Thank you, Madam Chair.
I am here representing the Society for Canadian Women in Science and Technology, SCWIST. We are honoured to be called upon to comment on your study about women's economic security and equal participation in the Canadian economy.
Based on over 35 years of supporting women in science, technology, engineering, and math, SCWIST will seek to address items (d), (e), and (f) of the study proposed pursuant to Standing Order 108(2).
Over the years, much effort has been put toward addressing the skill sets of women by providing them with training to make them effective in high-paying and leadership positions. However, skills are no longer the primary issue keeping women out of these positions. Access to these positions is the main issue.
Women are excluded from positions that could provide them with an equal measure of economic security, and in STEM fields this is largely due to gender biases against them. No amount of women's empowerment, education, or skills will increase women's presence if access is denied. Addressing women's lack of representation in key growth sectors and leadership positions requires changing the system, not the women.
We would also like to recognize that many Canadian women face additional economic challenges due to other aspects of their identity, such as race, ethnicity, religion, abilities, gender identity, sexual orientation, immigration status, and age. In recommending supportive policies for women, we hope that these other facets will be positively influenced by the improvement in our culture overall.
Access to these key positions is influenced by Canadian culture. This culture is upheld at the government level, the corporate level, the community level, and the individual level. We have made recommendations for how to influence culture at these various levels to benefit women.
First is the level of government. We recommend the implementation of non-partisan, gender-based analyses of all economic and social policies, and increased funding commitments to conduct these analyses. Ensuring that all policies are scrutinized for their short- and long-term impact on women would prevent existing policies from hindering new efforts.
We also recommend applying the “comply or explain” policies that have been enacted in the U.K., Germany, and the Netherlands. We should expect that companies in Canada meet certain pay equity and leadership diversity standards. One way for the government to do so is to amend procurement policies to require that organizations are compliant with standards that ensure the full participation of women.
We recommend that federal funding programs reward collaboration rather than competition and hold their applicants accountable for the diversity of their team and the impact their proposals will have on women.
This applies to media projects, which help shape the cultural norms in Canada. This applies to entrepreneurial or small-business funding, as women have been shown to receive significantly less investment for their small businesses than men, despite being a more secure investment. Of course, this applies to research funding, as women are less likely to participate in competitive application processes, and the competitive culture of winners versus losers only upholds the perception that singular minds are more valued than the collaboration of many diverse perspectives.
We need policies to regulate the media, especially advertising, with respect to their representations of women. Canada has developed extensive, high-quality Canadian content in both official languages. We can and should require that Canadian media respect and support diversity. Media is an essential piece of what builds our culture and, thus, our personal biases. If we want a future where more women are leaders in high-paying and male-dominated industries, we need to show Canadians that it's normal.
We need a federal policy on child care and family leave to ensure the full participation of women in the economy. This would help retain women, slow the departure of young workers, and save money on hiring and retraining. Giving women the support they need to stay in the workforce while raising a family would allow them the opportunity to compete for leadership positions and maintain their salary trajectory while not being burdened with the high cost of child care.
Next, we have actions recommended for the corporate level. As with the government level, we recommend a “comply or explain” approach for public consumers as well as stakeholders to keep companies accountable for having diverse leadership teams.
To comply with such standards, corporations will need to address their hiring, retention, and promotion practices to ensure that there are not biases inherent in these systems. Blind hiring, family-friendly policies, supportive policies for dealing with incidents of harassment, and intentionally diverse succession planning are all things that would support women's full participation in the workforce.
Third, we have a number of recommendations for the community level. We need to support and expand programs that create networks, provide role models, and ensure mentorship opportunities for women in male-dominated industries. SCWIST’s makepossible.ca, an online skill-based mentoring platform, is a result of intentional investment by Status of Women Canada that further supports women to pursue STEM careers. While we ask the government and corporate levels to explore new ways to influence culture, we must also keep up the grassroots work that has gotten us this far.
We recommend that communities actively engage in an open and ongoing conversation about the instances of behaviour that do not support a culture of inclusion. Keeping a dialogue going will allow community members to share these struggles and collaborate on how best to address systemic biases.
And finally, at the personal level, we need to come to terms with our own biases. Everyone has them. We recommend the Harvard implicit bias tests, because knowing is sometimes a surprising first step.
At each level, we need to build a culture where women are given access to these important positions. If we give them access, they will no longer be seen as the problem, but rather as the key to the innovation required to solve many problems, both global and Canadian.
Thank you.