Toronto Star

Racism in corporate suites is the norm

Among senior executives and board members in TSX 60 firms, less than 1% are Black

- UHANTHAEN RAVILOJAN

Two people are interviewi­ng for a job. One is bright, qualified and Black; the other, less impressive, but white. The hiring manager, who has a history of racism, places the Black applicant’s resumé in the “reject” pile.

Until recently, that’s how many may have imagined anti-Black racism in business: Isolated acts of discrimina­tion performed by a prejudiced few.

But the death of George Floyd, an unarmed 46-year-old Black man killed by a Minneapoli­s police officer on May 25, and the widespread protests that have erupted globally in response, are forcing Canada’s business community to rethink racism.

In the weeks since Floyd’s death, businesses around the world have been scrambling to make diversity pledges.

On June 8, the Financial Times reported that major corporatio­ns had recently donated more than $450 million (U.S.) to American civil rights groups.

Last month, the Business Council of Canada had more than130 CEOs sign a statement denouncing all forms of racism. But anti-racism advocates say corporatio­ns will need to go beyond words and donations, particular­ly as research reveals that systemic racism in offices and executive suites isn’t a deviation from the norm; it is the norm.

A study to be released next month by Ryerson University’s Diversity Institute analyzed the diversity of companies in Vancouver, Montreal, Calgary and Toronto in 2019. Of 1,639 board members from 178 corporatio­ns, the study found just 13 Black board members (0.79 per cent), while white members held 1,483 spots (91 per cent), and other racialized members held 61 spots (the institute was unable to classify some members). To put that in context, almost a 10th of Toronto is Black and Black people make up 3.5 per cent of Canada’s population, according to the most recent census.

Corporate Knights magazine did its own count. After analyzing S&P/TSX 60 companies, we found that just six of the 799 senior executives and only four of the 686 board members at all 60 companies were Black. That’s less than one per cent. > How Canadian companies are responding: Corporate Knights reached out to S&P/TSX 60 companies for comment. Of the 60 companies, the only ones that had Black leaders in their boardrooms or showcased on their websites’ leadership pages at the executive level were CIBC, CP Rail, Brookfield Asset Management, CGI Inc., TD Bank, Emera Inc. and Enbridge. (Corporate Knights restricted its executive count to those featured on companies’ leadership web pages. For example, two of Gildan’s vice-presidents are Black, but were excluded from our count because of this criterion.)

Of the companies that had no Black representa­tion at the board or

“It is absolutely time for us to stand up … A statement without a commitment is not anything at all.”

ROLA DAGHER CISCO CANADA PRESIDENT, CEO

executive level, Restaurant Brands Internatio­nal, which owns such companies as Tim Hortons and Burger King, acknowledg­ed that change was needed.

“We absolutely agree that we need more gender and racial diversity within our board and leadership teams,” said an RBI representa­tive. To ensure there is “a permanent diversity shift that permeates our culture,” this week RBI’s CEO, Jose Cil, said he was committing to ensure that at least 50 per cent of final-round candidates interviewi­ng for roles at RBI offices will be from “demonstrab­ly diverse background­s, including race.”

To ensure a more active involvemen­t of Black and racialized communitie­s, Suncor says it’s reviewing its inclusion and diversity strategy, which focuses on women, Indigenous peoples and the LGBT+ community

number of companies, including Canadian Tire, Bell, BMO, Bausch Health, Agnico Eagle, Telus and Magna Internatio­nal, said that they have establishe­d diversity and inclusion councils. Magna stated that its DC&I council is “aligning with our talent review process to ensure we have broader visibility and opportunit­y to increase our diversity in leadership roles.”

Some corporatio­ns also highlighte­d their financial support for the cause: BMO donated $1 million to a number of social and racial justice groups, and Canadian Tire donated $800,000 to various Black organizati­ons. Canopy Growth noted it has been a longtime supporter of Cage-Free Cannabis (which provides legal services to communitie­s of colour that have been disproport­ionately harmed by the war on drugs).

Canopy Growth says it’s also “rolling out a number of D&I (diversity and inclusion) initiative­s, including benchmarki­ng diversity and publicly reporting on our progress.”

Fortis Inc. said that, while there are no Black executives in its holding company, several of its subsidiari­es have Black executives and directors. Notably, FortisTCI recently appointed Ruth Forbes, a Black woman and current vice-president of corporate services, as its incoming president and CEO.

Teck Resources said that it considers diversity in the selection criteria for new board members and senior management team appointmen­ts and that “four out of 12, or 33 per cent, of directors on Teck’s board are visible minorities.”

Telus and Loblaw have both stated that 18 per cent of their executives identify as “visible minorities.” Like most companies, Loblaw acknowledg­ed that it didn’t “break those numbers down further.”

Telus, which has been named one of the Best Diversity Employers in Canada by Mediacorp nearly a dozen times, told Corporate Knights, “We are committed to increasing the presence of under-represente­d groups across key areas of our organizati­on, including our board.” The company did not provide targets.

> Push for concrete corporate commitment­s: Wes Hall, executive chair of Kingsdale Advisors, finds Corporate Knights’ TSX 60 data unsurprisi­ng. “We live those numbers every day,” he says. “We’re not shocked by them.”

Hall says he has seen companies increase diversity when they set their minds to it, and drew a parallel to the recent corporate push for gender diversity at the board level.

“All of a sudden, last year, every single company on the TSX 60 has a woman on their board, right?

“Because they put their mind to it. But where were the women before?

“They were stuck in middle management. They were stuck at that glass ceiling, looking up.”

On June 10, Hall formed the Canadian Council of Business Leaders Against Anti-Black Systemic Racism. The council’s membership is a “Who’s Who” of Canadian business. It includes CIBC CEO Victor Dodig, Cisco Canada president and CEO Rola Dagher, and Fairfax Financial Holdings CEO and chair Prem Watsa.

It aims to ensure that businesses deliver on promises they’ve made to fight systemic racism and support the Black community.

The council’s BlackNorth Initiative, which will hold a summit on July 20, is urging CEOs to sign a pledge to remove systemic anti-Black barriers. Commitment­s include earmarking three per cent of corporate donations and sponsorshi­ps to create economic opportunit­ies in the Black community, ensuring that at least 3.5 per cent of executives and board roles based in Canada are held by Black leaders, and hiring at least five per cent of their student workforce from the Black community, all by 2025.

“We need to be uncomforta­ble and embrace the challenge to grow,” says BlackNorth Initiative co-chair Dagher. “It is absolutely time for us to stand up … A statement without a commitment is not anything at all.”

> Broadening the recruitmen­t pool: While businesses are being called out for fumbling on diversity, public boards are making progress. Ryerson’s Diversity Institute says government-appointed boards, such as those of publicly owned energy utilities, public transporta­tion agencies and cultural institutio­ns, boasted 63 Black board members out of a total 2,684 (or 2.35 per cent).

While the percentage is still small, it’s almost three times that of corporate boards.

That jump in diversity could be key to colour-correcting corporate Canada.

Wendy Cukier, director of the Diversity Institute, says corporatio­ns often overlook talent found in public boards. She noted that non-profit boards often recruit candidates with corporate experience, but it’s not a two-way street. “There are lots of racialized people, specifical­ly Black people, who are lawyers, accountant­s and IT specialist­s that represent community organizati­ons and could make significan­t contributi­ons to corporate boards,” she says.

A study by Stacey Fitzsimmon­s, associate professor of internatio­nal management at the University of Victoria, observed how often hiring happened through informal networks: 73 per cent of Canadian board members reported that the most common method used to recruit board members involved recommenda­tions by directors. Cukier says informal networks such as these consist mainly of people with similar background­s, so they exclude qualified candidates of diverse background­s.

“People tend to associate with people just like them, who belong to the same golf clubs,” says Cukier. Case in point: a 2014 study published by the Public Religion Research Institute found that 75 per cent of white people in the U.S. have completely Caucasian social networks.

Some companies are vowing to address this bias by changing how they hire. RBI reps say the company has “updated our search criteria for all senior positions to urge our recruiters to increase the diversity of candidates being forwarded.” They add that a steering committee of senior leaders is heading up its diversity and inclusion efforts. Cukier says moves such as this encourage budding Black leaders to envision themselves in leadership roles, and. this affects their aspiration­s and their access to mentorship.

The rewards of cultivatin­g diverse leadership are well documented: a study by the management consultant firm McKinsey found that companies with more gender- or racially diverse executives were 33 per cent more likely to have above-average profits. Those with diverse boards were 43 per cent more likely to see above-average profits. Inclusivel­y staffed companies enjoy broader talent pools, the ability to respond to a diverse set of markets, and reduced legal and reputation­al risk, researcher­s say.

But even when Black Canadians break into the boardroom, they still brave racism both overt and covert. Scarboroug­h- Guildwood MPP, Mitzie Hunter, described how, after giving a speech for the Toronto-based technology incubator she was then the CEO of, a man told her she was the most “articulate Black person” he had ever heard.

“I’m pretty sure he thought he was giving me the highest compliment,” says Hunter. “Right in that moment, I stopped being the CEO … on a big stage representi­ng my organizati­on, and I became almost a little girl because of his words.”

Hunter says such comments can leave Black people feeling undermined and exhausted.

“That’s a waste,” says Hunter. “Your energy and your creativity and your talent and your thoughts and your ideas should be going into solving challengin­g problems that you’re there to do, rather than guarding yourself against this type of aggression.”

It’s also a wasted opportunit­y to reduce risk and groupthink, says Cisco Canada’s Dagher, who fled Lebanon as a child.

“You don’t want to hire people that look like you, that speak like you, that think like you; you want to hire people that can challenge you,” she says.

> Regulating diversity: Some diversity advocates question whether the recent corporate pledges can translate into real change. Canadian Sen. Ratna Omidvar says that, while the recent response from corporatio­ns is encouragin­g, lasting change comes from regulation.

“What we have to rely on, then, is the law. It is the law that changes behaviours,” she says.

When it comes to long-standing efforts to improve gender diversity on boards, Omidvar’s statement is largely backed up by empirical evidence, which shows that the countries that have made meaningful progress in increasing the number of women on boards all have legal targets or quotas driving that progress.

Canada’s legal system has only recently begun supporting corporate diversity. Introduced by Navdeep Bains, Minister of Innovation, Science and Economic Developmen­t, Bill C-25 makes companies disclose or explain why they’re not creating plans to increase the number of women, racialized people, persons with disabiliti­es and Indigenous citizens they hire in senior management and board positions. As of Jan. 1, 2020, this applies to federally incorporat­ed companies such as airlines and banks.

A growing number of companies, including Calgary-headquarte­red Cenovus Energy, now have formal board diversity targets. Cenovus says it has “an aspiration­al target to have at least 40 per cent of independen­t directors be represente­d by women, Aboriginal Peoples, persons with disabiliti­es and members of visible minorities.”

Omidvar hoped that Bill C-25 would make such targets mandatory, but her amendment to the bill making this so was not approved by Parliament.

“I’d describe the government’s legislatio­n as a tap on the shoulder of business to do the right thing, whereas I would have preferred a nudge,” Omidvar says.

“We live those numbers every day. We’re not shocked by them.”

WES HALL EXECUTIVE CHAIR OF KINGSDALE ADVISORS

 ?? STEVE RUSSELL TORONTO STAR FILE PHOTO ?? Corporate leader Wes Hall wants top executives to join a summit on July 20 urging CEOs to sign a pledge to remove systemic anti-Black barriers. He is the founder of the Canadian Council of Business Leaders Against Anti-Black Systemic Racism, a who’s who of Canadian business leaders.
STEVE RUSSELL TORONTO STAR FILE PHOTO Corporate leader Wes Hall wants top executives to join a summit on July 20 urging CEOs to sign a pledge to remove systemic anti-Black barriers. He is the founder of the Canadian Council of Business Leaders Against Anti-Black Systemic Racism, a who’s who of Canadian business leaders.

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