Safe(r)
As a bi-racial former foster child raised in an all-white rural town in the Pacific Northwest, Marnita Schroedl has taken her experiences with disparity and disconnection, in combination with her expertise as a senior communications professional, and developed an experience engineering model designed to help others learn to part with their preconceived notions of “the Other” long enough to work together to create meaningful, grassroots change on issues that affect our diverse communities.
The model she developed, Intentional Social Interaction (or “IZI”) is a replicable, measurable way to deliver cross-cultural competency while simultaneously developing leadership, engaging communities across difference, and conducting participatory action research. Over the past fifteen years, nearly 70,000 community members, decision-makers and other constituents have come together in the model of IZI to find common ground on issues ranging from public health, education access to collective resilience, healing from trauma, women’s rights and youth leadership.
We are committed to addressing the disaster of police violence against black, brown and other marginalized people, a crisis of public health and safety that requires urgent redress. Using our model of Intentional Social Interaction (IZI), we will host engaged, action-oriented community conversations – beginning in Minneapolis and expanding outward – around the issue of police violence. Our goals for these conversations include the collaborative development of:
1. Actionable public policy strategies to decrease state sponsored violence against black and brown people;
2. A model that can be reproduced; and
3. Uncovering talent and innovative solutions that already exist for more effective partnership and resource-sharing.
We must elevate Black, Brown and other marginalized voices and ensure their voices are centered in any policies addressing police brutality. With funding we can immediately commence this work, ensuring that the voices of the disproportionately affected communities are given their rightful place in decisions.
The costs of police violence against Black, Brown and other marginalized communities are staggeringly high. There is no comprehensive national database on police violence and instead we rely upon individual cities self-reporting. We already know that people of color – especially Black and Indigenous community members – are killed at a much higher rate than white people in the same cities. The Mapping Police Violence Project (mappingpoliceviolence.org) has demonstrated that in Minneapolis, Black residents are 13 times as likely to be killed by the police while Latinx residents are almost 6 times as likely to be killed in police custody.
In 2014, the ten largest Police Departments collectively paid out $248.7 Million in settlements and court judgments. In 2017, New York City paid out $302 million dollars in police misconduct lawsuits.
The public health costs are certainly even higher. The impact of violence by police against communities has been shown to negatively affect a range of health outcomes, including diabetes and obesity. This Is a public health crisis that must be addressed directly in partnership with communities that are most negatively impacted if we are to create an equitable and just society.
Starting in Minneapolis, we will convene community members, leaders and local officials focusing on ensuring that we are centering BIPOC and other oppressed voices. Together we will develop an actionable plan and strategy for reducing and eliminating violence against Black, Brown and other oppressed groups.
Our model of Intentional Social Interactions creates a neutral and safer environment for marginalized community members to interact directly with local leaders and officials. We do this by ensuring our public meetings are at least 51% BIPOC so that the communities most affected are represented and that local community leaders build authentic relationships with the communities they serve. We will host multiple community meetings, for now online due to Covid-19, and ensure we are reaching the most excluded communities so they can take their rightful place at the decision making table.
Utilizing direct feedback from different groups we can then work with the community to create a unified vision that is locally and bottom-up generated for ending violence against Black and Brown people. Relationships formed between community members are imperative to ensure that local leadership is held accountable to the community. This is how we ensure the sustainability of this project.
Safe(r) was created to serve the public safety and public health needs of community and to bring justice and restorative healing to the communities most affected by state violence in the United States. Any solution must be created with consultation and buy-in by the communities most affected by state violence.
Our model, IZI, was built to create spaces for the unheard to find voice and foster connections across systems to better respond to inequities across healthcare, education, and social justice by providing the tools and environment for people to connect and collaborate more effectively across differences. We hire local community connectors to ensure we are reaching as widely as possible. We provide meals to families that may not otherwise be able to attend and when needed we are providing devices and/or cellular data services to ensure we are minimizing the tech gap as much as possible.
We exist solely to elevate the voices of oppressed and excluded people and communities and ensure they take their rightful place at the decision making table. The health and future of our community demands that we must collectively heed and and raise up these voices to solve our toughest challenges.
- Elevating opportunities for all people, especially those who are traditionally left behind
We believe that our project applies to all three dimensions. Ultimately, the only way to drive action toward solving the challenge of police brutality is to elevate the voices of those traditionally oppressed and left behind. Their voices must be prioritized in order to ensure we are creating a sustainable and actionable plan while ensuring the community buys into it. Our model of IZI, works by elevating understanding between people and changing people’s attitudes, beliefs and behaviors by removing their preconceived notions of the other long enough for them to form an authentic connection with someone different from them.
Our office is three miles from 38th Street and Chicago Avenue in Minneapolis where George Floyd was killed by four police officers. This wasn’t the first time there had been police violence against Black and Brown people in the Twin Cities, but the outpouring of community anger, rage and sadness was palpable. In the days following as many in the city rose up, we felt that we must step up to create the space for solutions and help heal our communities. We have worked extensively in Minneapolis for our entire history as an organization. The previous two years, we have organized a community gathering on the 38th Street Bridge over 35W Highway in Minneapolis in partnership with City Councilwoman Andrea Jenkins. Bringing together two historically diverse neighborhoods in South Minneapolis that were intentionally separated by the building of the 35W Interstate. We have the partnerships, the expertise and the experience to do this right now, starting in Minneapolis, we just need the funding.
Marnita grew up in an all white town outside of Seattle, Washington in the 1960s and 1970s. She was born to a Black father and a white mother. She was given up by her biological mother after her biological grandmother gave an ultimatum to put her up for adoption or be expelled from the family. She left home at the age of 16 and has been self-supporting ever since. Marnita moved to Minneapolis from Los Angeles and founded The Table in 2005. She created the model of Intentional Social Interaction to ensure no one else would have to grow up this way and feel unwanted.
We have 15 years of experience bringing people together across differences to address public policy issues. We have worked extensively in Minnesota and across the United States, and are proud to say that we are trusted by the communities of color in Minnesota because of our history of working together collaboratively. We have developed relationships and partnerships with local leaders and officials, community organizations, organizers and activists, foundations and businesses. Our model of Intentional Social Interactions was created to address issues like this and create a space where collaboration and problem solving can be done across differences of race, class and culture. We have brought together 70,000 people in the past 15 years and have meaningfully facilitated changes in attitudes and behaviors towards traditionally excluded and oppressed communities.
The vast majority of our staff and leadership team come from communities most affected by state violence and have grown up with this specter of violence their whole lives. This is not just a passing fad, it is something we live every day and we must come together to solve this problem.
Our organization has been holding public community events over a meal for 15 years. Before the onset of Covid-19 in the United States, we had never canceled an event in our history. As a result of Covid-19, we had to figure out how to do what we do online and virtually. There was no guarantee that our current partners would continue to work with us while we all began social distancing for the good of our communities. Additionally, our events and model of Intentional Social Interaction has depended on in person experience engineering to create space open to collaboration across difference.
Due to the talent and expertise of Marnita’s leadership and our team – and in the span of one week – we were able to create an online virtual experience comparable to our in-person events. We were able to demonstrate to our partners that we are able to host engaging public events while still bringing people across differences to build relationships and solve problems. We’ve actually hired more staff during this crisis to keep up with the demand.
Marnita built this organization that started out with two employees to a team of more than 10 staff. Nearly 70% of the organization's revenue comes from someone that hires us. Through this growth, Marnita’s Table has sustainably built expertise and capacity to engage in bigger and bigger projects. She has hired and helped develop an internal team made up of women and non-binary leaders of color. Many of our staff started by attending a Marnita’s Table event and are proof of the success of the model. Marnita is proud that so many of the young people that started out coming to Table events chose to work for the Table when given the chance. In the past year we have hosted events in Minneapolis, Atlanta, San Diego, London, Mat-Su, Kansas City.
- Nonprofit