The agencies even laugh about it now as it's been going on so long.
And therein lies a further problem. The acknowledgement that something is wrong, but having neither the will or guts to do anything about it.
The agencies even laugh about it now as it's been going on so long.
I believe job selection should be based on merit, if candidates are equal in terms of ability, then it obviously goes down to the one with the best rack.
Apart from people with disabilities, the rest of it is bullshit. How much money do our councils and government waste sending people on courses, so that we don't offend anyone. I'm all for common sense, picking the best person for the job.
But you can't address a lack of diversity by not including them.. Then the group itself is not fully diverse..
FWIW, I am for helping the minorities get the same opportunities as the majority, I just believe the principle of diversity should include all..
I'd better get myself down to the ladies department at M&S then...again.
The group itself is not fully diverse - that is the point.
It is not opportunity that matters, it is reality. As I said to someone else it is not equality just to be allowed to apply for jobs, it is equallity if you have an equal chance of getting that job. That is not currently the case. That is why it needs redressing.
Given the classiness of your posts, Primark.
Look, it's about using different methods depending on needs , to achieve a desirable result. This case is about seeking the result of having more minorities in the workforce. It's pretty simple really. Or.
"I want to play basketball"
"Don't be daft, you're in a wheelchair, you'll never achieve that result".
Thats equality of outcome.
You know perfectly well that the right to play wheelchair basketball is not the same as the right of a man to experience childbirth. And, in terms of 'having more minorities in the workforce' I am stadfast that positive discrimination is discrimination. It was introduced in the US as a means to deal with outrageous discrimination, and back in the 70s I considered it a necessary evil, but when it leads to the best qualified person not getting the job it becomes a counterproductive farce, and was one of the original triggers of the odious term 'political correctness gone mad'. It also covers the cracks of ignorance because it allows that when the quota is met, there is no need to employ any more of 'them' (explaining why, in a predomonantly black nighbourhood, up to 50% of the workforce can be white - once the white bosses meet the quota they halt the hiring of the blacks - and exactly the same can work the other way; racist behavious is not rstricted to any one race). And then there is the detail - how do your base the quota? On national population demographics or local? Do you divide ethnicity into 'black' and 'white' (which means an 'Asian' boss can employ whites and 'asians' and need not employ any person of African origin) or do you go granular? How granular? Person of Norther Irish extraction versus Southern Irish? No.
No. All of this is disregarding who is best qualified for the job in order to enact social enginering, and meanwhile it deprives qualified folk of the 'majority' ethnicity (i.e., white, UK) of a job.
The solution is to have strict and open employment laws, as we have in the UK, and to enforce them. Educating our people on employment law would be useful, albeit I'm sure there are web sites. Yes, at Joe's garage, Joe may well get away with employing a long line of pneumatic blonds, but it is up to folk to challenge him. At the larger and more complex end of the employment tree, where I work there are tens of thousands of employees and the law is followed to the letter.
Albeit, 40 odd years ago a young heart surgeon failed to get a job here, allegedly due to him 'not being the right sort, don'tcha know?'. Harefield Hospital's gain was my place's loss; it was Magdi Yacoub, now knighted, the first surgeon to complete 1000 heart transplants ....FFS!
Why is this preventing the best person applying for the job regardless of race?
Sorry, to what does 'this' refer?
Yes, anyone can apply for any job (unless barred - see OP). I said I am against positive discrimination but I did not say getting rid of it would prevent anyone from applying for a job. The opposite, in fact.
Maybe you have grasped the wrong end of my stick.
You know perfectly well that the right to play wheelchair basketball is not the same as the right of a man to experience childbirth. And, in terms of 'having more minorities in the workforce' I am stadfast that positive discrimination is discrimination. It was introduced in the US as a means to deal with outrageous discrimination, and back in the 70s I considered it a necessary evil, but when it leads to the best qualified person not getting the job it becomes a counterproductive farce, and was one of the original triggers of the odious term 'political correctness gone mad'. It also covers the cracks of ignorance because it allows that when the quota is met, there is no need to employ any more of 'them' (explaining why, in a predomonantly black nighbourhood, up to 50% of the workforce can be white - once the white bosses meet the quota they halt the hiring of the blacks - and exactly the same can work the other way; racist behavious is not rstricted to any one race). And then there is the detail - how do your base the quota? On national population demographics or local? Do you divide ethnicity into 'black' and 'white' (which means an 'Asian' boss can employ whites and 'asians' and need not employ any person of African origin) or do you go granular? How granular? Person of Norther Irish extraction versus Southern Irish? No.
No. All of this is disregarding who is best qualified for the job in order to enact social enginering, and meanwhile it deprives qualified folk of the 'majority' ethnicity (i.e., white, UK) of a job.
The solution is to have strict and open employment laws, as we have in the UK, and to enforce them. Educating our people on employment law would be useful, albeit I'm sure there are web sites. Yes, at Joe's garage, Joe may well get away with employing a long line of pneumatic blonds, but it is up to folk to challenge him. At the larger and more complex end of the employment tree, where I work there are tens of thousands of employees and the law is followed to the letter.
Albeit, 40 odd years ago a young heart surgeon failed to get a job here, allegedly due to him 'not being the right sort, don'tcha know?'. Harefield Hospital's gain was my place's loss; it was Magdi Yacoub, now knighted, the first surgeon to complete 1000 heart transplants ....FFS!
'This' is referring to Creative Access. I think you are making the assumption that Creative Access are the sole recruitment conduit for the positions they advertise. A quick search of the companies they are advertising vacancies for appears to show this is not the case. So whilst CA are stating they only put forward BAME candidates that doesn't mean they will be the only candidates for the job.
Oh, right. OK. The conversation had moved on a bit I thought. So you are saying this is a non story, with creative access merely being a 'non white' advocasy group who seek out non white candidates for positions that are otherwise adverised elsewhere and open to all. OK. Fine. Cheers.
In this case it is a non story. You got on your high horse about a perceived case of 'positive discrimination' when it isn't. The argument is about getting BAME candidates in front of an interview panel, surely nothing more nothing less.
In this case it is a non story. You got on your high horse about a perceived case of 'positive discrimination' when it isn't. The argument is about getting BAME candidates in front of an interview panel, surely nothing more nothing less.