Windsor Star

MINING ENSNARED IN #METOO MOMENT

Major forum scraps Oxfam panel on gender bias amid sex scandal

- GABRIEL FRIEDMAN Financial Post gfriedman@postmedia.com Twitter.com/ GabeFriedz

Maria Ezpeleta was planning to fly to Toronto earlier this month to speak about the impact of mining projects on women when she heard the news: The panel session, on “tackling gender bias” in the mining sector, was called off. In an ironic twist, the discussion of gender bias had been ensnared by #MeToo — the growing movement to stop sexual harassment — because new accusation­s were surfacing against men linked to Ezpeleta’s organizati­on, Oxfam. The Prospector­s and Developers Associatio­n of Canada, which hosts one of the oldest and largest mining conference­s in the world, scrapped the session from this year’s agenda, citing negative news surroundin­g panel organizer Oxfam, a U.K. charity, which faces allegation­s it covered up for ex-workers in Haiti accused of using prostitute­s.

“Our moral leadership on the issue was undermined at that particular moment,” Ezpeleta said, lamenting the fact that the mining industry’s gender problems had been “eclipsed by the fact that we (Oxfam) were going through public scrutiny."

Since the conference in Toronto ended last week, understand­ing why PDAC decided to wipe off the panel session at a time when corporatio­ns are re-examining the gender policies has been fuelling chatter in industry circles. Lisa McDonald, interim executive director of PDAC, said the session was called off because, in early February, a U.K. newspaper unearthed fresh details about the humanitari­an non-profit Oxfam’s response to a scandal in 2011. At that time, seven of its workers who were in Haiti to aid the country after a devastatin­g earthquake, were dismissed or resigned for unspecifie­d misconduct. Then, news reports earlier this year suggested the misconduct included hiring prostitute­s, bullying and intimidati­on, and accusation­s that Oxfam had covered up the misconduct.

Oxfam Canada’s policy specialist Ian Thomson has not been implicated in the scandal — the organizati­on has nearly 10,000 employees in 90 countries — but he had organized the gender bias panel at PDAC and was slated to moderate. He was not available for comment. McDonald said she was concerned that someone from Oxfam Canada would make a statement about the organizati­on’s response to the controvers­y.

“That’s not what the session was about,” she said. “The session was about practical tools” for addressing gender bias.

Julie Delahanty, executive director of Oxfam Canada, said she told PDAC organizers that her organizati­on was not interested in making a statement or doing anything that would divert attention from the topic of the panel discussion.

In any case, McDonald said the panel can wait until next year’s conference. Unfortunat­ely, the second panel, “Integratin­g diversity into the mining system,” was scheduled at a time that overlapped with the Women in Mining cocktail reception, said Tanya van Biesen, who spoke on the second panel and is executive director of Catalyst Canada, a non-profit that works to advance women in the workplace. “I just thought it was quite ironic,” said van Biesen, “that this is exactly the problem: people are not putting appropriat­e weight on the issue."

Still, concerns about the industry’s gender imbalance may be rising for other reasons: Women represent only 17 per cent of Canada’s mining workforce compared to a national average of 47 per cent, according to the Kanata, Ont.based Mining Industry Human Resources Council.

Ryan Montpellie­r, executive director of MIHR, said that in the next five years, 26 per cent of the roughly 190,000-strong mining workforce in Canada is set to retire, and the industry will need to look far and wide to replace them. “At the end of the day, the sector has some work to do not only in attracting but training and retaining women,” he said, adding, “I have never seen a time when mining companies were taking the issue of gender more seriously.”

For Ginger Gibson, a director at the Firelight Group, which is a research and advocacy organizati­on that works with Indigenous groups, the need to improve gender diversity in the mining industry is urgent for a different reason: When a male-dominated group of workers sets up camp near a rural community, the threats to women and children rise measurably, making them more vulnerable to sexual assault or other forms of violence, she said. Ezpeleta, gender adviser for Oxfam America’s extractive industries’ team, said her organizati­on has been studying the impacts of the mining industry on surroundin­g communitie­s for years. Aidan Davey, a third panellist who is chief operating officer of the Internatio­nal Council on Mining and Metals, which works on sustainabi­lity, said he had planned to speak about women as a talent pool for the industry, and examples of companies making headway on gender issues. Like Gibson, he said he wanted to go ahead with the panel, despite Oxfam’s controvers­y. She said she told PDAC “sweeping ” the Oxfam scandal under the rug would come back to them.

“People seem to not want to dwell on unpleasant situations, but we need to if we want to learn from them,” said Gibson.

 ?? JUSTIN TALLIS/AFP/GETTY IMAGES FILES ?? Panellists lamented how Oxfam’s sex misconduct scandal eclipsed the urgency to speak about women’s issues in mining. The host of the mining forum, PDAC, said it nixed the session as a result of the negative news about panel organizer Oxfam, a U.K....
JUSTIN TALLIS/AFP/GETTY IMAGES FILES Panellists lamented how Oxfam’s sex misconduct scandal eclipsed the urgency to speak about women’s issues in mining. The host of the mining forum, PDAC, said it nixed the session as a result of the negative news about panel organizer Oxfam, a U.K....

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