Kelli Perkins Named Burlington’s Director of Racial Equity

Burlington Mayor Emma Mulvaney-Stanak has picked Kelli Perkins as the city’s next director of Racial Equity, Inclusion & Belonging.

Perkins, who lives in Winooski, was one of 40 applicants for the position. The Burlington City Council will vote on her appointment on Monday. If confirmed, she’ll start on October 6, oversee a department of four staffers and earn $130,331 annually.

“Dr. Perkins is a deep listener, a restorative justice practitioner, a Vermonter, and deeply committed to helping our community move forward together in this critical work at this very critical time,” Mulvaney-Stanak said at a press conference on Thursday morning.

Perkins most recently worked as the human resources and Justice, Equity, Diversity and Inclusion director for Vital Communities, an Upper Valley nonprofit focused on expanding access to food, housing and transportation. She previously worked in higher education, including as director of first-year experiences at Illinois Wesleyan University and associate director for residential education at the University of Vermont. She has a doctorate degree in higher education from Northeastern University.

“Burlington can be a place where anyone can thrive,” Perkins said. “That’s my goal: to help us get to a place where we can actualize that.”

Perkins is slated to take the helm of a department that has had its ups and downs since being created in 2019. Its first director, Tyeastia Green, built the department from the ground up, eventually hiring more than two-dozen staffers and putting on a widely successful Juneteenth event. But her tenure ended on a sour note, with Green alleging she faced “racial denigration” while working under former mayor Miro Weinberger — charges he has denied. She has demanded the city pay her a settlement to avoid a lawsuit, but she has neither filed one nor has the city ponied up.

Kelli Perkins (right) and Public Works director Chapin Spencer (left) Credit: Courtney Lamdin © Seven Days

Green’s replacement, Kim Carson, was only in the role for 18 months before leaving in May 2024. The department has been led by temporary directors since, most recently Christian Berry, who has been in the post since November. Activists had been pressuring Mulvaney-Stanak to appoint Berry to the permanent position.

On Thursday, Mulvaney-Stanak thanked Berry for her leadership but wouldn’t say whether she had applied for the position. The hiring process was “unexpectedly widely competitive,” the mayor said, potentially because diversity and equity programs have been defunded at the federal level. She added that Perkins has experience with “restorative practices” that could address some of the concerns raised in recent open letter campaigns in support of both Berry and Green.

Berry did not immediately return an interview request. An email sent to her city email address returned an out-of-office message.

Perkins said her goal is to foster a welcoming culture in Burlington. She floated the idea of creating a leadership program for Black and brown youth to become more involved in city government, which she said would make them feel more invested in the community.

Perkins will also advise the mayor on housing policy, which includes a goal of closing gaps in home ownership rates between white and Black residents. And she’ll be involved in a process to enshrine the Racial Equity, Inclusion & Belonging office in the city charter, an idea that gained traction after Mulvaney-Stanak shrunk the department to five staff, including the director position. One of those positions is currently vacant.

Councilor Melo Grant (P-Central District), who served on the hiring committee, said she hopes Perkins can revive some of the initiatives the city council approved in a June 2020 resolution. The measure notoriously trimmed the size of the police force by attrition — a move that has since been reversed — but also created a task force to consider how the city might pay reparations for its role in chattel slavery, among other items.

“I look forward to working with Dr. Perkins and addressing the long list of things on that resolution that were never finished,” Grant said. “We left a lot of things undone because we didn’t have the courage, and I’d like to think that we have the courage now.”

Council President Ben Traverse (D-Ward 5) said Perkins’ hiring demonstrates the city’s commitment to equity work when similar programs have been gutted.

“It is vitally important that the council and the mayor, in partnership with all of our city stakeholders, continue to show our strong support for this department’s mission,” he said.

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