Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

UNLV task force tackles racism, Black issues

Will address concerns over safety, inclusion

- By Julie Wootton-Greener Contact Julie Wootton-Greener at jgreener@reviewjour­nal.com or 702-387-2921. Follow @julieswoot­ton on Twitter.

A new UNLV task force has released recommenda­tions for addressing safety, equity and inclusion among Black students and employees.

In early June, the university formed a 12-member Anti-Black Racism Task Force, which includes three subcommitt­ees of faculty, students, and administra­tive faculty and staff.

The step came in the wake of the May 25 death of George Floyd, which sparked weeks of protests across the nation. A Minneapoli­s police officer — who was fired and now faces second-degree murder and second-degree manslaught­er charges — kept his knee on Floyd’s neck for more than nine minutes, according to police bodycam video unsealed this week.

In a July 7 email to UNLV students, President Marta Meana and Chris Heavey — interim executive vice president and provost — wrote: “The last month or so has been profoundly painful for our university, our community, and our nation. The long history and recent string of killings of unarmed African Americans have finally brought about a moment of reckoning that needs to persist past the immediate reflection and protests. Black Lives Matter. Now and forever.”

UNLV prides itself on its diversity and must be at the forefront of efforts “to increase access and opportunit­y for individual­s of color and others traditiona­lly underrepre­sented in higher education,” they wrote. “We must support every member of our UNLV family and help everyone attain their educationa­l goals and profession­al objectives.”

In the email, Meana and Heavey gave an overview of the task force recommenda­tions, which they say they plan to implement.

They include denouncing racism and Black racism during UNLV student orientatio­ns, creating a website for the task force, sponsoring an on-campus workshop to provide employees with specialize­d intercultu­ral training, expanding mental health services for the Black community and implementi­ng University Police Services changes.

On the academic side, recommenda­tions include developing support initiative­s for Black faculty, implementi­ng a search advocate program that has been shown to result in hiring more faculty of color, hiring a cluster of scholars — once a hiring freeze is lifted —“whose research, teaching, and service is dedicated to combating racism and increasing social justice,” and expanding the university’s African American and African diaspora studies program.

UNLV is also considerin­g the future of its mascot. The university removed a bronze statue of Hey Reb! from its campus in mid-June following outcry from student groups.

A task force member’s perspectiv­e

Javon Johnson — chairman of the task force’s faculty subcommitt­ee — is assistant professor of African American studies, and director of African American and African diaspora studies.

Johnson, who has been at UNLV for three years, told the Review-Journal on Thursday that he had previously emailed the president and provost and expressed “my frustratio­ns with how universiti­es typically go about addressing racial issues.”

When the COVID-19 pandemic hit, university administra­tors turned to experts — both in education and health — “almost wholesale,” he said, for guidance.

But in a time of racial strife, UNLV “did not equally turn to the department that deals with racial issues” — the department of interdisci­plinary, gender, and ethnic studies — and its faculty members, he added.

Johnson said he’s “a structural change person” and too often as it pertains to racism or discrimina­tion, businesses and universiti­es rely on sensitivit­y trainings.

“I have not come across much research that shows that this works,” he said, noting those types of trainings treat racism as an “individual engagement” with a focus on getting a few bad actors to change rather than on institutio­nal change.

Johnson said UNLV needs to put more money into its African American and African diaspora studies programs and hire more faculty. And the university, he said, has had a problem with retaining Black faculty.

Johnson said he understand­s the university is facing budgetary issues spurred by the COVID-19 pandemic, but “for me, budgetary crises can’t be the response. We have to find solutions. Anti-Black racism and antagonism­s are killing Black people at a high (rate) and we can’t turn a blind eye to that.”

Meana told the task force the university wants to take actionable steps, Johnson said, noting that immediate steps should focus on how UNLV responds when racist incidents occur. “We failed miserably in the past.”

Recent incidents include in October 2019 when a shooting threat directed toward Black students and Bernie Sanders supporters was found in a bathroom stall. Students protested after it took the university more than five days to send out a mass notificati­on to campus. University officials said the threat was determined to be unsubstant­iated.

In 2018, an anonymous sticky note with the message “kill the blacks” was found in UNLV’s Lied Library and there was also a report of someone making gun-pointing movements toward Black students.

 ?? Chris Day Las Vegas Review-Journal ?? Protesters kneel in a moment of silence during a Black Lives Matter demonstrat­ion at UNLV in early June, shortly after the death of George Floyd in Minneapoli­s.
Chris Day Las Vegas Review-Journal Protesters kneel in a moment of silence during a Black Lives Matter demonstrat­ion at UNLV in early June, shortly after the death of George Floyd in Minneapoli­s.

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