Racial Equity in the Library
Sonoma County Library, Calif.
Innovation Synopsis
The Sonoma County Library joined Sonoma County’s Government Alliance on Race and Equity team to address racial inequities for 500,000 residents. The library formed a Racial Equity Team to increase diversity amongst its staff, offer culturally appropriate and responsive programming and commit to being an anti-racist organization.
Challenge/Opportunity
By 2040, the Sonoma County Economic Development Board forecasts that 40% of the county’s population will be Latinx, in comparison with 27.3% reported currently. Sonoma County Library staff demographics do not reflect our county — only 10% of staff identify as Latinx, while 73% identify as white. The stark difference in demographic data clearly identified a priority to increase the number of Spanish-speaking staff in 15 branches, along with a need to diversify staff to reflect community demographics.
Key Elements of Innovation
The library created a Racial Equity Team made up from staff across the county and library administration, who received a full year of racial equity training through the “California Libraries Cultivating Racial Equity and Inclusion Initiative,” an LSTA funded initiative. The team recommended improvement in: improving hiring/recruiting to attract a more diverse staff; clarifying the role of police in libraries; working with BIPOC communities; improving marketing and publicity in Spanish; and gauging staff training needs.
Achieved Outcomes
The team created a measurable plan to improve hiring and recruitment efforts and issued a staff survey to assess training needs and organizational commitment to racial equity. In addition, 37 supervisors and managers were also enrolled in a series of anti-racist supervisory courses. The library is committed to dismantling racist practices in our structures and practices and our efforts build off the library’s statement released in June 2020.