In March 2022, when
The woman in the audience had been trying to start a credit union in North Minneapolis, "in what we call Ground Zero for George Floyd and Philando Castile. For years we had been trying to do this, and because of the heart of one person on that stage it is closer to reality, and that would be Renée Sattiewhite," the woman said. "I picked up the phone and called her and explained my journey. Ground Zero for this project is riddled with payday lenders and fringe bankers. There was no cavalry coming."
The audience member was
And Sattiewhite did just that.
The Black-led Arise Community Credit Union is set to launch next year due in no small part to Sattiewhite's intervention, according to Hurston. "No cavalry was coming until I called her, and now we have an amazing team of experts behind us," Hurston said. "Thank you, Renée, for everything. You know, we could not have gotten as far as we've gotten without you. I just needed you to know that publicly."
DEI or die
As president and chief executive of the
In a time when the credit union industry is
"People think that DEI is a moment, but for me, it's a movement," she said. "For me, if credit unions do not embrace DEI they will die."
Sattiewhite, who turns 62 in December, is still scoring victories for her industry and for her cause. On the AACUC's behalf, Sattiewhite accepted the
The AACUC is "the organization that gets to make sure that people are seen and heard, and I do believe that if we served everybody passionately, we could change the world," she said.
With the
Sattiewhite remains a devoted champion of diversity and equity in the credit union industry, and is committed to paying forward the opportunities she received early in her career.
Making change
Sattiewhite's entry into the banking world began through a customer service role at City National Bank in Los Angeles on May 23, 1983, when she became a teller trainee. She remained with the bank until January 1990, when Sattiewhite picked up and moved to Atlanta to become an instructor in the continuing education department at Spelman College, one of the few historically Black universities in the U.S.
It wouldn't be long until she returned to the financial industry.
Sattiewhite came across a job listing in the Atlanta Journal Constitution for a training coordinator during her time at Spelman and quickly met with Dave Gibbard, president of the insurance firm Creditor Resources, also in Atlanta, about the position in the company's in-house training department. Concluding eight hours of interviews, she formally joined in November 1992 and became his assistant six months later while retaining her teaching role on a part-time basis.
"He treated me like I was part of senior staff and not like I was a lowly assistant," Sattiewhite said.
And Sattiewhite was upfront about her career ambitions. "When he asked me to be his assistant, I asked him about my goal to one day run my own company and he said, 'I need someone to be me when I'm not here,'" she said.
After quitting her teaching role in 1997 and being laid off from Creditor Resources just two years later, Sattiewhite founded an executive coaching firm, Sattiewhite Training Productions.
Her involvement with the AACUC began around 2001, through her connection with one of the organization's founders,
She simultaneously went on to spearhead the AACUC's internship program as its director, with the goal of placing college-level students into various mainstream credit unions and offering them a taste of a career in finance. To date, the project has successfully enabled more than 400 participants to become full-time credit union employees.
"I believe that internships are still very, very important, but I believe now that our next level is young professionals," Sattiewhite said.
Sattiewhite stepped away from the AACUC in 2005 to continue her professional career and further develop her own firm, occasionally volunteering as a co-chair in the program she helped found. But that hiatus didn't last long. In October 2014, the group's board of directors named her as successor to executive director Lillian Priest, who had been in the role for roughly 10 years before
Sattiewhite excelled in her role and was appointed as the organization's permanent executive director in March 2015, going on to become the AACUC's president and CEO in 2020.
Her leadership would be put to the test during the COVID-19 pandemic as the AACUC and the credit union industry at large struggled with
"Up until that point, I think the most they've ever seen come through the organization was $600,000," Sattiewhite said. But she was up to the task. "We closed the books at [just over] $1 million that year, with that number jumping to $1.7 million the following year," Sattiewhite said.
Through the surge of support that the AACUC received in that time, Sattiewhite established a new support tier where organizations and individuals could pledge $100,000 a year for five years and even volunteer their time to help the organization. The chairman circle partnership is an additional option to its pre-existing corporate partner level of $25,000 a year for the same period of time.
Bolstered by this funding, Sattiewhite is expanding the group's internship program and Commitment to Change initiatives for ensuring that the "Black-run and Black-led organization will work in excellence at all times" and to dispel the stereotypes that still serve as obstacles to the Black community, she said.
"When I was 39 years old, these mega executives, CEOs and board chairs poured their support into me, they gave me the spotlight and they let me run with programs," Sattiewhite said.
"One of the things that I love about my job is that I get to do what was done for me when I was a young person."
Daniel Wolfe contributed to this story.