Diversity push ‘isn’t political correctness’
“If you want to get the very best people — the very smartest, most capable, most committed and most ingenious — then you need to look broadly and not exclude groups that would be very useful to you.”
There is more to the push toward increased diversity and inclusiveness than simply recruiting, though that part of the equation is vitally important.
Gen. Jonathan Vance, chief of the defence staff, recently announced a diversity strategy in which he noted that Canada was becoming more diverse — and the military needed to follow suit.
Doing so would be necessary to attract and retain people, Vance wrote, as well as to ensure the military continued to reflect the society it is sworn to protect and to increase its effectiveness on missions abroad.
That’s why the Forces appear to be turning a page: Leaders are recognizing the real importance of diversity, said Alan Okros, an expert on diversity in the military at the Canadian Forces College in Toronto.
“This idea that people with different views, different experiences, different skill sets are going to make the military stronger has been kind of coalescing and coming together for about a year and a half,” Okros said.
“This isn’t a luxury, this isn’t social engineering, this isn’t political manoeuvring or political correctness. This is now an operational requirement.”
Vance has since taken the unprecedented step of ordering the military to increase the percentage of female personnel to 25 per cent in the next decade, up from 15 per cent. Recruiters are now launching targeted advertising campaigns and reaching out to women who previously expressed an interest in a military career but didn’t join.
Senior commanders, meanwhile, are reviewing everything from uniforms and ceremonies to food and religious accommodations to see whether they meet the requirements of a more diverse force.
Lamarre plans to speak Monday at a citizenship ceremony in Ottawa in hopes of explaining to new Canadians what he describes as “a tangible way in which they can serve their nation.”
And Lamarre also hopes to sit down with Assembly of First Nations National Chief Perry Bellegarde and other Indigenous leaders to talk about ways to reach out and attract people from those communities.
Others within the military are getting in on the action, too, with the head of the Navy, Vice-Admiral Ron Lloyd, issuing a directive last week encouraging his sailors to attend Pride parades in uniform.
Vance is expected to issue a similar directive to the rest of the military in the coming days.
Not everyone agrees with what the military is doing, Lloyd acknowledged, including some already in uniform. But changing the face of the Armed Forces isn’t just some feel-good exercise, he said.
“In order to be successful in the future, we need to be able to recruit from the entire population.”
The military is still trying to overcome years of headlines about the treatment of women and members of the LGBTQ community by adopting a zero-tolerance approach to sexual misconduct.
There has also been a historic lack of interest in the Forces by many ethnic communities, particularly those that trace their origins to countries where the military has a bad reputation.
Then there are the problems identified by auditor general Michael Ferguson last year, namely that the recruiting system is struggling with red tape and the effects of Conservative budget cuts.
“We’re definitely still at the planning stage,” Lamarre acknowledged.
“We’re in the process of actually saying: ‘What is it we must do?’ ”