Vancouver Sun

Just the facts, ma’am: Women paid much less

Statscan report confirms men’s wages 18.9% higher in B.C., says Nina Hansen.

- Nina Hansen is the executive director of the B.C. Centre for Women in the Trades. It is funded by the Canada-b. C. Workforce Developmen­t Agreement as well as industry and labour partners.

Anecdotal accounts are funny things.

On the one hand, a personal story has considerab­le merit in that someone is sharing something they heard, saw or experience­d firsthand. If that person appears genuine and credible, the story is taken as the truth. But on the other hand, anecdotal accounts can blanket the facts with a cloudy lens.

In my line of work, as an advocate for workers in general and for tradeswome­n in particular, I’m often drawn into conversati­ons in which people surmise that there is no longer a gender wage gap in Canada. How do they know? Well, they’ve observed this themselves, working side by side with women earning exactly the same salary as the men on the job. I’ve heard this from men and women alike.

They may then point to a female CEO or the female head of a large associatio­n and claim that, hey, these women broke through that darned glass ceiling, so therefore anyone can do it.

While I’m the first to trumpet that, yes, women can do anything, I cannot concede that women in Canada have wage equality with men, and it turns out that Statistics Canada agrees with me. According to a report released Oct. 7, women in Canada still earn an average of 13.3-per-cent less per hour than men. Women in B.C. are even worse off than the average Canadian woman, earning 18.9-per-cent less per hour than men.

The study found that gender difference­s in occupation and industry were large factors in explaining the wage gap. For example, we have a major skilled trades shortage in this country, and employment in the constructi­on sector has thus increased over the past decade. Unions, industry, government and post-secondary institutio­ns have all placed a heavy focus on recruitmen­t, and it’s been paying off. But women still represent less than five per cent of workers in

How can we attract and keep more women in the trades and close the gender wage gap in our province? Simply said but harder to do: change the culture of constructi­on.

this sector, which means that in the end, constructi­on has contribute­d to the gender wage gap.

At the B.C. Centre for Women in the Trades, we’re trying to change that. Establishe­d as a two-year pilot program in 2017, our centre’s objective is to increase the retention and advancemen­t of women in the trades with targeted supports within companies and through mentorship­s by other women to address the numerous challenges women face.

Trades jobs in B.C. offer high wages, advancemen­t opportunit­ies and, in today’s economic climate, employment security. In any other field, that might be enough to attract women into the sector, yet it isn’t enough in constructi­on. Research, not anecdotal evidence, shows us that women face systemic barriers and challenges to their success in the trades — including limited access to sanitary toilets, an inability to find protective clothing that fits, bullying, harassment, discrimina­tion and exclusion. This is true at every level of their careers, from the start of their apprentice­ship to — if they get there — achievemen­t of their trades qualificat­ion or Red Seal.

So how can we attract and keep more women in the trades and close the gender wage gap in our province? Simply said but harder to do: change the culture of constructi­on. This requires a 360-degree commitment from industry to foster gender-inclusive workplaces.

It’s no small feat, and it starts with acknowledg­ing the barriers that have kept women out of highly paid constructi­on careers for decades.

We don’t need any more proof that these barriers exist; we need these barriers decreased and ultimately eliminated.

Finally, to all the women out there who have been fighting for wage equality for their entire working lives, thank you. Please keep fighting, because obviously we still have a lot of work to do. And that’s a statistica­l fact.

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