The Standard (St. Catharines)

Universiti­es must create diversity plan or lose research money

- MIA RABSON THE CANADIAN PRESS

OTTAWA — Universiti­es have less than two years to find ways to recruit more women and minorities for Canada Research Chairs, or they won’t get any more positions funded by the federal government.

The Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council, which reviews and approves applicatio­ns from universiti­es for Canada Research Chair positions, issued that edict this week.

“We’ve been talking about this for some time, we’ve been monitoring progress to meet the targets,” said council president Ted Hewitt.

The move comes a week after Science Minister Kirsty Duncan told The Canadian Press that she was dismayed universiti­es had not improved the rate at which they recruited women for the lucrative research jobs and was prepared to force their hand.

Hewitt said the change was in the works before Duncan’s remarks.

The council reviews the program every five years and last summer, when the preliminar­y results of a 15-year review came out, existing efforts to get more women, minorities, people with disabiliti­es and indigenous people appointed to research chairs did not appear to be working.

“We said ‘OK, that’s it’ we have to think about what we can do here to speed up progress,” said Hewitt. “That was a very serious catalyst for us.”

Universiti­es with at least five of the research positions will be required to submit an equity plan by Dec. 15 showing how they intend to meet the equity targets laid out by the granting council. They have until December 2019 to recruit and appoint enough researcher­s to meet their targets.

If their appointmen­t applicatio­ns do not match their equity targets by then, the council will withhold funding for new positions until they do.

Hewitt said universiti­es submit twice as many male applicants as female applicants, so the council wants to find a way to force them to seek out more diverse applicants.

“At this pace, they’re never going to meet their targets,” he said.

Canada Research Chairs run for five or seven years and bring $100,000 or $200,000 in annual funding, depending on whether it’s a more experience­d tier one position, or an emerging researcher, tier two position.

Universiti­es cannot terminate positions early to open up spaces for more diverse applicants, which is why the council is giving them a deadline more than 18 months away.

The program provides $265 million a year to pay for up to 2,000 research positions in engineerin­g, natural sciences, health sciences, humanities and social sciences.

As of this month, there are 1,615 positions filled, of which 30 per cent are held by women. Women account for just 17 per cent of the more lucrative tier one jobs and 37 per cent of the tier two jobs.

The program also wants to increase the presence of people with disabiliti­es, visible minorities and indigenous people. In the 2015 to 2017 period, 15 per cent of researcher­s were from visible minorities, which met the target set by the council. However only one per cent of positions were filled by a researcher who had a disability, below the four per cent target. The universiti­es had granted positions to about 16 indigenous researcher­s, which met the one per cent target.

 ?? CANADIAN PRESS FILES ?? Minister of Science Kirsty Duncan in January. The Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council issued an edict this week that universiti­es have less than two years to find ways to recruit more women and minorities for Canada Research Chairs, or they...
CANADIAN PRESS FILES Minister of Science Kirsty Duncan in January. The Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council issued an edict this week that universiti­es have less than two years to find ways to recruit more women and minorities for Canada Research Chairs, or they...

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