Close X
Saturday, September 21, 2024
ADVT 
National

Privy Council to continue anti-racism efforts, clerk says after report release

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 30 Jul, 2024 12:41 PM
  • Privy Council to continue anti-racism efforts, clerk says after report release
 

The head of the federal public service says he is personally committed to "continuous action" to address racism and discrimination in the workplace, following the public release of an internal report that details employees' troubling experiences on the job. 

Privy Council clerk John Hannaford says the department has put a number of initiatives in place, including an office led by a chief diversity officer, which is developing an anti-racism and equity plan.

His comments come after the Coalition Against Workplace Discrimination publicly released a report Monday that details discrimination and and racism faced by employees in the Privy Council Office. 

The coalition obtained the report through the Access to Information Act. 

The report shows Black and racialized employees described being passed over for opportunities given to white colleagues, and cites the example of Black employees who said they had to intervene with managers who used the N-word in their presence.

Hannaford says in a statement the report was part of an anti-racism and equity effort launched in 2021 and was shared internally last year.

The coalition has called for Deputy Clerk Nathalie Drouin, who it said has been in charge of the discrimination file since 2021, and Matthew Shea, assistant secretary to the cabinet, ministerial services and corporate affairs, to resign.

"We are particularly concerned about the lack of accountability measures against leaders who were at the helm while widespread discrimination was a regular occurrence," Nicholas Marcus Thompson, president of the Black Class Action Secretariat, which leads the coalition, said at a press conference Monday.

Hannaford said the government won’t be asking them to step down.

He has "full confidence" in Drouin and Shea, he said in a statement Tuesday. 

"The entire management team and I are committed to taking continuous action to identify and address any barriers that may exist in the federal public service," he said.

The office has instituted an ombudsman "to help foster trust and psychological safety," anti-bias training, support for employee-led networks and professional growth programs for Black, Indigenous and racialized employees, he said.

The government has improved representation in the department, he said including boosting the number of racialized employees in its executive ranks from 10.1 per cent to 27.3 per cent since 2020. 

But Thompson said Monday many key recommendations from the report still haven’t been addressed, and pointed to equitable hiring practices, such as name-blind screening and third-party hiring, as one example. 

MORE National ARTICLES

Vancouver port open to recommendations from TSB after seaplane-boat collision

Vancouver port open to recommendations from TSB after seaplane-boat collision
The Vancouver Fraser Port Authority says it is "certainly possible" that rules surrounding seaplanes operating in the city's downtown harbour could change in light of an aircraft colliding with a pleasure boat on takeoff over the weekend.

Vancouver port open to recommendations from TSB after seaplane-boat collision

Canada, U.S. interest rate policies set to diverge

Canada, U.S. interest rate policies set to diverge
With monetary policy at the Bank of Canada and U.S. Federal Reserve on track to diverge, experts say it could set the Canadian dollar up for volatility down the road. If the Bank of Canada’s rate falls too far below the Fed’s, it could negatively affect the loonie, said Allan Small, senior investment adviser at IA Private Wealth.

Canada, U.S. interest rate policies set to diverge

Trudeau heads to Italy as shadows of war in Ukraine, Gaza loom over G7 summit

Trudeau heads to Italy as shadows of war in Ukraine, Gaza loom over G7 summit
The three-day summit kicks off on Thursday in Apulia, Italy, where leaders of the seven wealthy democratic nations are expected to discuss the Russia-Ukraine and Israel-Hamas wars, the energy transition, artificial intelligence, migration and collaboration with Africa.

Trudeau heads to Italy as shadows of war in Ukraine, Gaza loom over G7 summit

Environment Canada predicts warm summer across country, especially in East

Environment Canada predicts warm summer across country, especially in East
Environment Canada is predicting a warmer-than-usual summer across the entire country, with the greatest chance of high temperatures everywhere east of Manitoba. The government agency released maps Tuesday suggesting the chance of a hot summer is virtually 100 per cent almost everywhere east of the Ontario-Manitoba boundary.

Environment Canada predicts warm summer across country, especially in East

ATV crash in B.C. kills 15-year-old boy, passenger suffers minor injuries

ATV crash in B.C. kills 15-year-old boy, passenger suffers minor injuries
A 15-year-old has died when the all-terrain vehicle he was driving overturned near Barriere. Mounties say the crash north of Kamloops happened Sunday near the two-kilometre mark of the Darlington Creek Forest Service Road.

ATV crash in B.C. kills 15-year-old boy, passenger suffers minor injuries

Rescuers work overnight to save teen and his dog after fall down B.C. embankment

Rescuers work overnight to save teen and his dog after fall down B.C. embankment
First responders in southeastern British Columbia say a teen and his dog have been rescued after falling "several hundred feet" down an embankment. A statement from the Regional District of East Kootenay says the pair suffered a "harrowing fall" near the community of  Elko, and search and rescue teams worked until around 4 a.m. Tuesday morning to get them up safely.

Rescuers work overnight to save teen and his dog after fall down B.C. embankment