Suzann Willhite, the youngest of 14 surviving children from a large farm family in southwestern Minnesota, grew up near the town of Walnut Grove. She saw many of her older siblings get married or have children right out of high school and have difficulty making ends meet. She decided she wanted something more. She is the first person in her family to go to college and get a Bachelor’s and a Master’s degree. She had a thirty-plus year career working for the US Forest Service, National Park Service and the Minnesota Department of Natural Resources (DNR). During her career she tried lots of different jobs, eventually ending up in management. At the DNR, she tried to hire affirmatively, realizing that the biggest beneficiaries of affirmative action had been white women, not people of color.
Initially very shy, she realized in college that she had to advocate for herself and started to be more assertive. She also began advocating for others. She stepped into leadership and advocacy roles in her family, neighborhood, church and community, taking care of her mother’s finances, serving as a block captain, and leading groups at church. She also worked to pass ranked choice voting in Saint Louis Park and was very involved with the marriage amendment, ensuring the right to marry for LGBT individuals.
While in college, Suzann realized she was attracted to other women. Coming home, she came out to her mother whose only concern was that Suzann be happy. 2020 was a big year for her. She separated from a 22-year committed relationship and retired. She had planned to travel and advocate for racial and social justice issues she cared about, but then the COVID-19 pandemic began and her plans were interrupted.
Growing up, Suzann saw inequality in her family, in the roles men and women played. Her father had an explosive temper and she saw him physically abuse her mother. She decided she wanted a different life where she was valued as an individual regardless of gender.
Since 2016, the passage of the Equal Rights Amendment has become a big issue for her. The ERA outlaws discrimination on the basis of sex and was introduced in 1972. Virginia was the 38th state to recently ratify the amendment, which is the minimum number of states needed to add this to the U.S. Constitution. However, there is still work to be done to make this 28th amendment a reality. Suzann would also like to see this added to the Minnesota State Constitution as 26 other states have done.
Many of her family members are on the opposite side of the political spectrum from herself. Navigating these different political views within her family is a challenge, but she is committed to keeping in conversation with them. It is important to her that ordinary people on both sides become more educated about the issues and more engaged in the democratic process.
Suzann describes herself as an ordinary Minnesotan, average, hard working, optimistic, practical, inquisitive, thrifty, adventuresome, a seeker, an avid reader, and a doer. She spends 10 to 15 hours a week volunteering her time for various causes. She also gives money to organizations she believes in because she wants to make a difference. Despite growing up poor, she realized as a white woman, she had access to spaces not open to people of color. She believes in equity of opportunity for all and attributes that to the example her mother set for her.