Madam Chair, honourable members,
Thank you for inviting the Canadian Human Rights Commission to contribute to your study of sexual harassment in Canada's federally-regulated workplaces. I have three main points.
The first is that despite all the work that has been done to eliminate it, sexual harassment persists; second, that while organizations need to be proactive about it, policies alone are not good enough; and finally, that ending harassment depends on cultural change.
Complaints of sexual harassment are more prevalent in hierarchical, male-dominated organizations. An equitable distribution of power within the workplace helps foster the inclusion of women and a workplace culture of respect.
It is only within our lifetimes that Canada has made strides to stamp out sexual harassment in the workplace. When our mothers joined the labour force, years ago, it was a different story.
My mother was 15 years old when she got her first job, driving a gravel truck in Stony Mountain, Manitoba. Like many children who lived through the Great Depression, she worked out of necessity to support her family.
Women joining the labour force at that time were routinely subjected to abuse, and there was little they could do about it. Inappropriate comments and jokes, unwanted touching, and uninvited sexual overtures were a condition of work, part of the price you paid for being a female. It was just part of the job. They often just had to put up with it. It was a matter of survival.
Today every person has the right to live and work free from sexual harassment. This right is protected by the Canadian Human Rights Act, by provincial and territorial human rights laws, and by the Canada Labour Code.
All provide recourse to victims of sexual harassment. Today, you can do something about it. But nobody should have to.
Once an act of sexual harassment has occurred, the damage has been done. Humiliation, stigma, embarrassment, fear, and stress cause emotional pain and suffering. We know emotional suffering to be akin to physical illness in the way it affects an individual. It goes without saying that organizations and society as a whole pay a heavy price in lost productivity. It’s a far, far better thing to prevent harassment from occurring.
Parliament designed the Canadian Human Rights Act as a tool to fight discrimination. The intent of Parliament was to provide equality of opportunity to everyone in Canada. The Canadian Human Rights Commission is responsible for administering the act and promoting equality. We receive discrimination complaints regarding employment and services provided by organizations under federal jurisdiction. This includes the federal public sector, as well as private sector companies involved in industries such as transportation, telecommunications, and banking. The commission screens all the discrimination complaints that it receives. Many are settled through mediation or resolved through a dispute resolution process; in some instances, we refer complaints to the Canadian Human Rights Tribunal for adjudication. The tribunal operates independently of the commission.
Canada was slow to outlaw sexual harassment in the workplace. In fact, sexual harassment was not recognized as a form of discrimination when Parliament passed the Canadian Human Rights Act in 1977. It wasn’t until six years later, in 1983, that it was added as a form of sex discrimination, a definition that was confirmed by the Supreme Court in 1989.
In other words, by the time the right to live and work free of sexual harassment was enshrined in law, women of my mother’s generation were already retiring, having spent all of their working lives without the benefit of these protections. What succeeding generations have found, sadly, is that while laws can protect our rights, they are not a shield. Sexual harassment persists in workplaces in Canada today.
In the past five years, the commission has received 332 complaints related to sexual harassment. More than 85% of these complaints were filed by women. When considering this number, it is important to note that the commission usually only deals with the most intractable complaints. Many sexual harassment complaints from workplaces under federal jurisdiction never come to the commission. They are handled through internal dispute resolution processes, internal grievance processes, or by the Public Service Labour Relations Board, which has jurisdiction to apply the Canadian Human Rights Act.
You will never get a complete picture of the problem from the number of complaints that come forward. We at the commission believe in fact that sexual harassment in the workplace is under-reported. Filing a complaint takes courage. In some organizations, there could be fears of stigma or retaliation. For many, complaining is a last resort. It’s often easier just to quit or to remain silent and take it.
As well, there are gaps in our understanding. We simply have no contemporary data on the prevalence of sexual harassment in Canada. In fact, only one major study has ever been conducted in Canada, and that was in 1994. The honourable members are no doubt aware of that study, entitled “Work-related sexual harassment”, which analyzed survey data collected by Statistics Canada in 1993. The study found that close to 400,000 women—6% of employed women—reported experiencing sexual harassment in the preceding 12 months. The same study found that 2.4 million women had experienced work-related sexual harassment in their working lives.
We can’t tell you what has changed in quantitative terms, because we don’t have the data. Clearly, that’s a gap that needs to be filled
Our laws and redress mechanisms may be effective in providing recourse for those who choose to and have the courage to seek it. However, their influence on human behaviour or the internal culture of an organization is limited. In other words, they do not prevent sexual harassment from occurring or reoccurring, so they do little to protect those who, for whatever reason, are unwilling to speak out.
The Canadian Human Rights Act and the Canada Labour Code place the onus on employers to ensure that employees can work free from sexual harassment.
According to the 2008 federal jurisdiction workplace survey, 87% of employees who work under federal jurisdiction work for an organization with a harassment prevention program in place, 77% work for an organization with an appeal process against a decision related to harassment, and 76% work for an organization with a dispute or grievance review process.
The smaller the organizations, the less likely they are to have processes like these in place.
I don't believe it is enough to ensure that victims of sexual harassment have effective recourse. As I said earlier, by the time someone seeks recourse or remedy, the damage is already done. We must find better ways to address the issue before a person's dignity and self-respect suffer injury.
Based on the commission's experience, sexual harassment is more prevalent in hierarchical, male-dominated cultures.
Addressing sexual harassment in federally regulated workplaces requires a fundamental cultural shift within organizations. It requires a far-reaching commitment to respect for human rights, one that extends to all corners of an organization.
The commission believes that an equitable distribution of power within the workplace, with an equitable representation of women in positions of responsibility, fosters respect for human rights, inclusion, and diversity. However, the proportion of women employed in senior management in Canada has remained relatively unchanged over the past two decades, according to the Conference Board of Canada's 2011 report. Men have been two to three times more likely than women to hold senior management positions in both the private and the public sectors.
The latest employment equity figures show that in the federally regulated private sector, women held 42% of the jobs but only 22% of senior management positions. In the federal public service, women held 55% of the jobs but only 45% of senior management positions.
So that's another gap, another piece of the puzzle that needs to be addressed. The fact that close to three decades after sexual harassment was added to the Canadian Human Rights Act we are sitting here...