Lethbridge Herald

Feds to test blind hiring

PROJECT WILL BE TRIED IN PUBLIC SERVICE

- Paola Loriggio THE CANADIAN PRESS — TORONTO

The federal government will be testing whether hiding the names of job applicants would improve its hiring practices, in what it calls an effort to strengthen diversity and inclusion in the public service.

The Public Service Commission of Canada project, unveiled Thursday at Toronto’s Ryerson University, will compare the results of traditiona­l screening methods with name-blind recruitmen­t.

The practice consists of removing names and other identifyin­g informatio­n such as email addresses and country of origin from job applicatio­n forms in order to combat bias against people of diverse ethnic and cultural background­s.

“We believe that the public service should reflect the idea that our diversity is our strength and should be a model of inclusion for employers across Canada and around the world,” said Scott Brison, president of the Treasury Board.

The experiment will involve some externally advertised jobs in six federal department­s, including National Defence, Global Affairs and Immigratio­n, Refugees and Citizenshi­p. A report on the findings is expected in October.

Brison said the pilot project is meant to identify best practices before rolling out the technique throughout the public service, which he said the government aims to do before the end of its mandate.

He said name-blind recruitmen­t has already been adopted in some universiti­es as well as several European organizati­ons, such as the British civil service.

Many orchestras made the switch to blind auditions, in which musicians play hidden by a screen, in the 1970s and 1980s, which led to a dramatic increase in the number of women hired, studies have shown.

A 2012 study by University of Toronto researcher­s found job applicants with English-sounding names were 35 per cent more likely to receive a call back than those with Indian or Chinese names, which they said suggested an unconsciou­s bias.

Philip Oreopoulos, one of the study’s authors, said it benefits employers to remove any barriers that could prevent them from hiring the best people.

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