Tag Archives: Diversity Equity and Inclusion

Scott Strong Receives Juan Jose Lopez DEI Award

–presented by Sara Eskrich on December 11, 2024

Scott Strong pictured here with DEI Committee Co-chairs Sara Eskrich (left) and Rebekah Pare (right)

In 2015, our Club was the first large Rotary club to establish a Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion Committee. Our strategic plan states that we will achieve diversity, equity and inclusion through recruitment, education, member engagement and community service. It’s an overarching theme that guides all we do as a club for our members and for our community.

Last year, we created a Diversity, Equity and Inclusion Award to recognize a member whose commitment helps in advancing these guiding principles.

Juan Jose Lopez, who passed away in 2023, would have been a valid candidate for this award. During his 26 years of membership, he served on our club’s board of directors, on our foundation board of trustees, and he chaired our scholarship committee. Juan was a strong advocate for promoting inclusivity and creating change in our community. As we recognize a member with our Diversity, Equity and Inclusion Award, this year we will add Juan Jose Lopez’s name to the title.

This year’s recipient is Scott Strong. Scott is executive director of RISE Wisconsin, and he joined our Rotary Club in 2008.

Scott has been a member of our Diversity, Equity and Inclusion Committee for 8 years and has co-chaired it for 2 years. He has led DEI sessions at the Rotary Tri-Con events. Scott has also served on our club board of directors, as Sgt-at-Arms and is a long-time member and past chair of our Youth Awards Committee.

For Scott’s leadership efforts in advancing the principles of our club’s commitment to our DEI goals, we are presenting him with our 2024 Rotary Club of Madison Juan Jose Lopez Diversity, Equity and Inclusion Award. Thank you, Scott, for continuing to help us advance the successes of our committee’s work.

Congratulations, Scott, on this well-deserved award!

August 30: Lessons from DEI Practitioners

–submitted by Bobbie Sladky

Tania Ibarra, co-founder of Step Up: Equity Matters) and Jeannine Bindl (Step Up: Equity Matters advisor, facilitator and project manager) described their organization’s journey as a start-up in Madison which began as a volunteer organization in 2014. By 2019, the organization added its first full time employee. The growth of the organization began to address the big DEI problems in our local organizations and to help them build the confidence and skills to keep moving forward for diversity, equity and inclusion improvements.

The Step Up: Equity Matters change management process includes assessment, strategy development, and implementation in that order – while recognizing that the process is not strictly linear. It is critical that the business’ leadership be a sponsor of the process and committed to the plan. The plan takes 3 – 5 years to fully create positive and sustainable change. The speakers indicated that, to be successful, business leaders must see the lack of diversity, equity and inclusion as a business problem to be solved at all levels of the organization. Their ‘Recognize – Own – Disrupt’ approach was described as ‘never easy’ and ‘never linear’. Continuous learning, and open feedback from all levels within the organization will help lead to inclusive growth.

Emotional intelligence is key in this process – clients must learn to understand their emotions and biases (while recognizing that the word, bias, is emotionally loaded). The speakers are clearly committed to their mission. They have guided many local businesses and organizations to continuous learning by embedding DEI in leadership, all business functions and employee learning opportunities. They definitely made it clear that DEI is good for business, and we know it is good for Rotary.

If you missed our meeting this week, you can watch the video here: https://youtu.be/fTRY3ts9h8k.

Teresa Holmes Receives Club’s First DEI Service Award

–presented by Joyce Bromley on August 16, 2023

Teresa Holmes pictured here with Club President Charles McLimans

In 2015, our Club was the first large Rotary club to establish a Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion Committee. In doing so, we were ahead of Rotary International by five years.  

Our Club’s strategic plan commits us to achieving diversity, equity and inclusion through recruitment, education, member engagement and community service.   

The importance of this commitment brought our Club’s Board of Directors to create a new annual service award to recognize a member who has contributed to our Club’s DEI endeavors.  I am pleased today to announce that Teresa Holmes is our club’s first DEI Service Award recipient.  

Teresa has chaired our DEI Committee, served on our Board of Directors, was our Club president for the Rotary Year that began on July 1, 2020, and spearheaded a strategic planning/governance task force that has resulted in streamlining and creating continuity within our club’s committees and leadership.  In each of these roles, she shared her insights about how our Club could achieve our Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion goals. Teresa is recognized as a leader who diligently worked to align our values with our practices. We are confident that she will continue her DEI commitments as a Board member of Rotary District 6250 while she serves a 2-year term on its Board which began on July 1. 

Congratulations, Teresa and thank you for your Rotary service!