Building a Workplace of Belonging
Employee-led resource and affinity groups bring colleagues together

Find Your Group
Learn more about Duke's ERGs, include how to start one.
Encouraged by leaders at Duke, Tumlin helped launch the in 2024.
The group gives disabled employees and their allies a space where they feel valued, supported and empowered.
DICE is one of 17 official or at Duke. Groups represent mothers, LGBTQ+ employees and allies, military veterans, remote workers, and others, promoting inclusion while fostering connections among colleagues and the wider community.

To start a group, employees submit an application that includes a charter and identifies an executive sponsor to advocate for the group. A steering committee reviews the applications, and approved groups receive financial support for eligible activities.
Officially launched in 2024 with Tumlin鈥檚 support, DICE hosted its inaugural public event in October.
featured Dr. Margaret Price, an Associate Professor of English at Ohio State University and author of 鈥淐rip Spacetime: Access, Failure, and Accountability in Academic Life,鈥 who discussed the challenges faced by disabled individuals and highlighted the importance of the new group.
鈥淎 lot of people told stories about what helped them survive,鈥 Price said. 鈥淚t was often one person, or a few people or a small community 鈥 like DICE, where people know they can go.鈥
Get to know a few ERGs taking root at Duke.
隆顿础尝贬贰!

Several years ago, while working with medical interpreters assisting Duke鈥檚 Spanish-speaking patients, Angel Romero, originally from Spain, enjoyed an easy rapport with
co-workers from Colombia, Ecuador and Puerto Rico.
After becoming Program Coordinator for Community Partnerships with the , meeting Hispanic colleagues became less common. When Romero learned about the launch in 2023 of , an ERG for Latino or Hispanic employees, joining the effort wasn鈥檛 a tough decision.
鈥淒uke is very large with many departments and silos, so it can be hard to know who is out there,鈥 Romero said. 鈥淭hese groups are great. They鈥檙e how we connect and stay connected.鈥
隆顿础尝贬贰! 鈥 a Spanish phrase meaning 鈥淟et鈥檚 go!鈥 and an acronym for Duke Advancing Latin茅/Hispanic Excellence 鈥 was created by Raquel Ruiz, Co-Director of the Equity, Learning Health Communities Pillar. After joining Duke in 2022, where 6.3% of the workforce identifies as Hispanic or Latino, Ruiz recognized the need for a community to connect and support Latino and Hispanic employees.
With more than 100 members, 隆顿础尝贬贰! hosts volunteering events, networking opportunities, a Hispanic Heritage Month celebration and regular cafecitos, which are informal virtual conversations over coffee with Duke leaders.
鈥淟atinos like to get together with other Latinos to find connection and shared culture,鈥 Ruiz said. 鈥淭hat鈥檚 what an ERG does. It allows us to build a community that can help us thrive.鈥
Special Events Planners Council

When Erin Clark became Program Coordinator for the Office of Duke-NUS Affairs in 2023, she was tasked with organizing the office鈥檚 events, including Durham visits from the Singapore-based faculty and leaders.
She knew tackling the challenges would require some backup.
鈥淚 immediately sought out resources to help me do my job,鈥 Clark said. 鈥淭hat鈥檚 how I found the Special Events Planners Council.鈥
Originally formed in the 1990s, the , which became an official ERG last year, is a network of roughly 300 staff members united by their need to make organizing complex Duke events look easy.
The council hosts occasional in-person events, where members meet potential vendors or visit venues. Periodic virtual gatherings explore topics such as making meetings more sustainable or accessible.
Through a busy Microsoft Teams channel or connections made through the group, members routinely help each other navigate the unique challenges of organizing everything from departmental meetings to large symposiums.
鈥淚t鈥檚 not just about tapping into the knowledge of the people who are doing similar work,鈥 said Clark, now the council鈥檚 vice president. 鈥淚t鈥檚 also about those connections
you make with the broader community of Duke.鈥
ME2 Black Employee Resource Group

During a 2020 老牛影视 School of Medicine virtual town hall on systemic racism, Coral May, then Director of the School of Medicine鈥檚 Human Resources Shared Services Center, noted that while there were groups for the school鈥檚 Black faculty and students, none existed for staff.
After hearing the comment, Annise Weaver, Co-Director of the North Carolina Psychiatry Access Line, sent an email to May about initiatives that could elevate staff. Their discussions evolved into a shared vision for a group supporting the school鈥檚 Black staff.
鈥淲hen I saw Coral speak up, I saw hope,鈥 Weaver said. 鈥淚 thought, OK, there鈥檚 a space for us. I saw someone who was identifying that staff have unique needs during this time.鈥
For several months, Weaver, May and a circle of colleagues met weekly on Zoom, sharing experiences and planning an ERG for Black staff members in the School of Medicine. That became the , which drew around 80 people to its 2021 virtual kickoff.
鈥淚 remember, after our first meeting, getting comments like 鈥楾his is the first time I鈥檝e been in a Zoom room where everybody looked like me,鈥欌 said May, now Assistant Vice President for Human Resources in .
Since then, ME2 has organized volunteer outings, Juneteenth celebrations and monthly virtual meetings with guest speakers, professional development presentations and opportunities for members from across the University and Health System to share concerns and successes.
鈥淕roups like this are a place where, collectively, we can put our voices together and talk about the issues that affect us,鈥 said Financial Management Analyst and ME2 leadership team member Antonio Jones. 鈥淲e can address issues in a meaningful way and promote the kind of growth at Duke that will make people want to stay.鈥
ERGs and Affinity Groups
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