ONLY
WHITES IN SENIOR CIVIL SERVICE JOBS
(Thursday 3 July, 2003 )
Five
government departments have no senior ethnic minority staff according
to the latest figures available from the Cabinet Office the CRE
revealed today.
With
the exception of the MOD, all departments have ethnic minorities
in their total workforces that represent the population. "The
good news is most departments are making progress in building up
a representative workforce, and in some cases they are taking strides
towards promoting minority staff into the upper tiers of management.
If we look more closely at the figures we see that ethnic minorities
are mainly concentrated in the lower ranks. The upper echelons of
the civil service remain out of reach for most ethnic minority civil
servants," CRE Chair Trevor Phillips said.
"We
need to question whether the targets set by Whitehall - of 3.2 per
cent for 2005 - raised the bar sufficiently. The performance between
departments varies widely. While some are doing well, others don't
seem to be getting the message. They should see that it can be done
and get on with it," Mr Phillips said.
Representation
at ground level and the lower slopes is more even - with an average
number of 9.7 per cent ethnic minority employees across all departments
and an average of 2.8 per cent for senior staff. However there are
12 departments where fewer than two percent of senior staff are
from ethnic minorities.
Speaking
at the launch of Towards Racial Equality, a major survey into how
public bodies have responded to new duties placed on them under
the Amended Race Relations Act, Mr Phillips said: "Across the
both public and private sectors we have what I call the 'snowy peak
syndrome'. A mountain represents an organisation's workforce. At
the base you find large numbers of women and ethnic minority workers
whereas at the summit you find a small amount of white, middle class
men."
Under
the amended Race Relations Act, around 43,000 public bodies have
a legal duty to eliminate unlawful discrimination and promote equality
of opportunity and good race relations between people of different
racial groups. This new research which was carried out by Schneider-Ross
consultants involved sampling approximately 3,300 bodies to assess
the nature, extent and quality of response from public authorities
to the new statutory duty to promote race equality. The study had
a 47% response rate (with a lower response rate of 20% from schools).
It shows glaring gaps in ethnic minority representation at senior
management level.
KEY
FINDING OF THE 'TOWARDS RACIAL EQAULITY' REPORT
On
the positive side:
-
70% said the race equality duty has already produced positive
benefits, it is improving wider policy making and service delivery
-
The top third show that the race equality duty works and are giving
a sense of moving things on. They are creating a sense of good
practice that others will be able to follow.
-
Between 83% and 99% of bodies had produced a Race Equality Scheme
or policy at the time of the survey (varies by sector).
-
84% had taken the first steps of prioritising their work for relevance
to race equality.
-
70% have identified some outcomes to achieve - however, around
30% have yet to identify outcomes.
-
The survey found a particularly encouraging response from local
government.
-
The survey also found encouraging evidence on setting outcomes
in the Criminal Justice Sector.
-
The survey found some good practice in small authorities and rural
areas.
-
The survey also found a clear correlation between leadership and
progress on this agenda. The more active the senior leader, the
more substantial the progress.
On
the less positive side
-
A group of organisations are not responding effectively to the
legislation. Six months after the deadline, some authorities had
no scheme or policy in place.
-
Overall 30% of public authorities have not set outcomes that they
will work to achieve. In education this increases to over 50%
of education bodies not identifying any outcomes. There is a need
for many organisations to set outcomes and to focus work here.
-
The survey found that public bodies gave limited attention to
promoting good race relations.
- The
survey also found that the progress in implementing the Employment
Duty varies considerably across bodies.
-
The survey also found few authorities were focussed on furthering
race equality in procurement and partnerships work - these are
levers for change that are currently under-exploited.
"
The snowy peaks won't melt overnight, but if there is a real commitment
to equal opportunities and fair employment practices from the top
we can reverse this trend. There are whole departments with no ethnic
minorities in senior levels. This is alarming. After 25 years of
legislation - and talking about ending racial discrimination - its
time to make it happen. Good intentions are not delivering real
results in terms of representation at the top." added CRE Chair
Trevor Phillips.
Click
here to visit the CRE
website.
Top
|