Toronto Star

A report from equity organizati­on Catalyst Canada indicates that about 60 per cent of Indigenous workers surveyed feel psychologi­cally unsafe at their workplaces.

Majority of Indigenous workers feel emotionall­y unsafe, survey finds

- TARA DESCHAMPS

As Krystal Abotossawa­y navigated corporate Canada over the past decade, the Toronto woman with Anishinaab­e Kwe heritage always took care to be on time, to watch her drinking at after-work events and to be agreeable in meetings.

“I didn’t want to show when I was angry or that I disagreed with my peers,” said Abotossawa­y, TD Bank Group’s senior manager of diversity and inclusion and the president of the Indigenous Profession­al Associatio­n of Canada.

“I didn’t have the same privilege as non-Indigenous people and I was aware of it.”

Those decisions were her way of staying “on guard” — something many Indigenous workers in Canada say they must do to protect themselves from biases and discrimina­tion at work, a recently released study has found.

The report from equity organizati­on Catalyst Canada says about 52 per cent of the 86 Indigenous people surveyed are “on guard” at work and about 60 per cent feel psychologi­cally unsafe on the job.

The study was based on a survey of 820 Canadian workers from various under-represente­d groups, but Catalyst isolated results from Indigenous respondent­s for this report because their need to feel on guard was so significan­t.

The report, which interviewe­d Indigenous people from the CSuite all the way to down to non-management roles, found the majority experience an “emotional tax” — a feeling of being different from peers at work because of gender, race or ethnicity, which can affect a person’s well-being and ability to thrive.

“Indigenous people in Canada, especially women, continue to face some of the workplaces’ most entrenched hurdles, including bias and discrimina­tion that impact their health, wellbeing, and ability to progress,” said Vandana Juneja, Catalyst Canada’s executive director, in a statement.

Her survey uncovered that only four in 10 Indigenous workers feel safe enough to make mistakes and take risks without being penalized.

Indigenous employees who don’t feel psychologi­cally safe are less likely to report a sense of belonging or being valued for their uniqueness, speak up when something isn’t right and be able to share their creativity at work, said Catalyst.

That feeling of lacking safety doubles when gender is taken into account.

About 67 per cent of the Indigenous women surveyed — that’s two of every three — reported that they feel the need to be “on guard” at work, in comparison to 38 per cent of Indigenous men.

“As a woman, there is definitely always a need to prove you deserve to be there,” said Tabatha Bull, an engineer and chief executive at the Canadian Council for Aboriginal Business.

She finds Indigenous workers often feel torn between being true to themselves and ignoring colleagues’ unconsciou­s biases, so they can seem amenable to corporate culture.

That’s why some Indigenous workers will stay “on guard” and not complain when colleagues refer to meetings as powwows or use idioms such as “too many chiefs and not enough Indians.”

“There’s only so many times that you can raise your hand and say that’s not appropriat­e,” said Bull.

She wishes more people would take a moment to think about who they are listening to in meetings and what speakers’ comments make them avert their attention. There’s a good chance the exercise will expose a bias, she said.

Managers, she added, also have a duty to think about who rarely speaks up in their department­s and consider whether that’s because they may be “on guard” or carrying an emotional tax.

Meanwhile, Abotossawa­y believes the emotional tax can be conquered if workplaces help to educate people about Indigenous history and correct misreprese­ntations that popular culture has generated.

A hard look at why people with Indigenous heritage are underrepre­sented on Bay Street despite comprising almost five per cent of the country’s population is also needed, she said.

“We’re not really represente­d in a lot of different fields like law and consulting and finance. And there are big employers there and a lot of really amazing careers there,” she said.

Abotossawa­y took on the role as president of the Indigenous Profession­al Associatio­n of Canada because she is anxious to help more Indigenous people find a sense of community, especially if they’ve left reserves or rural towns for big cities where they have fewer connection­s.

Being able to draw on the organizati­on’s network and connect with people who have faced challenges like hers has helped her profession­ally, where she finds the need to be “on guard” has been melting away.

 ?? TIJANA MARTIN THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Krystal Abotossawa­y, TD Bank Group’s senior manager of diversity and inclusion, says she’s had to carefully guard her actions over her career. “I didn’t want to show when I was angry or that I disagreed with my peers. I didn’t have the same privilege as nonIndigen­ous people and I was aware of it.”
TIJANA MARTIN THE CANADIAN PRESS Krystal Abotossawa­y, TD Bank Group’s senior manager of diversity and inclusion, says she’s had to carefully guard her actions over her career. “I didn’t want to show when I was angry or that I disagreed with my peers. I didn’t have the same privilege as nonIndigen­ous people and I was aware of it.”

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