By Jess Benninger â26, assistant editor
LVC prides itself on its diversity, equity, inclusion and belonging department.
Following the departure of Khalil Brim, a post-graduate fellow and LVC alumni loved by students, many members of LVCâs campus are wondering how the future of the DEIB office will look.
Currently, the DEIB department is comprised of Dr. Felicia Brown-Haywood, the vice president of diversity, equity and inclusive excellence, and Annesha Edwards-Carter, director of diversity, equity and inclusive excellence. Brown-Haywood assures community members that the DEIB office can continue operation with two staff members.
âDEIB work is the responsibility and expectation of every member of our campus community,â Brown-Haywood said.âŻâThe DEIB division partners with units across campus toâŻfacilitateâŻstrategic initiatives and programming.â
Brown-Haywood also shared that on-campus research is being conducted to assess the needs of the student body and DEIB office.
âDr. Chris Bijouxâs SWOTâŻanalysis will help the college understand and make decisions aboutâŻappropriate staffingâŻnumbers, roles and responsibilities,â Brown-Haywood said.
According to LVC President Dr. James MacLaren, the strengths, weaknesses, opportunities and threats (SWOT) analysis will provide more information regarding the Collegeâs next steps in DEIB.
âThe results of this independent analysis will be applicable to the whole of campus and not siloed to the DEIB administrative area,â MacLaren said. âWe expect the SWOT analysis to be uncomfortable and deeply informative about how the College should move forward.â
Many students have their own ideas about how to improve the commitment to DEIB on LVCâs campus.
âMore people should be hired for the DEIB office, but it shouldn’t just fall on faculty or administration,â Caeleb Smith, a junior English and creative writing double major, said. âThe students should have a say on who LVC hires to fill in spots for the DEIB office because student opinions matter.â
Smith also commented on the importance of the DEIB department more generally.
âDEIB shouldn’t have to be seen as an âextraâ resource on campusâit should be viewed as a necessary resource that everyone, not just BIPOC and LGBTQ+ students, should be aware of,â Smith said. âDEIB is important in our society; not giving it the attention itâŻdeserves promotes the idea that it doesn’t exist or isn’t important to know and learn about. People cannot and should not walk around campus assuming that DEIB isn’t an importantâŻpart of our society because it completely invalidates the lives of others and disregards their existence as a whole.â
With all of these suggested changes in mind, LVCâs administration assures that it is working hard to promote DEIB on campus.
âI want to note that the work of diversity, equity, inclusion and belonging is the responsibility of each member of the LVC community, every day,â MacLaren said. âWe know a lot more work needs to be doneâin hiring, in climate and in areas the SWOT analysis will spotlightâand the whole campus will need to collaborate to get to where we need to be. The work is ongoing and unending and requires continual evaluation and improvement.â