Windsor Star

Feds try hiring with blocked names

- PAOLA LORIGGIO

The federal government says hiding the names of job applicants had no significan­t effect on whether those who identified as visible minorities were called in for an interview over a six-month period.

A pilot project launched last April by the Public Service Commission of Canada sought to compare the results of traditiona­l screening methods with name-blind recruitmen­t in order to bolster diversity and inclusion in government ranks.

The practice involves removing names and other identifyin­g informatio­n such as country of origin from job applicatio­ns to fight bias against people of diverse ethnic and cultural background­s.

In a report released this week, the commission says there was no significan­t difference for candidates from visible minority groups when their personal informatio­n was concealed.

It also says applicants from all other groups were less likely to be brought in for an interview under that system compared to a traditiona­l method.

The commission notes that the results can’t be generalize­d to the entire public service because the pilot relied on department­s that volunteere­d and used a nonrandom selection of external hiring processes.

The project included 27 external job postings across 17 department­s between April and October of last year, resulting in a sample of 2,226 candidates, of which 685 self-identified as visible minorities.

The report is “just one of the many ways the PSC is exploring innovative approaches to ensure a diverse and representa­tive workforce while supporting bias-free recruitmen­t within the federal public service,” Patrick Borbey, president of the Public Service Commission of Canada, said in a statement.

“We will continue to push boundaries in this area while maintainin­g the integrity of the federal public service’s non-partisan and meritbased staffing system.”

The government said it will conduct audit work beginning in May to look at the success rate of applicants at key stages of the appointmen­t process. It will also examine how name-blind principles could be included in the design of future technology changes to its recruitmen­t systems.

The report said audits have the advantage of analyzing decisions that have already been made, which eliminates the possibilit­y that people might change their behaviour because they know they are part of a pilot project.

The federal government has said there is no evidence of bias in its current hiring practices.

Many orchestras made the switch to blind auditions, in which musicians play hidden by a screen, in the 1970s and 1980s, which led to a dramatic increase in the number of women hired, studies have shown.

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