45 of Ireland’s largest companies sign up to ELEVATE pledge to improve diversity and inclusivity in Irish workplaces

Business in the Community Ireland

THURSDAY 20th May: 45 of Ireland’s largest companies have publicly committed to improve inclusivity and diversity in their workplaces by signing up to ELEVATE, the Business in the Community Ireland (BITCI) inclusive workplace pledge.

BITCI recently commissioned Deloitte to assist with the research for a new report – Diversity and Inclusion in Focus – which highlights the inequalities in society and the barriers to inclusion. The BITCI Report found that compared to the general population:

  • a person with a disability is four and a half times more likely to be unemployed,
  • a black person is six times more likely to be unemployed,
  • and a Traveller 13 times more likely to be unemployed

The vision of the ELEVATE Pledge is to build a workforce reflective of society, starting now. The Pledge, which must be signed by the CEO, asks companies to commit to profiling their diversity and to take action to embed inclusion. BITCI will publish a progress report on an annual basis with the first report due in mid-2022. Specifically, signatories must:

  • Provide a diversity profile data of their own workforce starting with their senior management team.
  • Take at least one action to improve inclusion within own workforce and publish this action and the expected outcome.
  • Measure impact of actions and be accountable for progress made/or not and report on same.

The initial signatories are: A&L Goodbody, Accenture, Actavo, AIB Group, Allianz; Aviva General Insurance, Aviva Life & Pensions, Bank of Ireland Group, Bidvest Noonan, BT, Central Bank of Ireland, Coillte, Compass Group Ireland, Cook Medical Ireland Ltd., Cork Chamber, Deloitte, DHL Supply Chain, Diageo Ireland, Dublin Bus, eir, EirGrid plc, Energia, Enterprise Rent-a-Car, Fujitsu Ireland, Gas Networks Ireland, HEINEKEN Ireland, HSBC Ireland, Iarnród Éireann, Irish Cement Limited, Irish Water, Janssen Sciences Ireland UC, Janssen Pharmaceutical Sciences UC, Marks & Spencer (Ireland) Ltd, Maveric Contractors, Mercury Engineering, Momentum Support, Musgrave Group, Ornua, Permanent TSB, Roadstone Ltd., RSA Group, Sky Ireland, Sodexo, Ireland, SSE Ireland, Tesco Ireland, Veolia and William Fry.

As part of the Diversity and Inclusion in Focus report, Deloitte ran a series of focus groups in early 2021 involving participants from employment support NGOs and businesses. Some of the following situations were disclosed:

  • Being told by recruiters to change their names to make them more acceptable to Irish employers,
  • Employers and recruiters not understanding the visa process,
  • Frustration that their education and skills, being non-Irish, were neither recognised nor appreciated.
  • Being in low paid jobs that in no ways reflected their experience,
  • Being asked to apply for a job that they were competently doing but not passing the standardised aptitude test.

Tomás Sercovich, CEO, Business in the Community Ireland (BITCI), said “The global pandemic and movements such as #BlackLivesMatter have shone a spotlight on the major inequality in our society. Companies have a fundamental role to play and know that they have to do more. We are at the foothills of realising truly inclusive workplaces, but the power of a collective response from BITCI members and learning from each other will lead to continuous improvement as we have seen previously with our Low Carbon Pledge.” 

BITCI are ideally placed to run ELEVATE, as a core part of their work has been the successful EPIC Programme (Employment for People from Immigrant Communities) which leverages the support of business to help marginalised immigrants find employment.  The EPIC programme has run for the past 12 years and is part of the support infrastructure for migrants, refugees and asylum seekers trying to find work in Ireland. Over 4000 people from over 100 nationalities have completed the EPIC programme with two thirds going on into employment or further training and education. EPIC is funded by the Department of Children, Equality, Disability, Integration, and Youth and the European Social Fund. BITCI also run programmes supporting people with disabilities, and marginalised women to enter employment and a nationwide education programme where businesses are partnered with DEIS schools.

Sinead Patton, Chief Financial and Commercial Officer, Veolia Ireland and Co-chair of BITCI’s Leaders’ Group on Sustainability which developed the Pledge, said “Investors, consumers, employees, and civil society have increased their attention on how businesses respond to the diversity, equality and inclusion challenges we face. We are delighted to have already doubled our target of signed up companies and now it’s vital to build on this momentum.  We can learn from each other on how to authentically move the dial in a meaningful way which will benefit us all.”

Ken Scully, Head of Trading & Commercial Operations – Ireland, Marks & Spencer and co-Chair of the Leaders’ Group on Sustainability says “We know there is a strong business case for inclusion, but it is also the right thing to do. The reality is certain groups within our society face significant barriers to employment and we are proud to be working with other Pledge signatories to change this.”

Find out more about Elevate

Ends

For more information contact

Moira Horgan on 086 172 2105 or mhorgan@bitc.ie


Editors’ notes:

Concrete actions already committed to by the signatories include:

  • Offering a range of internship and apprenticeship programmes to attract and support diverse talent
  • Establish 50:50 gender balance in appointments to senior management and leadership by the end of 2021
  • Introduce mandatory Race Awareness Learning for all employees
  • Review job descriptions to eliminate unintended bias
  • Develop a pathways to employment programme to attract entry level staff facing barriers to employment
  • Undertaking a Gender Pay Gap analysis
  • Introduce mandatory Unconscious Bias Training to all People Managers and HR Practitioners
  • Partner with a DEIS schools to promote new job opportunities and offer TY placements
  • Roll out Disability Confidence Training
  • Promotion of family leave policies
  • Commence an internship programme to support people with intellectual disabilities to access work placements, launch a ‘spotlight on’ campaign to raise awareness of our personnel who are from diverse cultures, heritage and ethnic backgrounds, particularly those who have progressed and developed internally within the business.

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