Alberta civil service has 3x as many men as women at highest level - Action News
Home WebMail Saturday, November 23, 2024, 07:08 AM | Calgary | -12.2°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Calgary

Alberta civil service has 3x as many men as women at highest level

Premier Rachel Notley may have appointed a gender equal cabinet, but women make up less than one third of the deputy and assistant deputy ministers in the Alberta government.

Deputy and assistant deputy ministers work behind the scenes to craft policy, unnoticed by public

Women just 1 in 3 at highest level of Alberta's civil service

9 years ago
Duration 6:03
A panel of political strategists debates whether the government should do something about the lack of gender equality at the deputy and assistant deputy minister level.

Premier Rachel Notleymay have appointed a gender equal cabinet, but behind the scenes, women represent less than one third of Alberta's highest-ranking civil servants.

Of the province's24 deputy ministers and associate deputy ministers, justsevenare women.

According to independent pollster Janet Brown, these are some of the most influential individuals when it comes to crafting policy a fact not readily recognized by the public.

"They're under the mistaken belief that the elected officials are making the important decisions," she said.

"[Assistant deputy ministers] arevery important, but irrelevant to people who just watch the circus of the legislature."

Brown suggested that the provincial government could make strides tobreak down barriers by introducing new policies to encourage and equip women to apply for these positions.

But political strategist Stephen Carter denied the existence of a glass ceiling, saying women are slowly but surely climbing the ladder.

"It takes time to learn how to run all these things," Carter said.

"This isn't a photo op. These are the people who run our government, and they'd better be qualified, because I'll tell you some of those ministers aren't," he said.

Political expert Zain Veljithenchallenged Carter's notion of what makes someone qualified.

"Is it a Fortune 500 company where the only thing you care about is merit for the bottom line, or is it something bigger than that?" Velji asked.

"I contest it is bigger than that," he said.

"These are the people doing the work behind the scenes, and they should have the breadth of diversity that is Alberta. We need that diversity of thought. We need that diversity of perspective."

With files from CBC News Calgary