Thank you very much.
Thank you for the opportunity to speak this afternoon. I'm going to be talking about enhancing the role and participation of women in the non-traditional occupations in extraction and exploration, often combined and known as mining.
Women in Mining is an organization that was created in 2009, focused on advancing the interests of women in the minerals exploration and mining sector. In collaboration with our provincial branches, which have recently expanded very quickly—Newfoundland, Quebec, Ontario, Manitoba, Saskatchewan, and B.C.—we support grassroots initiatives in the realm of personal and professional development, while providing a national voice within the global minerals and mining community. Our membership consists of both men and women, actually twice as many men as women, and there are very progressive men out there as well.
What I want to talk to you today primarily about is a research study that we just concluded, called Ramp-Up. In the summer of 2009, WIM conducted a national research project primarily with the understanding that there seemed to be two voices in our industry. Employers did not see a specific problem, and women were expressing frustration and a great deal of problems. So the first part of understanding how to come to a solution is to recognize that indeed we have a challenge.
That is what Ramp-Up has done. It provides us a baseline and a clearer picture on the status of women in the minerals exploration and mining industry. We surveyed women in the industry, academia, employers, and employees.
The study surveyed 2,040 participants, and we know from MiHR, the Mining Industry Human Resources Council, that Canada and the mineral industry will be facing a human resources crisis, estimated to be 60,000 workers by 2017. Of this total, potentially 900 positions annually are likely to be filled by post-secondary graduates and immigration. An increasing number of jobs left by the growing skill shortage in the industry could be filled by women.
The wages in our sector are very attractive. Average weekly wages are $1,347 per week, which is 33%, 35%, 42%, and 44% higher than construction, finance, manufacturing, or the forestry industries. It's an extremely well-paid sector. Furthermore, wage discrepancies between male and female employees still range from 22% in the coal industry to 43% in the mining support sector, according to the Conference Board of Canada and StatsCan.
Traditionally, mining has been a male-centric profession. A female working on mine sites was taboo, considered bad luck. Breaking the code on the old boys' network was unheard of, and laws were introduced in the late 19th century prohibiting companies from hiring women. Many of those were unchanged until the 1970s.
Yet while representation of women in mining and exploration in Canada has increased, I would suggest at a glacial pace from less than 11% in 1996 to over 14% today, their representation is significantly lower than in the overall workforce at 47.4%.
Our key challenge is that we have two voices, two views. Numerous barriers were identified by two thirds of the women, but only by one third of the employers. One third of educators and fewer than 30% of employers believe that working conditions need to be addressed. In fact, with the exception of the need for flexible work arrangements, employers were more likely to report that were no barriers, that no barriers existed, than to identify a single challenging working condition. By contrast, two thirds of past and current female employees believe that some working conditions in the sector need to be addressed for women to succeed.
Working conditions that pose challenges are flexible work arrangements and the workplace culture. As one female employee observed, “For an industry that can cope with the vagaries of metal prices and supply and demand through advanced schedule optimization, it seems we should be better able to cope with more variability in the workforce”.
Assumptions hold women back. Several female employees surveyed said that supervisors, as a matter of course, do not offer site experiences to women who have children or to women who they believe plan to have a family. It is assumed that field work will conflict with a mother's caring responsibilities and will eventually lead employees to search for alternative employment. Work-life challenges are also an increasingly growing issue for single fathers who are primary caregivers.
Also, the survey noted that supervisory roles in the field are currently occupied almost exclusively by men. This creates two problems. First, female workers do not have any women on the frontline of leadership whom they can speak to or mentor under. Second, these field roles are viewed as essential experiences for developing into more senior roles.
Don't make assumptions. Give women the same opportunities, just allow them a little bit of notice so they can take care of what they need to. They're prepared, willing, and able to take the most difficult positions the industry can offer.
On the subject of getting to the top, Anglo American's chief executive officer, Cynthia Carroll, may be an excellent example of a woman advancing to the very top, but few women ever reach that level. Ramp-Up found that both employees and employers agreed that advancement through the leadership strata is clearly difficult for female employees. Senior management and executive roles pose the largest barriers, closely followed by the CEO position, middle management, and supervisory positions.
Concerning our next generation, the under-representation of women in mining and exploration is also an outcome of the educational pathways women select for post-secondary education and training. We do have women in geology. I was recently at the University of Manitoba as a guest lecturer, and the audience was 40% women. How it is that they represent less than 15% of the workforce is a question we must address. There is no doubt, as this study indicates, that women looking at career choices are not picking this excellent field. They are not choosing this. A lack of knowledge, we believe, is holding many back. Of 100 female students polled in the study, only 10 were aware of the mining industry at all, and only five of those intended to seek jobs in the sector.
We want to dissolve the gender gap. One size will not fit all. We must enhance recruitment, retention, and advancement of women. The study evokes an integrated approach to strengthening policy to dissolve the gender gap so that we can move well ahead of the 14%.
We are suggesting that immediate measures be taken: awareness and promotion, mentorship, awareness training, and critical-mass strategies. Hiring one woman into a field crew of 20 or 200 does not make a positive setting in which that woman can break those barriers.
We also suggest re-evaluation of talent and potential, greater flexibility, award achievement recognition, and analysis of pay practices. Make this issue a priority at the meeting of mines ministers coming up this summer and on the agendas of all departments that deal with the minerals industry.
We also encourage regular reporting initiatives, such as the GRI, the Global Reporting Initiative, that ask for diversity and gender reporting for all companies.
We are facing a labour shortage. We know that women are excellent communicators. We can meet the needs of a skill shortage and be excellent ambassadors for a modern, safe industry while obtaining our industry's social license going forward.
Thank you for your time, and I appreciate being able to speak to you.