Colorado’s United Church of Christ committed to DEI. Three years … – Colorado Public Radio

An abrupt firing

In August 2022, Scott said his relationship with his supervisor turned sour. According to Scott, his supervisor began yelling at him for being late to a meeting, and told him he was unfit for his job and was underperforming in his work.

I knew that that wasn't true because I had never had a negative performance evaluation, Scott said. He maintains he was on time for the meeting.

After the incident, Scott filed a report with the conference and he requested an apology.

But in November 2022, a meeting with his bosss supervisor was scheduled where he was fired.

There was no forewarning, there was no performance review process initiated. It was just a swift, abrupt, We're terminating you today, Scott said. They offered an agreement of separation, which contained a severance amount. But that was contingent on a non-disclosure agreement.

He didnt sign: I could not, in good conscience, accept that.

CPR News contacted The Rocky Mountain Conference of the United Church of Christ about these allegations. Interim Conference Minister for the conference Rev. Douglas Wooten said in an emailed statement, We do not take these matters lightly. We are concerned about legal ramifications but, as a community of faith, our overriding concern is for healing and for allowing justice and equity to prevail.

In the case of Rev. Dr. Scott, remedies have been and are being offered in hopes of finding a path toward wholeness, both for Dr. Scott and for the Conference, the statement continued.

Scott has since filed a charge of discrimination with the Colorado Division of Civil Rights and an investigation is underway.

The Rocky Mountain Conference responded to CPR News request for comment, but did not address specific questions CPR News asked about Scotts relationship with his supervisor or his firing.

Any time we hear about cases involving racial discrimination, we become concerned. We take such matters very seriously, said Charles Jefferson, director of Marketing and Communications for the United Church of Christ nationally. We are a church that has shown itself to be both capable of great harm to people of color and capable of being a critical agent of racial equity. We repent of the former and seek with passion and intent to increase the latter.

He added that the United Church of Christs rules prohibit national church leaders from interfering with local church issues.

Speaking on this or any disciplinary matter involving employees in another setting of the church, would be a violation of our polity and ethics, Jefferson said.

In June, the Rocky Mountain Conference of the United Church of Christ held its annual meeting, during which members discussed a resolution for Scott. According to a document Scott shared with CPR News that church leaders confirmed was accurate, representatives laid out two proposed resolutions: They recommended that Scott be offered his old job with full back pay and benefits." But if he declined to be reinstated, he would receive back pay and benefits from the date of his termination to present.

Whichever option Scott chose, he would receive an apology and pay in the amount of $68,000 by July 1, 2023, according to the amended version of the document that CPR News obtained from the church. At the time of publication of this story, he had yet to receive anything from the conference.

According to Rev. Wooten with the Rocky Mountain Conference, these were not the terms a majority of conference members agreed on and the conferences board has yet to complete a resolution on the matter.

The Board is working diligently to act as quickly as possible to satisfy all parties involved, Wooten said in mid-July.

Scotts experience is far from uncommon for people hired into DEI roles in 2020. Many people who took on DEI work are no longer in those roles three years later, NBC News reported.

Since the summer of 2022, the number of layoffs for DEI roles has outpaced layoffs in other jobs in the U.S. More than 300 DEI professionals, mainly in the tech industry, have quit their positions in the same time period, according to data from Revelio Labs that it produced in collaboration with The Washington Post and Reuters. DEI roles also had more employee turnover than in other jobs across all American companies, the data shows.

In the nonprofit world, including religious or faith-based organizations, there is a sense of fatigue when it comes to DEI, said Yolanda Johnson, president and founder of YFJ Consulting, which provides expertise in fundraising, inclusion, equity and diversity to nonprofit organizations.

What people have to understand is that this work is a lifestyle change. It's work of the heart, and it changes at the rate of people, Johnson said.

Many organizations took pledges, made statements and even created task forces or committees dedicated to anti-racism and social justice work in 2020. But today, those efforts have faded. The initiatives were great, Johnson said, but the lack of accountability didnt foster sustained change.

Rev. Dr. Nancy Niero agreed. Ordained in the Rocky Mountain Conference, she recently completed a Ph.D. where she researched white silence in the conference. She found the culture within the church gives preference to whiteness and is resistant to change.

It appears that clergy were more protective of maintaining systems, rather than dismantling systems to make [a church constructed for the] 21st Century, Niero said. Based on what I am hearing from a lot of other clergy colleagues around the country, this is not an isolated situation of white churches not wanting to do the work of dismantling white silence or decentering whiteness in sanctuaries.

Twomey, the former reverend at Vista Grande Community Church in Colorado Springs, encountered this resistance in her own work.

A frequent participant in social justice rallies, Twomey joined a racial justice task force for the conference in 2020. She said her congregation was committed to learning about how to be anti-racist and wanted to do the work to dismantle white supremacy. Working with Scott and others, the task force developed guidelines for how to make the conference more diverse and requirements that clergy members would need to follow.

However, Twomey said pushback from conference leadership was tremendous, and they didnt see a need to prioritize diversity, equity and inclusion work.

Across the board, progressive churches can be highly problematic because we think that if we think the right way, we can't be held accountable to our complicity in any -ism, Twomey said.

Niero questions whether people of color are supported within the conference. She noted that at the United Church of Christs annual meeting earlier this summer, no Black clergy were sent to represent the Rocky Mountain Conference.

Are we doing everything to create safe spaces for Black people who are congregants? Are we lifting up the one Black church we have in our conference? Niero asked, referring to the United Church of Montbello. I hear pastors or lay leaders say, Whoever you are, you are welcome here. And I say to that, Show me; Show me how people of color are welcome here.

By summer 2022, Twomey resigned from her post with Vista Grande Community Church after her partner accepted a job in Pennsylvania. Once there, she decided not to work with a church, instead taking a job with the states Human Relations Commission.

I did not seek another church because I did not feel welcome in the larger church anymore, she said. She added that she was not pushed out of Vista Grande, but it was very clear that what I was bringing to the table with regard to my call and this work was not welcome.

Months after Scott was terminated from his role, he moved back East. He now leads Reformation Lutheran Church, a historically Black congregation, in Philadelphia. After telling his new congregation leaders about what happened in the Rocky Mountain Conference of the United Church of Christ, he said they were understanding. They also asked him if he would lead DEI work within their organization.

There are definitely some reservations I have, Scott said. Before taking on another DEI-focused role, I definitely want to do perhaps a more thorough job of assessing the environment or the atmosphere.

If congregations want to make progress, people like Scott, who were hired into leadership positions, need to stay in those roles, said Johnson, the diversity consultant. And they need to be listened to by higher-ups so the congregations can evolve.

Its not as easy as watching a video and coming up with a list of recommendations, Johnson said. Her theory on DEI is to put inclusion at the forefront because, without it, every other effort fails. That means looking beyond race and ethnicity and into other forms of diversity like gender, ability, age and more.

Within the faith communities, I think it's just a matter of staying the course, Johnson said, adding that she has seen some progress. From theology, small group bible studies, fellowship activities, honoring and recognizing different cultural heritage months, learning about each other, sparking dialogue. I've seen leadership evolve and change and become more diverse. I've seen people change.

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Colorado's United Church of Christ committed to DEI. Three years ... - Colorado Public Radio

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