How Coffee Roasters Can Contribute to the Anti-Racism Movement

How Coffee Roasters Can Contribute to the Anti-Racism Movement

By O.M. MILES, Chair of the CRG’s Equity, Diversity, and Inclusion Committee 

Hello CRG Members,

My name is Miles, I’m a Business Development Manager at IKAWA, a former AST and roasting educator, and a black coffee professional.

Moving through life as a member of the minority, the layers of my identity are always front of mind. Even the same when participating in coffee: I’m a woman who roasts coffee in a male-dominated sector, as well as a Black person working in a white-dominated industry. 

Before the globally- and publicly-viewed, gruesome killing of George Floyd I never was given space to share with colleagues what these intersections mean, why they matter, or why even not discussing them holds us back as a community.  I’ve shared so much now, more than ever, and have been met with so many conversations showing growth from my colleagues (and also a few showing willful ignorance and a commitment to upholding white supremacy, unfortunately).

As a volunteer of a committee created by the CRG at the turn of a white supremacist incident at one of our community events, I bear the weight of bringing awareness to the topics above and finding ways to organize our roasting community and the structure of our CRG to protect the folks in our sector in the margins.

Much of what this looks like is unseen work: committee calls, sharing, long-term planning, our own democratic process, cross-functional projects, internal selling, rebuttals and education, carried out as volunteers on top of our full-time jobs.  I’m happy to be sharing it here, as it’s a very overdue introduction. 

Moving forward, I’m happy to share more on what we’re working on as a committee and, of course, receive feedback from the community (this is actually one of our committee’s tasks for this year!).

Thanks for reading and staying involved!

- O.M. Miles 

(just call me Miles)

Here are a few ideas on how you can contribute to the anti-racist movement…

#1 Donate:

  • In addition to or in lieu of the list above, don't forget to go local and donate to organizations in your community that are lesser-known, thus receive fewer donations.

#2 ... if you can't afford to donate, crowdfund or raise money:

#3 Protest:

#4 Petition:

#5 Vote:

#6 Educate yourself and your staff:

#7 Look closely and adjust your organizational structure:

#8 Amplify, support, and patron Black-owned businesses:

#9 Highlight Black coffee professionals:

#10 Keep listening and learning:

  • Restaurants Must Use This Moment to Change, Too (Eater)

  • Put feedback structures in place for black coffee professionals at your business

  • Host frequent and consistent educational sessions with your team

  • Incentivize learning within your organization

Nominations Are Now Open in the 2020 Coffee Roasters Guild Election

Nominations Are Now Open in the 2020 Coffee Roasters Guild Election

CRG Leadership Council Adopts Changes to Bylaws

CRG Leadership Council Adopts Changes to Bylaws

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