Wayland residents are broadly happy with their town, yet many still experience life from the margins and question whether civic leaders truly welcome differences. That paradox anchors a 91-page Community Life & Engagement Equity Assessment unveiled at the Select Board’s June 2 meeting.
Conducted by Dr. Damon Williams and the Center for Strategic Diversity Leadership and Social Innovation, the study pairs numbers with narratives to show where belonging thrives and where it frays.
Seventy-five percent of respondents called Wayland “a good place to live, work, and be in community.” Yet many simultaneously questioned the town’s commitment to racial, religious, and LGBTQIA+ inclusion. Residents who are Black, Latino, Southeast Asian, Jewish, Muslim, agnostic, economically vulnerable, disabled, or LGBTQIA+ reported “lesser experiences than their white counterparts and peers.” Wayland’s affluence can feel like “a bubble of privilege” that leaves those with fewer resources “feeling a level of otherness,” the report said.
Williams distilled the data into seven composite “personas.” Two examples include “community connectors” — long-time, financially secure white homeowners who “love Wayland” and wield outsized influence in civic life, and determined METCO families — Boston-based Black and Latino parents who believe in Wayland schools yet say their children “too often feel like guests rather than full members of the community.” Other personas include “accessibility champions,” “working engagers,” “cultural bridge builders,” “resilient integrators” and “respected elders.”
Recommendations
Williams urged officials to adopt a concise roadmap. He suggested a three-year Community Life and Engagement Plan in which the town affirms shared values by publishing a town statement on dignity and belonging and keeps the Human Rights, Diversity, Equity & Inclusion (HRDEI) Committee well-resourced.
Second, he requested that the town make operations inclusive by:
- Training staff, boards and police on accessibility, bias and conflict resolution using local case studies
- Broadening hiring and volunteer recruitment
- Ensuring “access, not quotas” via mixed interview panels and plain-language for mobility.
Lastly, he suggested that the town tighten school-community ties by forming a METCO working group, auditing student access to programs, and creating an easy and confidential bias-reporting system with public outcome tallies. He also identified the need to celebrate cultural richness through inclusive festivals and “neighborliness” events, shifting language from polarized “DEI” debates to the unifying goal of belonging.
Williams cautioned that progress hinges on activation. “Reports are worth only the digital output it takes to produce them if nothing happens,” he said, urging officials to prioritize “two or three things you can do well.”
Chair Carol Martin welcomed the data, noting the town has “already started working” on several HRDEI-led initiatives. Town Manager Michael McCall will return with cost estimates and an implementation timeline later this summer. Wayland is among the first Massachusetts towns to commission a comprehensive equity audit. Without action, Williams warned, the town risks reinforcing its own “bubble.”