The Journal

Mayor urged to tackle gender gap

- DANIEL HOLLAND Reporter daniel.holland@reachplc.com

Care urging whoever becomes the first North East mayor to take “concentrat­ed, determined action” to improve the lives of the one million women and girls in the region.

The political rivals set to contest a historic mayoral election this May are being asked to commit to a series of pledges aimed at addressing gender inequality issues in a range of key areas that the new political figurehead will hold power over – including transport, housing, and jobs. Members of the One Million Women and Girls campaign are challengin­g the mayoral candidates to lay down a vision that will maximise the potential of females across the region, with the economic exclusion of women estimated to have cost the wider North East more than £2 billion in 2022.

Campaigner Cullagh Warnock said: “We are trying to seize this moment. This is a point in time where we can see a really significan­t step change, if we can get the candidates and the local authoritie­s on board.

“This is not about making things better for women and girls to the detriment of men and boys. If things work better for women and girls they tend to work better for everyone – whether that is more accessible, safe public transport, more flexible adult education options, etc. It tends to scoop everyone up and give them a better deal.”

The campaign cites the region’s strategic economic plan as one area tilted in favour of men, due to a focus on developing sectors like manufactur­ing, digital technology, and energy – areas in which women are less likely to be employed. The 58-yearold, from Heaton, added: “Those are really sensible areas to concentrat­e on and we are not saying that we should not be looking at renewables or transport or IT. But how do we make sure that women and girls can get into those industries? Experience suggests that it will take a concentrat­ed, determined action that has been well thought out.”

It has been suggested that the new mayor could push for greater job creation in areas such as social care, while also “taking concrete steps to remove barriers to women and girls choosing careers in sectors such as digital, energy, transport and logistics”. Prioritisi­ng improvemen­ts to bus services, which women use more often, and tackling problems like a lack of affordable childcare are also on the agenda.

A motion backing the One Million Women and Girls group and calling on the new North East Mayoral Combined Authority (NEMCA) to take action was passed by Newcastle City Council last week and the campaign hopes all other local authoritie­s in the region will follow suit. Karen Kilgour, the council’s deputy leader, said it was essential the North East’s multi-billion pound devolution deal is not “another opportunit­y that leaves women behind”.

She added: “Women are far more likely to work in low-paid sectors than men, with part-time or temporary contracts also being more common. This means women, especially women with children, are far more likely to face poverty and destitutio­n than men. Women are more likely to need or arrange childcare and are far more likely to be caregivers, either paid or unpaid.”

Fellow Labour councillor Lesley Storey told colleagues how the North East has fewer women in work than anywhere and that 25.3% of women in the region are economical­ly inactive, compared to 20.5% of men.

An order that will ratify the new devolution deal is expected to be laid in Parliament shortly, paving the way for a mayoral election in May. The new mayor will cover a large patch encompassi­ng Newcastle, Northumber­land, North Tyneside, Gateshead, Sunderland, South Tyneside and Durham. Current candidates are Labour’s Kim McGuinness, independen­t Jamie Driscoll, Conservati­ve Guy Renner-Thompson, Liberal Democrat Aidan King, the Green Party’s Andrew Gray, and Paul Donaghy for Reform UK.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom