Orange Organizing Against Racism and the Racial Equity Institute are holding a “Groundwater” presentation this Sunday at 2:30pm at the Kehillah Synagogue in Chapel Hill.
Groundwater presentations are participatory in nature and focus on the systemic and structural aspects of racism.
Wanda Hunter of Orange Organizing Against Racism compares racism affecting systems such as the government and economics to groundwater spreading to lakes and rivers.
“Racism is in the groundwater of our nation,” says Hunter. “It is feeding all of the institutional lakes, and it’s a cross-system problem, so when you ask who should come, we think everyone should come because we’re all connected to systems.”
This type of institutional racism is what the Racial Equity Institute focuses on over individual bigotry because, Hunter says, racism will always exist as long as it exists in our institutions.
“We could take all those bigots and shoot them to the moon and racism would still be alive and well in this country because the kind of racism that causes the inequities in systems that we talk about is not caused by bigots, it’s not caused by the bad apples, it’s caused by the normal people,” says Hunter. “And we don’t even know how we’re doing it.”
Helping to organize this Groundwater training presentation is April Richard of the Orange County Health Department, who attended the Racial Equity Institutes’ Historical and Institutional Foundations in Racism workshop along with the rest of her department.
Richard has been helping to inculcate the health department with the institute’s teachings.
“Everyone comes to the table with a prejudice or a bias,” says Richard. “One of the things we’ve really been spending some time on is looking at how that bias has manifested itself in how we work with our clients.”
Richard says that attending racial equity training has helped her and the rest of the staff not let those inherent biases affect the way that they treat their clients.
“You really have to bring this conversation back home,” says Richard. “It’s hard to admit, to sit back and say, ‘I hold some bias myself.’”
For more information on the Groundwater presentations or on the Racial Equity Institute visit racialequityinstitute.org.
Related Stories
‹

Chapel Hill, Carrboro Community Members Advocate for Racial Justice in Education SystemCommunity members of all ages gathered at the Arts Center Plaza in Carrboro for a Black Lives Matter demonstration organized by three local students with a focus on addressing racist systems in education. Organizers based the event, which began with hundreds of participants kneeling for 8 minutes and 46 seconds in silence to honor George Floyd, […]

Celebration of Independence Day to Alter Local Government Services in Orange CountyThe celebration of Independence Day on Friday, July 3 and Saturday, July 4 will affect several local government services in and around Orange County. Here’s a look at what typical services will and won’t be happening during the weekend: Town of Chapel Hill All Chapel Hill administrative offices will be closed Friday, July 3, as […]

Drone Shows and Parades: Here's What to Know Before Orange County's July 4 CelebrationsA variety of July 4 festivities are set to take place across Orange County. Here's how local governments are celebrating.

Juneteenth Holiday to Affect Local Government Services Around Orange CountyAcross the country on Friday, Black Americans and communities will celebrate Juneteenth — the national recognition of when the final slaves were freed in the 19th century and of African-American culture. As a holiday, government services around the Orange County community will be affected on June 19 and the surrounding days. Here’s what residents can […]

Local Government Meetings: June 15-19, 2026This week in local government: a proposed AI moratorium in Durham and a board appointment (maybe) in Chatham County.

Garbage Collection, Local Transit and More: How Memorial Day Will Impact Local ServicesThe observation of Memorial Day Monday, May 25 will affect local government services around the Orange County community. Here’s what residents can expect: Town of Chapel Hill Memorial Day is an official town holiday. Most town and other administrative offices will be closed. Residential trash will not be collected on Monday, with the make-up day […]

Chapel Hill And Carrboro Hold Third No Kings Day, Joining Communities NationwideChapel Hill and Carrboro residents participated in the third No Kings Day on Saturday, Mar. 28, protesting President Donald Trump.

Local Government Meetings: February 9-13, 2025This week in local government: residents in Chatham County push back against Flock license-plate cameras and AI data centers.

Orange County Communities to Observe Martin Luther King Day Jan. 19. Here's How it Affects Services.The observation of Martin Luther King, Jr. Day on Monday, Jan. 19 will affect local government services around the Orange County community. Here’s what residents can expect this year: Town of Chapel Hill Most town offices will be closed Monday. Residential trash normally collected Monday will be collected Wednesday, Jan. 21. Curbside recycling collection will […]

Orange County Communities to Interrupt Services for December Holidays (2025)Communities around Orange County will interrupt their normal service schedules during the upcoming winter holidays. Here’s what customers can expect: Town of Chapel Hill Town of Chapel Hill government offices will be closed from Wednesday, Dec. 24 through Friday, Dec. 26. Residential trash collection will not be affected. Yard trimmings will not be collected on […]
›