Diversity, Equity, & Inclusion

Our Commitment

To make the St. Louis region a more vibrant place to live, work and play by developing a regional network of greenways. We are a public agency, created by a vote of the people in St. Louis City, St. Louis County and St. Charles County in the year 2000 to create a sales tax dedicated to parks and greenways. Those funds allow us to collaborate with partners and communities to build, care for and bring to life your network of greenways, creating healthy habitats and watersheds along the way. It’s an honor to deliver on the community’s vision for a vibrant, connected region. 135 miles of greenways and counting!

Your Role

We do not have all the answers, but we are committed to doing the work. We invite you to get involved. Read the plan. Tell us what you think. Check in on our progress. Bring us new ideas. Hold us accountable. Contact us anytime: info@grgstl.org or 314-436-7009. Our internal champion for this work is our Chief Operating Officer Michelle Bock, mbock@grgstl.org, ext. 116.

230 Annual Jobs Produced
125+ Miles of Greenways Built
600+ Miles of Greenways Planned
A Short History of Our DEI Efforts

How We Got Here

  • Great Rivers Greenway began a formal effort to our ability to understand and address diversity, equity and inclusion in Spring 2016 by starting a series of trainings with our staff and board from Dr. Terry Jones of University of Missouri St. Louis, Julie Simon with United Way of Greater St. Louis and Natalie Self of Practical Diversity Solutions. We learned about the history of our region, redlining, restrictive covenants, segregation and implicit bias. We got more comfortable with being uncomfortable and started to establish a culture of discussing these topics, understanding terminology and working through the complexities of individual and systemic and institutionalized racism.
  • We hired Gladiator Consulting and Practical Diversity Solutions in 2018 to help us design and implement a process to create a plan for our agency to address diversity, equity and inclusion. We formed a group of staff members, board members, partners and community members to audit every single department and function of our operations, identify short and long term projects and document them in a plan, finished May 2019.
  • Our team has gotten better at having those uncomfortable conversations. We meet for lunch at least once a month just to discuss anything going on in the world related to racial equity, separate from the business of greenways. We seek advice from those who know more about this than us on a regular basis.

Progress on the short-mid-term action plans so far

Items Completed
  • Identify internal champion
  • Rewrite Employee Manual
  • Create internal communications strategy
  • Form Board Committee dedicated to DEI
  • Evolve language and voice to be more inclusive
  • Develop reciprocal relationships with community groups to create genuine connections (have formed an Indigenous Intepretation Council for reviewing interpretive content)
  • Shift public celebrations to go beyond opportunities to congratulate professionals and elected officials to centering community voices
  • Create opportunities for enthusiastic trail users or neighbors to share their experiences with potential greenway users and neighbors (started People of the Greenways content series)
  • Update Great Rivers Greenway Foundation policies and bylaws to reflect those adopted by Great Rivers Greenway, including ensurance for accommodations that support all Board members to participate in meetings

 

Work In Progress
  • Develop DBE/MBE/WBE contracting goals (in research stage)
  • Identify planning lens and budget priority considerations that consider equity (in progress)
  • Go beyond basic ADA requirements toward Universal Design for accessibility (in research phase)
  • Website accessibility audit and revisions (Spring 2024)
  • Insert DEI commitment into major documents
  • Develop reciprocal relationships with community groups to create genuine connections, identify opportunities (in progress)
  • Build an intentional plan for diversifying volunteer base (have measured current demographics, identified opportunities)
  • Define components of DEI capacity that Great Rivers Greenway Foundation Board members should have and train members to increase their knowledge, skills and awareness in those areas
  • Refine process for Foundation Board to consider funding opportunities and include how equitable outcomes are considered (have created committee of the board)

Why We Do This

Mission Case

How DEI Helps Our Mission
  • Build, promote and sustain greenways collaboratively with diversity of community members in an equitable way, such that our process meets people where they are.
  • Establish greenways as welcoming, inclusive common ground to enrich lives & bridge communities.
  • Ensure tax funds are spent wisely to provide greenway access to all communities, regardless of local capacity.
  • Develop greater diversity among staff as hiring allows to become more representative of the communities we serve & develop cultural capability with all staff to enhance our ability to connect.

Business Case

How DEI Helps Our Agency Long-Term
  • Integrate inclusion throughout all projects to become a model for bridging communities to strengthen collaborations, facilitate processes & improve long-term sustainability.
  • Develop greater diversity among staff as hiring allows & develop cultural capability with all staff to enhance creativity, gain insight & perspectives, enhance partnerships, improve problem solving & design projects that are better adapted to needs of the communities served.
  • Develop staff abilities to apply the DEI lens & tools to reduce risk & achieve directives more effectively & expeditiously.
  • Broaden reach & engagement of the region’s taxpayers to deepen their appreciation for the greenway network & build ambassador, volunteer, voter & donor support.