprofit agencies, community coalitions and individual citizens for stepping forward and taking ownership for the implementation of some of the recommendations. It is due to the commitment of our staff and community partners that this report will not merely sit on a shelf.”

To ensure transparency around the implementation of the recommendations, a database has been added to the website that will include each working group recommendation as well as the responsible entity and a timeframe for implementation. In addition, there will be a mechanism to allow community members to get involved in the process and help with implementing the recommendations. Quarterly progress updates for listed recommendations will be posted within 30 days of the quarter’s end.

“Real progress toward racial equity can only be accomplished with a total community effort,” said Mayor Lovely Warren. “The city of Rochester has grown and improved to where it is by virtue of its involved citizenry and thanks to the input of our citizens and the members of the Commission on Racial and Structural Equity, our city and our county will be positioned to provide more jobs, safer, more vibrant neighborhoods and better educational opportunities.”

Outcomes of the community leadership phase include identifying gaps in recommendations that were not prioritized by the county or city, aligning with community stakeholders and organizational leaders, encouragement of assessment and prioritization of recommendations with the community and preparation to develop a formal council to manage the implementation of recommendations.

RASE recommendations include:
• Create and invest in sustainable economic opportunities in Black and Latinx communities to promote and maintain self-sufficiency, entrepreneurship and career advancement;
• Implement and incentivize practices and programs that increase the racial/ethnic diversity and cultural competence of employees, vendors and contractors;
• End practices that disproportionately drain resources from Black and Latinx communities;
• Decentralize services and embed them in trusted agencies throughout the community; and
• Embed accountability measures in all policies to ensure equity and fairness across all services, programs and delivery models.

RASE is an intergovernmental collaboration between the county of Monroe and city of Rochester. RASE was established to review, identify and recommend changes to local laws, policies and practices that will eliminate inequities across the county and city. The commission is co-chaired by former Rochester Mayor William Johnson Jr., ESL Federal Credit Union Senior Vice President and General Counsel Arline Santiago and Executive Director of the Brian and Jean Hickey Center for Interfaith Studies and Dialogue and professor of Islamic and religious studies at Nazareth College Muhammad Shafiq. The commission includes 21 business, government and community leaders.

The complete RASE report is available at rocrase.com.

[email protected] / 585-653-4021
Follow Velvet Spicer on Twitter: @Velvet_Spicer

City of Rochester rolls out RASE recommendation plan

The city of Rochester on Friday rolled out a comprehensive, three-phase implementation plan to accomplish  recommendations outlined in the Commission on Racial and Structural Equity (RASE) report that was released in March.

“Our city’s roadmap to fulfill the recommendations set forth by the RASE Commission will ensure that we make real progress towards equity,” said Rochester Mayor Lovely Warren in a statement. “The creation of an ongoing RASE council to oversee the implementations will allow city government to truly focus on the work to be done and hold us accountable for achieving it.”

The implementation plan builds on the guiding principles of the RASE Commission, outlining transparency, fidelity, accountability and sustainability as its core values, officials said.

“The core values underscore the city’s and Monroe County’s commitment to establishing and strengthening our partnerships across municipalities, but more importantly, across the community,” said Cephas Archie, Rochester’s chief equity officer and the city’s liaison to the RASE Commission.

The plan contains three phases: 1) principle review; 2) community leadership; and 3) establishment of a RASE Council.

The commission’s goal is to accomplish one phase per quarter, with the first phase, principle review, set to be completed by June 30. Already in progress, during the city’s Phase I principle review process, internal city leadership highlighted responses to 97 of the report’s recommendations. Warren and Rochester City Council recently approved allocating $1 million to support the implementation of the report’s recommendations.

“As a city, we are committed to following through and making the RASE Commission recommendations a reality,” Warren said. “Paired with our implementation plan, we now have the tools and the resources we need to achieve the goals of the RASE Commission to address and repair the racial and structural inequities in our community.”

As the city begins Phase II of the implementation plan, it will initiate engagement of community organizations and leaders who are, or would like, to lead efforts recommended in the original RASE report. The goal of Phase II will be to identify recommendations not owned by the city or county and encourage other community stakeholders to take ownership of recommendations they can advance.

In alignment with the RASE Report recommendations, Phase III will focus on the establishment of a RASE Council, which will be a “successor body” comprising former RASE commissioners, sector content experts, and city and county community stakeholders. The implementation plan outlines the council’s scope, which will include monitoring the pace of implementation efforts; establishing the reporting process to share progress; and creating feedback mechanisms to ensure community input and direction during implementation.

“Assessment and feedback are essential to continuous improvement,” Warren said. “The commission members spoke loud and clear about being intentional in how implementation occurs and ensuring it is done in a transparent and collaborative manner.”

Updates will be provided to the community on RASE Report progress at the end of each quarter. Additional information and recommendation updates also will be provided via the RASE Commission’s website, rocrase.com, including details of the full implementation plan.

[email protected] / 585-653-4021
Follow Velvet Spicer on Twitter: @Velvet_Spicer

City, county complete analysis of RASE report

The city of Rochester and the County of Monroe have completed their initial analysis of the recommendations made by the Commission on Racial and Structural Equity (RASE) report, which was presented to the community six weeks ago.

“The completion of this initial analysis allows us to assign responsibility for each of the recommendations to ensure that they are implemented for the benefit of our entire community,” said Cephas Archie, the lead for RASE Report implementation and chief equity officer for the city of Rochester. “We can now move forward and build the teams of community stakeholders necessary for success and create the benchmarks needed to measure our progress.”

Archie serves as the city’s lead representative, with Candice Lucas leading the county’s efforts, on a cross-governmental team to provide staff support and resources for the commission. RASE is comprised of 21 community members and is co-chaired by former Mayor William Johnson Jr.; Muhammad Shafiq, executive director of the Hickey Center for Interfaith Studies and Dialogue at Nazareth College; and Arline Santiago, senior vice president and general counsel for ESL Federal Credit Union.

Completion of the first “principle review” phase of the Commission’s work will guide the city and county’s development of an implementation plan for the report’s recommendations. The identification of which respective government would own specific recommendations and which ones would be jointly shared was conducted by leadership teams from both the city and the county.

The final implementation plan will include the identification of key stakeholders and benchmarks in support of the report’s six overarching themes. The review process encompassed an assessment of the recommendations made by the Commission’s nine working groups. The review also identified internal and external partners, required resources, tentative timelines for completion and principle personnel responsible for facilitating implementation efforts, monitoring progress and providing updates.

The six themes identified in the report include:
• Inequitable and inadequate access to essential resources and systems critical to closing equity gaps.
• Structures and protocols inequitably impact and disadvantage Black, Indigenous and other People of Color (BIPOC).
• Structures and personnel lack cultural/linguistic competencies critical for effective engagement.
• Systems create and perpetuate disadvantages.
• City/county structures lack reliable transparency and accountability operations, negatively impacting trust among BIPOC.
• Current city/county/state systems possess insufficient economic investment in structures and resources critical to attaining equity.

The commission developed five systemic solutions and nearly 40 specific recommendations. Solutions include creating and investing in sustainable economic opportunities in Black and
Latinx communities to promote and maintain self-sufficiency, entrepreneurship and career advancement; implementing and incentivizing practices and programs that increase the racial/ethnic diversity and cultural competence of employees, vendors and contractors; ending practices that disproportionately drain resources from Black and Latinx communities; Decentralizing services and embedding them in trusted agencies throughout the community; and embedding accountability measures in all policies to ensure equity and fairness across all services, programs and delivery models.

In their letter to the mayor and county executive that accompanied the 271-page report, Johnson, Santiago and Shafiq said that while they found few laws in the city and county that created and sustained racist policies, “we have found practices and conditions where diversity of race, ethnicity and gender are nearly non-existent; where people of color are unable to fully participate and are implicitly or explicitly excluded from opportunities that could enhance their economic, social and mental health; and where people of color are denied the opportunity to participate in the rule-making and decision-making that shapes our lives, from birth to death.”

Over the next several weeks, the city and county will compile their recommendation responses and provide a community update on implementation efforts.

[email protected] / 585-653-4021
Follow Velvet Spicer on Twitter: @Velvet_Spicer