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Civil Rights and Diversity Training for Extension Councils, Committees, and Staff.

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Presentation on theme: "Civil Rights and Diversity Training for Extension Councils, Committees, and Staff."— Presentation transcript:

1 Civil Rights and Diversity Training for Extension Councils, Committees, and Staff

2 Diversity = Human Differences

3 No matter how you define it— linguistically, culturally, religiously, ethnically the United States is the most demographically diverse nation in world history

4 Inclusive in our programming and hiring.

5 It all started with… The Civil Rights Act of 1964 “ No person in the United States shall, on the grounds of race, color, or national origin, be excluded from participation in, be denied the benefits of, or be subjected to discrimination under any program or activity receiving federal financial assistance.”

6 Other Federal Laws Relating to Civil Rights and Diversity USDA Secretaries Memorandum #1662 and #1884 and Supplements Title VII of the Civil Rights Act (EEO) Title IX of the Education Amendments of 1972 Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA) of 1990

7 Requirements for Civil Rights Planning and Reporting 1.Program Delivery 2.Public Notification 3.Civil Rights Training 4.Civil Rights Compliance Reviews 5.Employment 6.Handling a Complaint

8 1. Program Delivery Adapt program content Increase participation on program planning and advisory committees Increase membership of under-represented in 4-H community clubs and special interests Adjust programs for customers with disabilities Offices and program locations handicapped accessible

9 2. Public Notification Modify where we advertise our programs Advise potential clientele that we don’t discriminate Display “…And Justice For All” poster and include on printed materials Inform groups with who we cooperate on the nondiscriminatory requirements of Extension Use statements, photos and graphics to convey the message of equal opportunity Use sex-neutral language

10 3. Civil Rights Training Civil rights training annually for all staff, councils, committees on our Civil Rights responsibilities Focus on dealing effectively with diversity in communities

11 4. Civil Rights Compliance Reviews Implement the systematic procedure for conducting civil rights reviews

12 Iowa’s Compliance Plan

13 Every 4 years - County Civil Rights Audits in each county Annually –meetings to determine if parity was reached and to set goals for the next year. –Individual staff goals on their annual performance appraisal form.

14 Documentation Written evidence or proof of compliance efforts and their results. Should include names of parties involved, dates, what transpired and date the documentation was developed. Program participation data is documentation.

15 5. Employment Equal Employment Opportunity requires: –A plan for recruitment of diverse employees. –Full utilization of staff skills –Access to training, promotion, and awards –Fair processing of complaints –Accessible EEO counselors

16 6. Public Complaint Procedures Complaints can be made to: –Vice President for Extension and Outreach –Secretary of Agriculture –Iowa Civil Rights Commission –or any ISUEO staff member File complaint within 180 days Document the date, the complainant, nature, send to REED even if not formal Inform those who make verbal complaints that they can make written complaint and notify supervisor

17 Now it is your turn.. First, let’s test your “clicker.” Where do you live? 1.Farm 2.Rural area 3.City

18 A Public Notification Plan is: 1.A plan for alerting citizens of an approaching tornado 2.Part of the environmental law requirements to build a confined livestock operation (CFO). 3.A written plan in a county which outlines the usual procedures for program recruitment and notification by program area.

19 “All reasonable effort” means: 1.What staff do to get incomplete information on program registration forms. 2.Actions required encouraging participation of minorities in Extension Porgrams. 3.What parent do to get their kids to do their chores around the house.

20 Parity is: 1.The time frame right after the party. 2.When the participation rate of historically underserved audiences reflects the same proportion of participation as the general population. 3.When Iowa’s program meet the needs of diverse participants.

21 Compliance is achieved when: 1.We accomplish all the requirements of the various Civil Rights laws. 2.When all staff put programs on the Extension Calendar of Events web site. 3.When the rate of participation of historically underserved audiences has reached 80% of the potential.

22 Potential audience is: 1.Anyone who lives in the county. 2.Persons who participate in our programs 3.Persons or groups within a defined geographic are who might be interested or benefit from an Extension Education Program.

23 Adequate Public Notification Includes: 1.Using a variety of mass media to inform potential audiences of programs, services and opportunity to participate. 2.Sending personal letters, flyers and publications to potential clients. 3.Making personal visits to a representative number of potential participants.

24 Iowa is becoming more diverse.

25 Counties With Over 200 Minorities: Total Minorities 12.7% Black Alone3.2% Asian Alone2.0% Native Hawaiian, Pacific Islander0.1% American Indian/ Native Alaskan0.5% Two or More Races/ Other1.6% Hispanic 5.3% Under 200 MinoritiesOver 200 Minorities

26 Highest Number of Hispanics

27 *Minority includes Hispanic, Black, Asian, Native American, Pacific Islands, and multi-race students. Percent Minority* K - 12 Students Iowa 1978 0% 5% 10% 15% 20% 25% 1982 1990 2000 2013 2006 199819861994

28 Percent Minority* K-12 Students, 2013 Total Minorities 19.7% Black Alone 5.0% Asian Alone 2.2% Native American 0.4% Pacific Islander 0.2% Multi-Race 2.8% Hispanic 9.1% *Minority includes Hispanic, Black, Asian, Native American, Pacific Islands, and multi-race students.

29 Are Extension programs and staffing keeping up? How can we tell?

30 Civil Rights Population Projections Establish program targets. Project anticipated participation in goal setting. Try to reach parity. Goal is to have participation contacts in reasonable proportion to the distribution of minority and gender groups (80% of potential).

31 Data Collection to see if we meet parity Currently –4HOnline for youth Program –EFNEP/FNP statistical –One week random sample of gender and ethnicity/race for meetings on the Extension Calendar 4 times a year –One week random sample of one-on-one consultations 4 times year

32 Civil Rights and Diversity It’s the law and it’s the right thing to do!

33 Questions ? Contact ISUEO Human Resources Phone: (515) 294-3283 Email: exthr@iastate.edu


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