OSPE introduces action plan to overcome systemic bias in engineering culture, training and licensure process

The Ontario Society of Professional Engineers (OSPE) has introduced a four-point action plan to address systemic bias prevalent in the culture, training and licensure process.

A recent study commissioned by OSPE found that, overwhelmingly, engineers, engineering graduates, and hiring mangers view systemic bias as a major problem in the engineering community. While Ontario has a pool of diverse and underrepresented groups, systemic bias discourages some of the best talent from remaining in engineering roles.

In response to these findings, OSPE says in a statement that it is deepening its vital commitment to acknowledging and uprooting all sources of bias in the system that selects, educates and registers professional engineers.

“This has gone on for too long, with little action by the leaders of Ontario – and Canada’s – engineering community,” says OSPE CEO Sandro Perruzza. “Starting right now, OSPE is dedicating itself to unifying the voices of Ontario’s engineering community. Enough is enough and we won’t stop until we see meaningful change and movement towards a diverse and inclusive profession that is vibrant and ready to serve Ontario without bias.”

Research from a previous OSPE study highlights gender-based issues clearly enough, however more research needs to be supported and undertaken to conceptualize the experiences of other underrepresented groups:

  • One-in-three women currently get paid less than their male counterparts in the engineering sector
  • One-in-four women experience harassment, discrimination or bullying at work within the engineering industry
  • Forty-five per cent of women reported feeling undervalued or disrespected in the workplace, when compared to 20 per cent of their male counterparts
  • Forty-four percent of men compared to 18% of women claimed to having never felt barriers to their workplace advancement.

“Women and other underrepresented groups are being held back from contributing to the vital work Ontarians need them to do,” says current OSPE president and Chair Réjeanne Aimey. “Our members’ voices are also clear: It’s time for action. It’s time for leadership. It’s time for real change.”

OSPE invites all engineers, Ontario’s engineering regulator, Professional Engineers Ontario (PEO), government officials, engineering school deans, Engineering Student Societies’ Council of Ontario (ESSCO), the Association of Consulting Engineering Companies – Ontario (formerly Consulting Engineers Ontario) and all vested community stakeholder groups, to join with them in this endeavour.

“This is a complex problem, with deep cultural and historical roots. We are calling on the best of Ontario’s engineers to join with us to break the cycles of prejudice and bias that we all know are there,” says Perruzza.

“It’s not an us-versus-them initiative. We are all in this together, and it will take all of Ontario’s engineering community to make real change,”  Aimey said in the statement. “I know all too well the unspoken professional culture that diverse underrepresented groups have to overcome just to be heard.Angela Wojtyla, current chair of OSPE’s Diversity and Inclusion Task Force, said: “I’m a proud engineer and know that the engineering community is committed to ensuring the safety and success of our society. It is our passion, but I’ve watched too many talented problem solvers get sidelined by systemic biases built up over generations. It’s time for real change, and together we’re going to make it happen.”

OSPE says its four-point plan will kick-start bringing about real change for the future of the whole engineering community in Ontario.

“We invite our stakeholders and all members of the engineering community to join us in this mission for change by signing their names and telling all of our leaders that they demand action over rhetoric,” says Perruzza.

The points are:

  1. Taking concrete actions and reaffirming that diversity and inclusion remain one of our core values;
  2. Offering regular diversity and inclusion training to any members of the engineering community who seek it;
  3. Launching a new featured Diversity and Inclusion Champion Award in 2021 to honour OSPE members who are making real systemic change; and
  4. Committing to convene a summit with all Ontario engineering leaders in 2021 to develop an industry-wide action plan.

In addition to these steps, in its role as a leader of Ontario’s whole engineering community, effective last Thursday (Nov. 26), OSPE has created a hub at engineeringforchange.ca “for the whole engineering community to unite to tackle its most challenging and most complex problem,” the statement said.

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