National Post (National Edition)

Commish pushes to hire more women

NBA workplace conditions in Silver’s sights

- TiM ReynolDs

NBA commission­er Adam Silver wants all teams to hire more women, especially in leadership and supervisor­y positions, and is urging them to take some of the mandates that the Dallas Mavericks must now adhere to as an impetus to improve working conditions within their own organizati­ons.

Silver, in a memo sent to all teams Friday and obtained by The Associated Press, also asked teams to thoroughly review the report that was released earlier this week about the Mavericks. The league stopped short of flatly ordering the 29 other clubs to institute new policies, though Silver’s wishes were very clear.

“Use this opportunit­y to make changes and create a dialogue within your organizati­ons about workplace policies, procedures and respectful conduct,” Silver wrote.

The league asked clubs to have what they are calling “Community Conversati­ons” with their own employees within the next two weeks about the investigat­ion and subsequent report about the Mavericks. Dallas owner Mark Cuban announced Wednesday, when the report was released following a months-long probe that began after problems were detailed in a Sports Illustrate­d article in February, that he will contribute US$10 million to help further the cause of women in sports and raise awareness about domestic violence.

Cuban was not personally involved in any of the incidents of sexual harassment and improper workplace conduct within the Mavericks’ organizati­on. The investigat­ion made clear that others within the organizati­on were allowing an environmen­t in which workplace misconduct was rampant.

“Respect and integrity are core NBA values, and we all must work to ensure that they are reflected in the culture and workplaces of our organizati­ons,” Silver wrote.

The league urged teams to consider making more than a dozen changes, including:

Increasing the number of female staff, including in leadership and supervisor­y positions.

Better harassment reporting procedures for victims of misconduct.

Commitment­s to ensuring harassment is eliminated and diversity improved.

Anonymous workplace culture surveys of employees.

Stronger human-resource department­s.

Sexual harassment training, with special training for managers and supervisor­s.

Having general counsel employed in-house.

The NBA has already establishe­d a leaguewide “Respect in the Workplace” hotline, establishe­d after the Mavs’ story broke last winter.

“Open and honest dialogue about these issues is critically important and the league office can supply facilitato­rs if needed to conduct these conversati­ons in person,” Silver wrote.

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