The Guardian (Charlottetown)

The corporate climb

Women locked out of old boys’ club in misguided Me Too backlash

- BY TARA DESCHAMPS

A lawyer is asked whether a male executive should leave the door open when meeting with a woman.

A consultant’s longtime male client will only take a meeting with her if someone else is in the room.

A public relations executive hears from senior business leaders who say they are shying away from mentoring young women.

The revelation­s relayed to The Canadian Press about being a woman in corporate Canada in recent months offer a glimpse into a male-dominated workforce that is quietly grappling with the unintended consequenc­es of the Me Too movement.

The movement emerged late last year following a slew of sexual misconduct allegation­s against film industry heavyweigh­t Harvey Weinstein and other high-profile American businessme­n. Allegation­s of inappropri­ate behaviour have spread to a range of sectors north of the border, as well — from politics to theatre to sports — but leaders in corporate Canada has so far been left unscathed.

Still, women in business say they are facing a resulting “chilling effect” on their relationsh­ips with male colleagues and supervisor­s.

They reported a noticeable decline in invitation­s to meetings, business trips and dinners — gatherings considered invaluable for career advancemen­t.

More importantl­y, they added, senior executives are increasing­ly hesitant to mentor female employees.

It is a developmen­t that poses a threat to women who aim to rise to the highest corporate roles at a time when two-thirds of the companies included on the TSX 60 index of Canada’s largest companies did not include a single woman among top earners last year, according to a Canadian

Press analysis.

Most of the dozen women who spoke with The Canadian Press were hesitant to discuss the unintended consequenc­es of Me Too because they didn’t want to detract from the progress they hope the movement will make toward improving opportunit­ies for women.

They fear the misguided actions of some male leaders could instead reinforce the door to the old boys’ club, further hindering the hard-fought progress made by the few women able to climb to the top of the corporate ladder.

Lori McIntosh flew to Miami in early spring to meet with a client of 12 years, only to be told the company no longer allows its executives to take meetings alone, including with her.

The founder of business consulting and executive search company Vim and Vixin said she

agreed to the new terms because “business is business” and she was determined not to let the policy stand in the way of her company or career.

“It is the new reality, but why should having someone in the room with me and the CEO hold me back?”

Toronto employment lawyer Sunira Chaudhri has fielded an increasing number of calls from her corporate clients worried about sexual harassment in their workplace — mostly from those wondering whether they need to change policies around co-ed oneon-one meetings, mentorship, office parties, business trips and dinners.

“Some asked, ‘Should we be having the boardroom door open if it is just me and a female alone in a room?’” Chaudhri said. “Holiday parties were a huge issue, too, and of course business travel

is big as well because often you are sitting side-by-side 12 to 16 hours a day and you are not just working together, you are eating together, you are staying at the same hotel, consuming alcohol, entertaini­ng clients, it can make for a very intimate scenario.”

While Chaudhri has seen some workplaces show concern around how they should be handling business travel or dinners after Me Too, she said many small- and medium-sized workplaces don’t have the resources to formally train workers and managers around handling sexual harassment or office dynamics.

Others, she said, simply don’t have the nerve.

“Forget about serious misconduct. Employers are still afraid about confrontin­g that person that shows up at 9:05 every day, when they are supposed to be in at 9.”

 ?? CP PHOTO ?? Sunira Chaudhri, a lawyer partner at Levitt LLP, poses for a photograph at her office in Toronto on Monday.
CP PHOTO Sunira Chaudhri, a lawyer partner at Levitt LLP, poses for a photograph at her office in Toronto on Monday.

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