NIBS Convenes Built Environment Leaders for Social Equity Roundtable

The National Institute of Building Sciences recently convened an executive Social Equity Roundtable, meeting with dozens of leaders to help move the needle on diversity, equity, and inclusion in the built environment.

The late July meeting was a followup to a December 2020 executive roundtable entitled “Improving the Workforce of the Built Environment Through Social Equity.” The goal of these meetings is to discuss workforce, industry sustainability, review data and best practices, and partnerships.

“We must work together as an industry to focus on steps that will impact real change,” said Lakisha A. Woods, CAE, President and CEO of NIBS. “Committing to take specific action as it relates to developing a diverse leadership pipeline is the key to future success.”

Next Steps and Group Commitments

NIBS will sign the PwC CEO Action for Diversity & Inclusion, joining 2,000 CEOs who have signed the pledge. The pledge aims to cultivate trusting workplaces that can have complex, and sometimes difficult, conversations; implement and/or expand unconscious bias education; and share best—and unsuccessful—practices.

NIBS also will compile and share best practices with industry leaders who participated in the roundtable. The goal is to have all building industry organizations commit to the CEO Action Pledge and other recommended steps, including committing to building a diverse leadership team and promoting members, by the end of September.

Background

After the December roundtable, NIBS partnered with independent market research and consulting firm Avenue M Group to study the current demographics and culture of the building industry. Among the findings, 65 percent of respondents indicated it is important or extremely important to increase the diversity of the built environment. 43 percent of employed respondents indicated their company has a program or initiative dedicated to DEI; 28 percent of respondents indicated they have experienced discrimination or prejudice based on age; and 66 percent of respondents indicated they have experienced discrimination or prejudice based on gender (women).

Learn more about NIBS’ commitment toward cultivating and preserving a culture of inclusion and connectedness.

Source: National Institute of Building Sciences

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