Video Interview, Dan Sapper, February 22, 2013

  • KEVIN INDOVINO: So Dan, first thing, for the record,
  • we just need the correct spelling
  • of your first and last name.
  • How you want it to appear on the screen.
  • DAN SAPPER: Dan Sapper.
  • D-A-N. S-A-P-P-E-R.
  • KEVIN INDOVINO: Like I said in my notes to you,
  • primarily the focus is going to be on Lambda,
  • but just talk to me first, about how
  • you became aware of Lambda Network at Kodak,
  • and what was it about that, that interested you
  • enough to get involved.
  • DAN SAPPER: I first became aware that there
  • was this group forming when I saw an ad in the Empty Closet.
  • It was just a few lines that said,
  • attention Kodak employees, if you're
  • interested in forming a gay and lesbian group,
  • please call this phone number.
  • And it was David Kosel. phone number.
  • And I called it and said, what's going on?
  • I had no inkling that something was
  • happening until I saw this ad.
  • And what I was told was, there was
  • going to be some sort of planning meeting--
  • formation meeting-- just getting the people
  • who are interested together, and that was held at David's house.
  • I don't even remember what time of year it was,
  • but I think, somewhere around twenty,
  • twenty-five people, maybe, showed up.
  • Maybe around twenty.
  • And it was really just kind of an open meeting.
  • What are people interested in.
  • Trying to figure out what, would the name of the group
  • be, if we did have a group?
  • And we were told that there had been some groundwork laid
  • that Kodak had this opportunity for groups of employees
  • to come together, if there was some business
  • interest around it.
  • And these were going to be called employee networks,
  • and one or two had already formed,
  • and I think that was the Woman's Forum of Kodak Employees
  • and Network North Star, which was
  • a group for African-American employees.
  • So Lambda was born that night.
  • We did a lot of brainstorming for names.
  • And did we want something really in your face, kind of name?
  • Did we want something that gays would recognize,
  • but other people wouldn't?
  • And that's how we came up with Lambda.
  • We knew that that was a word used
  • in early civil rights movement, and we said, maybe
  • we should take part of that.
  • And Lambda Network at Kodak began at that point.
  • KEVIN INDOVINO: I want to get a sense
  • of not so much the why, but the need to develop this network.
  • What was going on that gays and lesbians felt that they needed
  • to come together and form this?
  • DAN SAPPER: I think the need for a network
  • was a little bit different in everybody's mind--
  • in each participant's mind.
  • It ranged from anything from feeling discriminated against
  • or feeling harassed in the workplace
  • to feeling isolated, lonely.
  • Not knowing that there might be other gay people
  • at the same company.
  • Just a need for a feeling of a good place to be.
  • I don't know that there was, at that point--
  • at the beginning, at the very beginning--
  • any talk about really creating a huge amount of change.
  • I'm sure that, in some people's minds,
  • maybe they saw an opportunity to address management,
  • whether that was, hey, we need health benefits.
  • Or hey, we need bereavement leave.
  • But it was early, even in the gay rights movement,
  • for those kinds of discussions.
  • We're talking 1993, 1994.
  • So why did we need it?
  • I think there was just that common interest
  • of finding a place for ourselves,
  • some camaraderie, and some interest in making
  • a difference in our workplace.
  • KEVIN INDOVINO: Can you talk about, maybe,
  • some of the initial challenges of getting this group together?
  • Where there internal challenges?
  • Community challenges?
  • DAN SAPPER: The biggest challenge
  • that I remember, was figuring out, how do we find the gays?
  • How do we find the lesbians?
  • An add in the Empty Closet was state of the art at that point.
  • And right around that same time--
  • I think-- there was some computerisation starting
  • to happen, and I think, really, one of our earliest challenges
  • as a group was, how do we communicate to the workplace?
  • How do we communicate to each other?
  • And Kodak had an email system and an online bulletin board,
  • in the days before the internet when places to post messages
  • were something out of the pong era--
  • green letters on a black screen.
  • And we were able to convince Kodak
  • that Lambda Network needed a computer bulletin board so
  • that we could post messages that related to our group-- meeting
  • notices, meeting notes.
  • And that was a real big deal.
  • That was probably, the first really big hurdle
  • that we had to cross because when we went live with that,
  • suddenly, we were out there.
  • I don't think we really had many names up there,
  • but that was a coming out for Lambda Network
  • because suddenly, we were visible to the company,
  • as one of the--
  • I don't even remember how many bulletin boards were
  • available on the screen, but it probably
  • wasn't more than twenty or thirty.
  • And suddenly, there was this one called Lambda Network at Kodak,
  • and people would click on it and see that it
  • was a gay group at Kodak and--
  • that's when we started to get feedback.
  • KEVIN INDOVINO: Well, and the story that I heard
  • was, it was up there very long before it had
  • to be taken down for a moment.
  • DAN SAPPER: And I don't remember it being taken down,
  • but that wouldn't surprise me if it was.
  • Maybe I missed that little interval.
  • But I think we had to work out--
  • if I recall-- I think we had to work out
  • with the company, the kinds of things
  • that we were allowed to post and the kinds of things
  • we weren't allowed to post.
  • It really had to be with regard to Lambda Network,
  • with regard to the business at hand,
  • and in support of Kodak's business.
  • And we couldn't post community news,
  • like the Empty Closet was posting the news.
  • KEVIN INDOVINO: Can you talk to me
  • about once you guys did go live and you
  • were up on those bulletin board and the word was getting
  • around corporate, let's talk about some of the responses
  • that you were getting.
  • What was the initial response of the gay and lesbian community
  • at Kodak, in regards to--
  • was this a floodgate--
  • did they open up?
  • DAN SAPPER: I think the response early on,
  • to Lambda and to having this ability to communicate,
  • it took--
  • I think-- it was a many-headed monster, in a way--
  • monster's probably too strong of a term.
  • But there was response from the general employee base
  • that some people weren't ready for gay and lesbian diversity
  • to be represented in the workplace.
  • That was, kind of, the crux of the matter.
  • I think the company and the management was ready for it.
  • I think Lambda was ready for it.
  • And there, at that point, had to be
  • some pretty serious discussions between our network's leaders,
  • and HR leaders, and top management of a company,
  • that said, hey, look at this kind of stuff.
  • Look at this kind of feedback that you're getting just
  • for everyday postings that might be on our bulletin board.
  • And if this is directed just at a bulletin board,
  • imagine what's directed at us--
  • as individuals.
  • How that makes individuals feel.
  • And so there was an acknowledgment--
  • I think, at that point--
  • that we were going to partner with the company,
  • with the diversity director, with the HR
  • people around the company, with the leaders across the company,
  • to make things better.
  • So there were some initial challenges
  • that I don't think they were really unexpected to us,
  • but I think the floodgate was unleashed.
  • KEVIN INDOVINO: You're into the Lambda Network.
  • It's starting to take off.
  • It had become pretty well recognized, not only in Kodak,
  • but now, within Rochester as a whole.
  • From your personal point of view,
  • what was it about (unintelligible)
  • that you choose to be so connected to it?
  • What did you see that Lambda was doing,
  • that you felt this is something that I need to commit to?
  • DAN SAPPER: When I first started at Kodak,
  • I was nineteen years old.
  • I was in college.
  • I was a co-op student so I was at Kodak for three
  • or for months at a time, then I went back to college
  • for the balance of the year.
  • Then I was back for another work block.
  • And I was out on campus at nineteen, twenty,
  • twenty-one years old, but I was realizing, very quickly,
  • that I was very in the closet in the workplace.
  • And that was in the early to mid-eighties.
  • So even as I started my professional life at Kodak,
  • I was rather, in the closet.
  • I wasn't sure how to present myself.
  • Whether it was even appropriate to be gay at work.
  • You know, what does that mean, being gay at work?
  • It's basically just being yourself--
  • as we can realize now.
  • But at the time, it was definitely
  • a feeling of being closeted.
  • So Lambda-- for me-- represented an opportunity
  • to explore that part of the workplaces.
  • How do you integrate your authentic personal self
  • with what you spend eight, nine, ten hours a day
  • doing, as part of your career?
  • And for me, I was an engineer, and gay and engineer
  • don't exactly go together like the aptitude test said it
  • would, or wouldn't.
  • So there was this need for me, that Lambda brought together
  • my personal self and my professional self in a way that
  • wasn't expressed before.
  • And being young at the time-- still relatively young
  • and early in my career--
  • there were role models in Lambda.
  • People who were much more out in the workplace.
  • People who were much more advanced in their career.
  • Very sure of themselves.
  • And knew how to network, and by network,
  • I don't mean Lambda Network.
  • They knew how to network among the company leadership,
  • and I thought that was really cool.
  • I said, I want to be part of that.
  • I want to be able to do that.
  • You spend all this time--
  • I don't know how much of your waking life--
  • one third of your waking life at work,
  • and I wanted it to be more fulfilling, personally, to me
  • so I just got involved and more involved.
  • KEVIN INDOVINO: So when was it-- in the work that you're doing
  • with Lambda--
  • that you realized-- maybe it was a given moment--
  • that it dawned on you that, what we're doing here
  • is really important.
  • What we're doing here's really making a difference.
  • DAN SAPPER: Was there really a moment where something dawned
  • on me that we're making a difference,
  • I think there were a lot of big moments,
  • and there were a lot of little moments.
  • Working through these problems--
  • like this public bulletin board, this electronic bulletin
  • board--
  • and seeing the company's response
  • and seeing that we had people who were
  • responding to our concerns--
  • that was one of those initial moments.
  • But I think when things really started
  • making a difference was when non-gay people started
  • interacting with Lambda Network, and whether that was managers.
  • Work groups.
  • Work groups inviting Lambda representatives
  • to come to their workplace and tell them
  • what we're about, as a network.
  • We started to get traction that way,
  • and we saw that it wasn't just the gay and lesbian people
  • wanting to make a difference, but that there
  • were other people who wanted to make a difference,
  • and they would partner with us and be our allies.
  • And I think, that's when things really
  • started to take off and get some traction,
  • and feel like, we weren't a voice in the darkness.
  • KEVIN INDOVINO: Can you talk to me
  • about that first the management event, management dinner--
  • reception, whatever it was.
  • Just talk to me about the experience of that evening.
  • And again, that kind of moment that maybe, the realization
  • that this could really work.
  • DAN SAPPER: There was a vision which
  • I did not see for this first ever educational event
  • with management.
  • The board of directors of Lambda and the executive team,
  • the president, and President-elect--
  • throughout this idea that we need
  • to come together as a group and invite
  • top management of the company, to hear what we have to say.
  • And we were going to call this, the Educational
  • Event with Management.
  • And I was like, what the heck?
  • What's this about?
  • What are we going to do there?
  • I don't get it.
  • What's it going to be?
  • But luckily, some of these role models
  • that I mentioned earlier, had the foresight and the vision
  • to create this opportunity for Lambda Network--
  • gay, lesbian, and I think it was before we even
  • used bisexual and transgender--
  • but for the gays and lesbians to come together.
  • Come out as a network, in front of the top leaders
  • of the company, with them present at a big dinner--
  • party, really.
  • And have some presentation.
  • And it started to come together.
  • And one of the big news in our planning meeting was,
  • was that George Fisher was going to want to address the room.
  • So here, we had a room full of--
  • at least, we planned to-- have a room
  • full of gay and lesbian people from Lambda Network.
  • Maybe some people who didn't want to associate with Lambda
  • Network, but should have wanted to associate with us.
  • So in other words, people who were still in the closet.
  • And some managers that had to be convinced to attend and maybe,
  • bring some of their work group with them.
  • And we had the CEO of the company
  • get up in front of a group and say, we have not only a right
  • to be there, but we must be--
  • gay and lesbian people must be present.
  • Must bring themselves fully to the workplace.
  • And to hear the CEO say that in front of his leaders
  • and in front of the Lambda Network, that was really,
  • really something.
  • We had a guest speaker, who was Elizabeth Birch.
  • This was before Elizabeth Birch became the executive director
  • of the Human Rights Campaign.
  • And I believe she was still working for Apple,
  • Incorporated, at the time.
  • And she also, was one of these visionaries who,
  • herself, she was out at work.
  • She was high up in her company.
  • She was an out and proud leader.
  • And she spoke to us as a company and said,
  • this is what you must do as diversity leaders.
  • And she broke new ground, by speaking to us.
  • And it was just an overall wonderful coming out
  • party for Lambda Network, and it was really
  • an opportunity for the managers of the company,
  • to see what it felt like to be in a room full of mixed crowd--
  • gay and lesbian and straight allies.
  • So it was really, a big thing, and Lambda took a lot of energy
  • away from it.
  • It was definitely a launching point for future successes.
  • And the company took a lot away from it.
  • It was definitely a launching point for change.
  • Change at the leadership level.
  • How they approached diversity.
  • How they approached gay and lesbian--
  • KEVIN INDOVINO: Can you put into context for me,
  • where Lambda Network stands historically,
  • compared to other companies in the nation?
  • Because if I remember right, Lambda was one of the first.
  • It wasn't the first, but it was, probably,
  • maybe one of the first five.
  • DAN SAPPER: I don't know that answer.
  • Where does Lambda stand in the pecking order of early employee
  • resource groups?
  • I know that IBM was more advanced than Kodak,
  • in terms of employee resource groups or employee networks.
  • And we looked to some of those early adopters
  • for some direction, for some best practices.
  • And I would say that, I don't know whether Lambda
  • was in the first five, or first ten, or first fifty,
  • but yeah, I think we were early, and we were active early.
  • So I think we got good traction in the mid-nineties,
  • that education event with management
  • that we talked, about was 1996.
  • For Lambda, we were seeking out, how do we make a difference?
  • And we were attending diversity conferences,
  • like the Creating Change Conference,
  • which was sponsored by the National Gay and Lesbian Task
  • Force.
  • So we were early, but there were others in the Rochester area
  • that we're making a difference, too.
  • With GALAXe at Xerox.
  • They were right there beside us so I
  • don't want to claim to be way early,
  • but I think we were early in the traction department.
  • KEVIN INDOVINO: I'm going to throw this question at you.
  • In the early nineties, there was this need for this employee
  • group, is the need still there?
  • Has the mission had to evolve or change at all?
  • How is Lambda twenty years later now, almost,
  • different than it was when it first started?
  • DAN SAPPER: Lambda today is very different than Lambda
  • of ten or fifteen years ago.
  • First of all, Kodak is much smaller company
  • than we were ten years ago, and the public troubles of Kodak
  • are well known, at this point.
  • So our network has shrunk quite a bit.
  • The interest level has diminished greatly,
  • from the people who want to be members
  • or should want to be members.
  • Looking back and being involved at the beginning
  • and being involved now and on the board of directors
  • of Lambda at the beginning and being on the board of directors
  • now, it's a struggle to keep interest going.
  • And I think, part of that is because there
  • have been so many advances made that the same kinds of issues
  • or the kinds of issues that were important
  • to be addressed in the mid-nineties.
  • The need for health care insurance
  • for our significant others--
  • now we have Marriage Equality in New York.
  • Kodak gave us health insurance for our domestic partners
  • in 1997.
  • So as things started to change at Kodak, where
  • some of the needs were being met and more and more demonstration
  • from the company, that we were accepted and included
  • and part of the workplace, fully engaged,
  • that I think people didn't see the need or now,
  • don't see that need to come together as much.
  • And I think, the gay community is just so much more visible,
  • and there's so much more nuances in the types of groups
  • that are available for people to participate in,
  • that do people really feel a need to participate
  • in a workplace group?
  • Or are we being more authentic?
  • And are the laws of the land supporting us
  • in being more authentic?
  • And I think that's the case.
  • So it's very different now in maintaining the energy level
  • with Lambda Network compared to what
  • we were doing in the early 2000s, when we were getting
  • four hundred or five hundred people attending
  • our annual education event.
  • So that early event that we had in 1996,
  • with maybe eighty-five or ninety people in the room,
  • grew to be an annual event with four hundred or five
  • hundred people in the room.
  • And boy, the energy level is just so different.
  • Now, we try to do an annual event yearly,
  • and we have to partner with--
  • often, we partner with another employee network.
  • We've partnered with the Empower Group which
  • is a group that represents disabled employees
  • or people with disabilities in the workplace,
  • whether they're visible or invisible disabilities.
  • But we get together, and we pull off these events,
  • and we present some of our own information.
  • So we're still active.
  • It's just not nearly to the same level.
  • KEVIN INDOVINO: So is there this kind of, now
  • what question out there?
  • It's kind of like, we worked hard to get certain things,
  • and we've pretty much got them.
  • Now what?
  • DAN SAPPER: That question gets asked every year.
  • And having served on the board of directors quite
  • a bit over the years, we start the year
  • with that question, now what?
  • Where are we?
  • What did we accomplish?
  • Where are we going?
  • And it doesn't always feel like we're accomplishing something
  • every moment of every month of every year,
  • but when we look back and look at chunks of time
  • and how things progress, we say, yeah, there's still a need.
  • We're still here.
  • We still want to serve.
  • And so, we keep going on.
  • We have ideas now--
  • one of our things that we're looking at right
  • now is a walk down memory lane.
  • What have we accomplished in the-- it's almost twenty
  • years since the concept arose, that Lambda Network was
  • going to be this employee resource group.
  • So we want to have a reunion.
  • The retirees.
  • The people who are still active employees.
  • People who have transferred to other companies.
  • People who have been laid off, but are still our friends.
  • And let's get together for a reunion,
  • and have a walk down memory lane.
  • That's our plan for this year, and we
  • think that we'll get a lot of energy from that.
  • And may reinvigorate us.
  • So we'll see.
  • One way or another, it will be meaningful to the people who
  • attend.
  • KEVIN INDOVINO: So when you look back, look at your work
  • with Lambda Network, what are you most proud of?
  • How do you want history to reflect upon Dan Sapper
  • and what he's done?
  • DAN SAPPER: I've thought about that question of,
  • what have I accomplished?
  • What's my legacy with this group?
  • And what catches me most off guard
  • is when people who I don't know, come up to me
  • and know me because of my involvement with Lambda
  • Network at Kodak.
  • And that might be somebody who is in the closet and says,
  • I really admire what you're doing.
  • I really admire how much courage you've put into this.
  • And it's like, it didn't seem like I was courageous
  • at the time, but when people tell me
  • that's how they perceive it, it's
  • like, that's a reality for people.
  • So I think what I get out of Lambda
  • and what I think I'll be remembered for is
  • that I tried to be more out.
  • I tried to be a public face of being gay in the workplace.
  • I'm not a big in your face kind of--
  • here I am, but I did all this work, and that was really
  • part of my interest in Lambda, was putting myself into it
  • and seeing what came out of it.
  • And I've mentioned, hey, I want to be like those role models
  • that I saw so early in my career.
  • And I do get some of that feedback,
  • and sometimes, I don't even recall
  • doing something or saying something and somebody will
  • come up to me years later and say,
  • you were such an inspiration for me
  • when you put yourself out there or whatever
  • it was that I did, that I don't remember.
  • And all I can say is, wow.
  • Something's coming back at me.
  • It's payback time-- in a good way.
  • It's just a really warm feeling.
  • So seeing people have the confidence
  • to come out of the closet in the workplace
  • or come out of the closet to me because they
  • know that I've done it, that's just a really good feeling.
  • KEVIN INDOVINO: Similar question.
  • It's easy to look back now at those first days
  • and those first couple of years, but I can't imagine back then,
  • that you guys realized how groundbreaking
  • and how historical that creating this network was going to be.
  • DAN SAPPER: Living through the progress that Lambda has made
  • and that Kodak, as a company, has made,
  • everything was incremental.
  • And when you live in that environment of increment,
  • it doesn't seem historic.
  • Looking back on it, yeah, I guess it sort of was.
  • Cool.
  • I don't think of it in those terms,
  • but I know that other companies, other organizations have
  • come to Lambda and said, how did you do it?
  • What did you do?
  • What's the best practice?
  • So we became a benchmark, and that is historic, too.
  • So it didn't always feel that way at the time,
  • that we were doing groundbreaking work or earth
  • moving work or really in the trenches,
  • but every little thing added up.
  • KEVIN INDOVINO: This next question,
  • it just dawned on me--
  • I didn't give you the questions ahead of time.
  • Not about Kodak or Lambda.
  • It's about you and Jim.
  • I want to just get a nice sound bite from you
  • about how you felt when you heard that gay marriage was
  • passed in New York state.
  • DAN SAPPER: That's a long story.
  • How did I feel when I heard that the legislation was passed
  • and going to be signed, that New York would have same sex
  • marriage--
  • Jim and I we're logged on to the internet for the New York--
  • I think, it was the Senate that had to approve it second,
  • after the House had approved it.
  • For many years, the state House had approved it.
  • Many times over, we were waiting for the Senate to approve it.
  • We were logged onto the internet.
  • We were watching the proceedings.
  • We are waiting for the vote.
  • My cousin and her husband were visiting us from out of town,
  • staying with us--
  • just for a day or two.
  • And we were mesmerized by the proceedings on the internet.
  • We had our laptop computer.
  • We were carrying it around with us, all around the house.
  • We were waiting for the vote.
  • Come on.
  • There were groups that were delaying it.
  • And finally, the vote was taken, and the few members
  • who crossed the aisle to support the majority vote, one of them
  • was my representative in my district, who
  • had voted against same sex marriage in prior votes,
  • and changed his vote for this historic moment.
  • And we were elated.
  • And my cousin who was visiting said, it's passed.
  • When are you getting married?
  • And I know that there were couples
  • who were waiting at City Hall for the first day
  • that the law went into effect, which
  • was a month after the legislation was signed
  • by the governor.
  • We were not right there.
  • We were about a month after that,
  • that we tied the knot in a very small ceremony held
  • in our backyard.
  • But it was earth shattering.
  • We had waited for that moment.
  • A year later, when we started filling out our taxes,
  • we realized, this is really messed up
  • at the federal level versus the state level
  • because the tax forms are all intertwined,
  • but the federal forms don't allow
  • us to file as being married.
  • Anyway, that's a sideline, but we were very happy.
  • And there's a tie in here to Lambda Network
  • because somewhere--
  • k-- think around 2005 or 2006, perhaps,
  • Lambda's annual educational event,
  • the theme was same sex marriage.
  • I don't remember the title exactly,
  • but marriage, justice, equality for all-- something like that.
  • And Jim and I spoke at that event,
  • what would it mean if we could get married?
  • And there were several couples who spoke.
  • There was a lesbian couple who had children together, and were
  • among the first in New York State--
  • maybe among the first in the country-- who were allowed
  • to adopt as same sex parents.
  • They spoke.
  • Jim and I spoke.
  • One of the top leaders of the company
  • spoke, what would it mean to the company,
  • if same sex marriage were legal.
  • So even however many years before the legislation
  • was passed--
  • five, six, seven years prior--
  • Jim and I had to sit down and think about, what would it
  • mean if we could get married?
  • And we had to put our words on paper.
  • And we had to read it back to an audience of four hundred
  • or five hundred people.
  • So it became a reality in our lifetime,
  • and it was meaningful to us.
  • We didn't plan a big wedding.
  • Some of our friends have had big weddings,
  • and they've been wonderful.
  • It wasn't in the cards for us right at that time.
  • So we're married.
  • We're happy.
  • And hopefully, the marriage equality
  • will continue to propagate in other states,
  • and hopefully, become the law of the United States,
  • not just the individual states.
  • KEVIN INDOVINO: With that, we'll leave it there.
  • Good job.
  • Brian will get that microphone off of you.