The Hamilton Spectator

Minorities left behind by Liberals’ merit-based process, documents show

- JORDAN PRESS

OTTAWA — The Liberal government’s overhaul of the patronage system has led to gender parity in government appointmen­ts, but new figures show few of those women are in leadership posts and visible minorities are being left out.

Documents from the Privy Council Office, obtained under the Access to Informatio­n Act, show that as of last year, 55.5 per cent of appointees to federal agencies, boards and organizati­ons were women, slightly above their proportion in the Canadian population.

But the Liberals’ “meritbased” process for appointmen­ts has screened out 61.8 per cent of visible-minority candidates as insufficie­ntly qualified, compared with 37.6 per cent of applicants who are not visible minorities.

Visible-minority applicants who made it past that cut and into job competitio­ns were less likely to be recommende­d or appointed.

“This is one of the reasons why we need to know what constitute­s merit,” said Kathy Brock, a politics professor at Queen’s University who has studied the changes in the appointmen­ts system.

“What are the criteria that are being used to screen people, and embedded in that criteria are there certain considerat­ions that have a negative impact on those communitie­s?”

Despite the changes, final say still sits with the responsibl­e minister or the Prime Minister’s Office.

Months after taking power in late 2015, the Liberals changed how the government makes hundreds of appointmen­ts each year to the boards of Crown corporatio­ns and tribunals that make decisions on benefit payments and immigratio­n claims, for example. The majority are parttime. They don’t include senators, judges or officers of Parliament, such as the ethics commission­er, who are not chosen with the same process.

Before 2015, government­s simply decided who would get what position, often giving posts to party loyalists. The Liberals promised to make appointmen­ts based on merit, where applicatio­ns are open to anyone and selection committees recommend names based on precise criteria.

“The government is striving for gender parity, and seeks to ensure that Indigenous peoples and minority groups are properly represente­d in positions of leadership,” spokespers­on Stéphane Shank said in an email, calling the number of visible minority applicants “encouragin­g.”

As of April 30, 2019, the Liberal government has concluded 1,100 appointmen­ts under the new process, he said, noting that 13 per cent of the appointees selfidenti­fied as visible minorities. Another nine per cent identified as Indigenous.

The percentage of visible minorities currently serving in the roles nearly doubled, from 4.4 per cent in November 2015 to eight per cent in May 2019.

About 4.5 per cent of appointees identified themselves as having disabiliti­es, below the 15.5 per cent of people with disabiliti­es in the Canadian population.

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