People of color and Native Americans working at the Minnesota Department of Human Services are sometimes the targets of racial slurs and harassment, denied promotions and raises and are isolated without support from senior management, several current and former employees say.
The climate not only creates personal turmoil and career disruptions for those affected, but employees say their ideas to improve outreach and programs to better meet the needs of the state's diverse communities are sometimes ignored.
"The atmosphere there is so blatantly racist," said Shirley Cain, a Native American who left the DHS in June after six years. "They need to do something big to make that place fair for people."
DHS, the state's largest agency, employs 7,300 workers and serves more than 1.1 million Minnesotans with public health insurance programs, services for the elderly and people with disabilities, cash assistance and other social services.
At least 35% of its clients are people of color or Native American, while 80% of its workforce is white. More than 40% of new hires who are Native American or people of color leave within two years, according to DHS data obtained under a public records request.
Commissioner Jodi Harpstead, who was appointed to the department's top job last year, said in a recent interview that she is aware of the concerns and is putting programs in place to make the DHS "an anti-racist organization."
"Obviously, we have work to do," she said. "Right now there is a very heightened sense of frustration. I get that."
The atmosphere, described by some as toxic, prompted employees to reach out this year to legislators and Gov. Tim Walz's office to intervene. Several say it is too risky to raise concerns internally because "they are at best ignored and at worst denigrated and accused of race baiting," according to minutes of a June meeting of the Minnesota Association of Professional Employees.