Eighteen years after stepping into the top leadership role of the Women's Foundation of Minnesota, Lee Roper-Batker is enthusiastically stepping back. "I love the foundation," said Roper-Batker, 58, whose tenure as president and CEO ends in January. "I also know that I want to lead by example by making room for a new leader, hopefully a leader of color, to bring new insights and wisdom to the foundation." Whoever that is will inherit a robust and respected organization that has seen a massive increase in grantmaking, a permanently endowed fund for girls, and an anti-human trafficking campaign, MN Girls Are Not For Sale, that has led to changes in laws and police training. Here, she shares her hopes and plans.
Q: Your first job was an unfortunate eye-opener. You handled it … uniquely.
A: I was 14 and the "popover girl" for a country club. My uniform was a really short dress with poofy blue bloomers and I had my first experience with sexual harassment. A male member pinched my bottom. A couple of weeks later, he came back and did the same thing. I poured my whole pitcher of water on him.
Q: I'm guessing you were fired, the times being as they were.
A: No, I kept my job. The staff and managers lined up on each side of the kitchen doors and they all clapped for me. I thought, OK, I can stand up for myself and I won't be punished.
Q: You say working at the foundation was a calling. What made it so?
A: My dad played a large role. He was a Lutheran minister at Mount Olivet church in Minneapolis and a church in Excelsior. My dad told me three things. One, you're a girl so people will tell you that you can't do things, but they're wrong. Two, fight for what you believe in life. And three, you have a lot of privilege, so it's your responsibility to give back.
Q: Are you really retiring, or just refocusing your boundless energy?