:
Ladies and gentlemen, I would like to call the 79th meeting of the Standing Committee on the Status of Women to order. We will now begin our proceedings.
We will spend the first hour speaking with Sherry Lee Benson-Podolchuk via videoconference. She is appearing as an individual and has already given her opening statement.
Ms. Benson-Podolchuk, thank you for appearing before the committee a second time, to give members a chance to ask you questions about your statement.
We will begin with members' questions, and we will hear from another witness during our second hour.
I would just like to let the committee members know that Ms. Bowes-Sperry wasn't able to join us today, even though we were hoping to hear from her. We will see whether we can invite her to appear next Tuesday, during our second hour.
On that note, I will hand the floor over to Ms. Truppe.
You have seven minutes.
:
When I joined in 1989, there wasn't anything. I believe probably over the years, as things sort of popped up within the....
In Canada and in the Canadian Forces, they were encouraging anti-harassment training at that time. The commissioner in the early 1990s said, “Well, we don't have a problem; we don't need that kind of training.”
However, I guess as lawsuits popped up and there were these whispers across Canada of harassment, they did begin to have harassment training, but I didn't receive any of it until later in my service.
I had asked for the training when I first saw some of these courses popping up, but because I was either off duty sick with my injury or stress leave, I was never given the opportunity. In training, though, I think they had started that.
Unfortunately, I wasn't here for your presentation, but I read it last night. I could actually relate to it, having worked in a workplace where I was sexually harassed.
I worked for probation and parole services, and I remember when the mandate came in for harassment training and everybody had to take it. I remember going to this one institution for that training and someone walked in and said, “I'm not sitting beside that person,” and took their chair and moved it away. I know how it feels and how that other person must have felt. Here we were in a harassment training course. It was already there and that poisoned environment just continued to build.
We know that it's not just the employees who need to take this training. Supervisors, managers, and everyone in the workplace should take these courses. Regardless of whether someone has taken a course or not, we continue to see these events take place.
With the recent story that broke involving Staff Sergeant Caroline O'Farrell, we see it's the same thing again. You and she had repeatedly mentioned this to your superiors and very little action was taken, or if action was taken, the victim was actually victimized again.
Many experts have agreed that one of the first barriers to reporting sexual harassment in the workplace is the fear of retaliation, which you have talked about, as has the staff sergeant. In the RCMP, have you seen the existence of a mechanism, effective or not, that aims to avoid and prevent reprisals? I am wondering if you have seen something like that.
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I think there are 300 people in the lawsuit right now that could probably identify with that. I think a lot of them are still serving.
I've been approached several times by people who are in the RCMP. They phone me to tell me that they've read my book or they've heard about me or they know about the lawsuits that are going on and they are afraid to come forward. The first thing I ask is whether they're safe. You just never know how things can escalate.
I'm sorry you had those experiences, because they do leave a scar on people. For me, there were a lot of subtle things before I realized it was actually almost criminal behaviour. It was the little things. You look back now and you can see how damaging it was and what harassment really looks like. Basically, it's bullying. You can put another label on it, but someone who harasses you is a bully. A bully in the workplace, a bully in the military, a bully at school, a bully in cyberspace, they're all doing the same thing. Their intent is to have power over someone and to wound and destroy.
:
Thank you, Madam Chair.
To the witness, thank you for taking time to come back with us today. As you know, we've been doing a lot of work on this study, and it is very important to all of our committee that individuals go to work each day knowing that their workplace will be free of sexual harassment as you face all the other challenges that one has in a day's work.
Earlier you shared copies of correspondence from both inside and outside the RCMP on the topic of your experiences. In your book Women Not Wanted you mention that you did not begin as a good note taker, but subsequently developed the skill. This is a skill that takes learning. Can you describe how you see this as being a very important skill, and how important it is to maintain this kind of information?
:
That's an excellent question. I tell people when they're having problems the same thing: document, document, document. It started out just when things would happen and I thought I was never going to remember things so I would just write down that I was at the detachment, the people who were there, the date and time. As I gathered notes, I was able to start to look back to see if there was a pattern of abuse.
When I was writing my book, it was a lot easier to prove my case when I wanted to see a lawyer, when I wanted to go to the Canadian Human Rights Commission, because they would ask me what evidence I had. This happened two years ago. They don't want to go just by memory. They prefer to have something in writing.
I had boxes of stuff, of documents that I could show, e-mails and letters in which people were saying that I shouldn't have reported my partner being drunk, and I had no sense of humour about the door falling on my head. Of course, I kept that and that's perfect evidence of what abuse of power looks like and how the retribution is on people who make complaints. I tell people all the time about the importance of documenting.
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I'm not sure if it would have helped me. I think I would have recognized....
I'll go back right to the beginning. Right in training, we are silently seduced, is the best way to say it. We are silently seduced to believe that we are better because we wear the uniform.
For many people, to protect the image of the uniform, they will do whatever they can. If that means abusing somebody else, harassing someone else, bullying someone else to maintain the image of that RCMP organization, then they will do that. I don't know how you're going to change that. It's going to be difficult, but that's where it has to start. It's not the uniform that reflects the person, it's the person who reflects the uniform.
Does that help?
:
Yes. For sure we all admire and owe great respect to those uniforms when we see them, of course.
In your book, Women not Wanted, you describe the grievance process at the time of your first grievance as having 30 different stages throughout it, and two levels of decision, and then finally access to the external review committee, and decisions sent to the commissioner. In between all of these steps you are under pressure to meet short deadlines for submission of documents.
While you were in the middle of this process, the rules changed and some of the stages between the initial letter and the decision by the commissioner were removed. Could you please describe the difference in the initial process as compared to the changes that were then made?
:
That's the million-dollar question. I really would like to know what an effective answer would be to that.
The problem that I've seen is the fact that in the internal process, when people are making complaints, the RCMP is handling them. As you have seen this last year or two, when the serious complaints come forward, the RCMP handles them. You're right that most businesses would say that this is fraud, this is sexual assault, this is to be tried criminally. They go straight to the code of conduct.
According to the policy, you can only get a maximum of 10 days' suspension. Hopefully with the amendments, there can be some people who are actually fired. But I'm not sure how the outrageous conduct is going to ever be defined.
:
For the information of the committee, I have some evidence that I'll be referring to. I'll give it to the clerk and ask that it be distributed to all members of the committee. I believe it's critically important evidence as part of the study we are doing. No one in Parliament or anywhere else could read the kind of evidence I'm going to give you and not feel that more needs to be done, over and above what we're doing right now.
As many of us have heard:
RCMP Staff Sergeant Caroline O'Farrell has commenced legal proceedings against the RCMP and several of its members for damages she sustained while she was a member of the Musical Ride in the mid 80's. It had long been a dream of S/Sgt. O'Farrell to be on the Ride, and she was one of the first women to be admitted. In the end, it turned out to be a nightmare, when she was assaulted, sexually assaulted, abused and discriminated against by the other members of the Ride.
All of these acts were either witnessed by or known to her supervisors who did nothing to stop them or to hold the perpetrators accountable. Any efforts S/Sgt. O'Farrell took to protect herself or to obtain redress only resulted in her being further abused, victimized and isolated.
We’ve heard that from Sherry Lee and others.
S/Sgt. O'Farrell was ultimately removed from the Ride, not by virtue of any inadequacy on her part, but only because her supervisors felt it would be best for her own protection.
An investigation was conducted at the time, and the conclusion was that there were over 100 substantiated incidents of assault and abuse.
An example of the kind of abuse she had to endure is a particular incident in which some of the male members—and I'm sure Sherry Lee has heard these things before—swarmed her from behind and yanked the stirrup of her horse from her hand. She punched some of them and tried to push them away with a penknife folded in her fist. She also punched other constables. They formed a circle, closed in, filled a wheelbarrow full of cold water, and carried her forceably into the riding school where she was restrained. They lifted the wheelbarrow over her head, drenching her head and body in cold water, right down to her bra and underpants. Then they dragged her along by her arms through the mixture of dirt, shavings, manure, and urine. Once they had finished with her, she sat there, her head fuming, alone and humiliated. All the while, they were laughing and videotaping the incident. Afterwards, they all took off. The incident was videotaped by a particular constable and witnessed by 18 other course members, who were walking their horses at the time. The incident occurred within a few feet of the supervisors who had gone into the farrier's shop after learning that a shit-troughing was about to occur.
That is exactly the kind of incident this particular individual is referring to, and I will submit this as information that I think will be helpful for the committee as we move forward with this.
I'd also like to move a motion that we allow Caroline O'Farrell to appear before the committee. We know clearly from the rules of the committee that anyone coming and giving evidence before the committee does not violate the sub judice convention. It happens very often in standing committees where we have people come before us as part of a study, as long as it's relative to the study. That would help us to achieve the goal, which is to thoroughly understand this issue.
In 1988, this issue was raised in the House of Commons by one of my former colleagues, Sheila Copps. In 1988, the same issue was raised referring to Staff Sergeant Caroline O'Farrell.
Sherry Lee, it's wonderful to see you again. Thank you for coming to committee, and I'm sorry we took up quite a bit of your time on the process.
I know that you are one of the first women who came forward to tell your story. I commend you for that. It must have taken a huge amount of courage.
Do you feel that your coming forward has made a difference? How do you feel about the process now that you're sitting here today, compared to where you started from, which I can imagine was in the depths of despair?
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Wow. That's a very good question.
Coming forward was the most terrifying thing I've ever done, basically because I knew the history. I knew that the reaction would be negative and that the retribution would be quick and swift. I was correct on that, but I knew there were other people out there who were probably more terrified than I was.
As I said before, there were whispers. There were always whispers across the country, and now it's a roar, which is wonderful. I had to do that because I knew if I didn't, it was going to destroy me, and I thought it wasn't right. I have this fierce sense of justice and equality and I knew I had to find justice by speaking out.
On the equality part, I knew there were other people out there somewhere, both male and female, who were treated like I was, because as I said before, there were whispers. I hadn't seen anyone around me treated like I was, because I would have definitely spoken up for them. That's why I did that, and I've never regretted it.
As a matter of fact, I received an e-mail a little while ago from a gentleman who is still in and is having a difficult time. He's not sure if he wants to stay in the RCMP. He asked me if retiring at 20 years was worth it. I had to really do some thinking. I thought it was, because my mental, physical, and spiritual body was being destroyed. If I hadn't spoken out, if I hadn't written my book, which is my voice, then I don't think I would be here.
It's not that I wanted to make a decision to kill myself, it's just that I wanted to end the suffering, go to sleep, and not wake up. If I hadn't spoken up, I don't think I would be here. For people to speak up and say what has happened to them is very important to the healing process.
:
Thank you, Madam Chair. I will be sharing my time with Mr. Morin.
Ms. Benson-Podolchuk, thank you for participating in our discussion.
This past February, the Commission for Public Complaints against the RCMP released a report entitled “Public Interest Investigation into RCMP Workplace Harassment: Final Report”. It discusses the fact that harassment may be under-reported, because of, among other things, fear of reprisal and concern that the complaint may not achieve significant results.
From your experience and observations, do you believe sexual harassment is actually under-reported within the RCMP?
:
Oh, definitely, and that's because people are afraid. People are terrified. The squeaky wheel gets bonked on the head. They're the ones who have the stalled careers. They're the ones who get further targeted for harassment or alienation within the detachment, or that particular rank. So, yes, I believe it is under-reported.
I looked over that new report by Commissioner Paulson on a gender-respectful workplace, and there are so many errors in it. Success, to him, would be that nobody reports. Well no, nobody was reporting before, because they were terrified. Simply because he's not receiving any reports doesn't mean there's not a problem, and there still will be a problem until they deal with the fear people have of reporting, and the fact that nothing is going to be done if they report. So they think, “Why would I bother?”
That's a very good question.
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They have made some changes, which is great. The shift within the mindset of the organization and this culture of protectiveness is definitely going to take some time, because people have to buy into this idea of a respectful workplace.
For me, I think they would have to continue with the training, and not an online course where you just choose a, b, or c, and you pass. That means nothing. It's actually getting in the trenches with people who have been harassed, such as speaking to Catherine or the other women who have been involved and having people come and present exactly what it looks like. What does harassment look like? What is the impact?
As a business, they should realize they need to take care of their employees. They're losing so much money with people being on sick leave, spending it on the education, and spending money on not having people there. Improved training and conferences where people are actually interacting with victims of harassment would be one way.
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I have to say that, after listening to you and following your experience, I'm shocked. When will someone wake up and realize that the organization has suffered a tremendous blow by losing an employee with such a strong sense of justice?
Correct me if I'm wrong, but I get the sense that the harassment problem in that environment is similar to the kinds of things that happen in all other workplaces. People try to be friendly at first, paying compliments and such, and the behaviour escalates until there is no respect at all. You are objectified and victimized.
I don't think that can change from the inside. Those in charge, especially in the government, have to take over the process in order to bring about a genuine and significant change in culture. Those people have to realize that all the actions you and hundreds of your colleagues have been subjected to do not constitute jokes or funny remarks, but devastating incidents. It's devastating not just for the victims like yourself and your colleagues, but also for the entire country, because everything would run much more efficiently if the workplaces were more harmonious.
What do you think?
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We are now resuming the 79th meeting of the Standing Committee on the Status of Women.
Here with us, as we begin the second half of our meeting, is Linda Collinsworth.
[English]
Madam Collinsworth is an associate professor of psychology at Millikin University.
Madam, thank you very much for being with us today. You will have 10 minutes or less for your opening remarks. I will have to cut you off at 10 minutes, and then we'll go to the question and answer period. Members will have an opportunity to ask you questions. Once again, thank you for being with us.
:
Thank you very much. It is indeed an honour to have been asked to present to your committee on the issue of sexual harassment.
I certainly commend the committee on its efforts in addressing the needs of women in Canada. As issues get addressed in one country, the attention generated spreads to other places around the world, so I thank you for your efforts. I would also like to thank your staff, who have been very helpful in arranging the details to be able to present to you from my home city in the United States.
As you know, my research and area of expertise concern the problem of sexual harassment. Although I have done research on sexual harassment in schools, the military, and public housing, I am going to confine my remarks today to sexual harassment in the workplace because that is the focus of your current investigation.
First, I want to say that I am a social scientist, not a lawyer, not an attorney. Because sexual harassment is a cause for litigation, people frequently assume that the sexual harassment I talk about is equated with the sexual harassment that is a tort claim in the United States. It is not. I'll be talking about the social scientific findings on the topic of sexual harassment. The legal world and the social science world may overlap at times, but they are not identical.
As a social scientist, I find it important to ensure that when we are talking about a topic, we are on the same page about what that topic is, so I will be using the term “sexual harassment” to mean uninvited sex-related behaviour that is unwanted by and offensive to its target. Although different researchers may operationalize sexual harassment in different ways, the research in which I have been most involved and on which a number of additional social scientists rely conceptualizes sexual harassment as consisting of three types: gender animosity, unwanted sexual attention, and sexual coercion.
I should also note that I will only be reporting on the research as it relates to women.
My research is based on an instrument that was developed by Dr. Louise Fitzgerald and her colleagues at the University of Illinois. The instrument is called the “Sexual Experiences Questionnaire”. This instrument measures the behaviours that are described in slide 1. I believe you all have copies of some slides that I prepared. There's gender animosity, and there are some examples of what that consists of, unwanted sexual attention, and then what sexual coercion is.
Using this measurement instrument, Dr. Fitzgerald and her colleagues have developed and validated a model of sexual harassment that specifies antecedents and outcomes of sexual harassment in the workplace. The model has been shown to apply to other cultures and multiple organizations, including the studies conducted by the U.S. military in their studies of gender equity in the armed forces. Slide 2 shows you Dr. Fitzgerald's and her colleagues' comprehensive model.
I was asked to talk about the psychological and other consequences of sexual harassment, so my remarks are going to be confined to the right side of the model, though I could talk about the left side if you were curious about it.
Numerous studies have documented that harassment has serious consequences for the targets, including job and work related detriments, as well as negative health and psychological related outcomes. We'll look first at work consequences.
Slide 3 shows that experiencing sexual harassment has numerous negative consequences for women's work situations. Slides 4, 5, 6, and 7 are the result of research done in the United States involving women involved in a class action lawsuit. These are provided as illustrations only. These same results have been found to be replicated regardless of the organization in which the studies have been done. As you can see, as the frequency of sexual harassment increases, job stress increases, co-worker and supervisor satisfaction decreases, and the intention to leave the job increases.
We also can see from the model that there are negative health-related symptoms. There's really an exhaustive list of consequences that are related to health, but it includes fatigue, headaches, gastrointestinal disorders, teeth grinding, eating disorders, nausea, and many more.
Finally, the psychological consequences of sexual harassment are well documented in the research literature. As the frequency of sexual harassment increases, self-esteem declines, life satisfaction declines, anxiety and depression increase, and the risk of developing post traumatic stress disorder increases. There are some slides that show that as well.
The material I've presented to you today covers research that spans decades of research in multiple organizations. There has been no research that I know of that has findings counter to what I have presented. It is well documented in the social science literature that experiencing sexual harassment in the workplace leads to numerous negative consequences for the targets of the harassment.
Thank you for your time. I'm happy to answer any questions that I can.
:
The theoretical framework from which we operate has to do with stress. We conceptualize stress as coming from multiple sources. It's an individual variable about how well any individual will cope with the stress they experience in their lives. When an individual is under stress, they attempt to cope with that by any means they have. When the stressor exceeds their resources, then we begin to see psychological detriments to their psychological health.
When we think about sexual harassment, there are so many factors. If we're talking about it in the workplace there are so many factors that make sexual harassment a significant stressor for any target. There's research, which I didn't report here, which shows that the negative psychological effects begin to take place almost immediately, in fact, after a single incident. Therefore, by the time someone has experienced a second episode or a second event involving sexual harassment, we begin to see a decline in psychological well-being. The effects kick in very quickly in terms of one's experience.
As we explain those consequences, we think about it as being a significant stressor for any person who is a target.
:
All of the psychological outcomes I've alluded to and mentioned in my remarks can be addressed through interventions with the individual, such as therapy or group counselling. At the same time, some of these symptoms don't necessarily need that kind of an individual intervention. You can do things in the workplace to help people recover from these experiences.
Mainly, the thing that is most supportive for individuals who have been targeted with sexual harassment is that the organization be supportive of their experiences. Part of that model you have—did you get to look at the model I sent? The part of the model I'm interested in you seeing is the side that has the organizational climate, which has an effect on the outcomes over and above what the sexual harassment has. So yes, sexual harassment is a significant stressor, but there is an added stressor that comes from an organization that does not believe the target when she complains. There is an added stressor if the woman feels that if she complains, her job, her position, or her work duties will be at risk.
The work that's been done in the military actually shows that having meaningful sanctions against the offender is one of the most powerful actions that can be taken to prevent sexual harassment.
These three components of an organizational climate have an impact over and above harassment.
When I talk to my students about what we can do about this issue—because people say, “Well, sexual harassment is going to occur”—the good news is that if the organization, which has power over the climate in which workers work, can change the climate, then sexual harassment will decrease and the impact on women will be minimized as well. So there is good news about this model.
I appreciate having received this. Just so you know, we actually received it yesterday so we had plenty of time to bring it with us.
You indicated serious consequences, and you talked about the psychological aspect of this. The fact is that in workplaces, whether federal or non-federal, people react differently to the harassment that takes place, whether it's sexual harassment or the type of bullying that goes on as well.
I'm trying to get some sense of whether you've come to some type of a conclusion as to why it affects certain people certain ways, and not others. Some people seem to be able to get over that hump a lot more easily than others can. It's not that we discount the fact that this happens; it's just that I don't know if it's the severity of it. I'm trying to get some sense of whether you did some research on that.
:
Yes. We have attempted to operationalize what we mean by severity, because the more severe the harassment, the more negative consequences there are. Severity has been operationalized in this way, and I'm not sure if I'll be able to remember all facets of it.
One of the facets is whether the individual is targeted herself or whether it's more of a general denigration of women, if that's the kind of harassment you're experiencing. It tends to be more severe if the harassment is directed at you, if there is difficulty trying to escape from the situation, or if you're unable. Many of the women we have interviewed and surveyed depended on their job for their insurance. It may be insurance used for their children, for example. People will ask why they didn't quit their job. Well, that's not an easy thing to do. The more the woman is in a situation that she can't escape from, the more severe the consequences are for her.
If it's physical, that makes it more severe than if it is merely verbal. Most of the harassment that occurs in the workplace according to this study is not physical, but if it is physical, that makes it worse.
:
Thank you. I don't have a lot of time.
So in the workplace, for example, they can't seem to get away from that person as easily as if it happened in the public somewhere. The reason I ask that question is that I have worked in the mental health field and the criminal justice field, and some of our colleagues who we thought were really strong all of a sudden we saw the depression because of something that had occurred. All in all, whether it occurs once or several times, it's not acceptable.
The previous witness indicated that with the RCMP, basically there's a 10-day suspension in place. That's the worst outcome at this point. Then they go back to work. I believe it's probably a 10-day suspension with pay.
Would you see that as a positive move to try to prevent or to set an example by having a 10-day suspension? Would you consider this a light sentence or a heavy sentence?
:
Thank you, Madam Chair.
[English]
Thank you so much, Dr. Collinsworth, for your research and the work you've done to make change, positive change, and not just for the women in the United States, because I know we will benefit from your research.
I am most particularly interested in your comments about sanctions. We in this committee want to make a difference for all employees, not just women, but all employees in the federal public service or any related organization, and make sure that we know how to create a better harassment-free workplace, a respectful workplace.
The current status of the federal Government of Canada is that we.... You were just talking about this, so feel free to expound upon your thought with regard to the previous question.
Our current approach, Dr. Collinsworth, is that we protect the harasser in some cases more than we protect the victim. Our government is very interested in protecting victims on every level. Interestingly enough, in the public service of Canada, we erase any trace of harassment from the record of a gentleman or a woman who has harassed, who has either just harassed or sexually harassed an individual. This record disappears in two years, and then that person is free to go on with a clear record, have another job, and harass again in a different work circle.
Your comments, Dr. Collinsworth, about sanctions, and how you have documentary evidence indicating that clear sanctions actually give greater clout to the prevention, is I think a crucial piece for all of us. It's the taxpayer who pays for our public service. I look at your research, and I can see that the cost associated with this is enormous, not just to the person but to the entire system.
If you could expand on the sanctions, then, I would be very grateful.
:
The research seems to indicate that sanctions are effective for multiple reasons. If someone is sanctioned for their misconduct, it communicates, first, to people who are potential offenders that this will not be tolerated in the workplace. If they do it, they're going to have sanctions or consequences.
It also communicates to the potential targets, or to the women in this case, that we, the organization, take this seriously, and if they come forward, they're not risking anything. They're not risking being demoted. They're not risking losing your job. They're not risking being retaliated against by the organization, that it will take their complaints seriously.
Those things are what climate is all about. It communicates to both men and women in the workplace that the organization takes it seriously, and that there will be consequences if they choose to behave in this way. It is just an extremely important message to send to employees.
Our experience is that in organizations, such as in corporations, at the corporate level they seem to get it. It's getting it down into the plants and to the local organizations that there seems to be this disconnect.
If you as an organization tell your employees that you take this seriously, then you have to back it up. You can't just say that you have zero tolerance in the workplace. You have to follow it up with these kinds of concrete actions if someone steps over the line.
The problem, of course—
:
Thank you very much, Madam Chair.
Thank you very much, Dr. Collinsworth, for being here with us today and helping us with this important study.
The issue of the RCMP is the one I am most concerned about, and the kind of sexual abuse and harassment and so on that has gone on. I realize you may not be that familiar with it, but the government of the day has introduced a bill that would give the commissioner more power to suspend people and so on, rather than this code of conduct. Some people are concerned that putting more power in the hands of the top-notch commissioners is not the answer, because clearly some of the rank and file today are being told that with the new legislation, they'd better just do as they're told, otherwise they could be fired instantly, if the commissioners wanted to do that.
Some people are saying it's just another form of intimidation to be used within the service. Certainly from our perspective, we question whether that's the way you deal with changing the culture of an organization.
Given the fact that this is very much a male-dominated organization, and women are coming into a field where they're clearly not wanted by many—and maybe this is the older generation, and maybe they all need to leave and bring in the younger ones who will have more respect for women—why do they seem to feel so threatened by having females in a male-dominated profession like the RCMP?
:
I certainly agree with you. This is not a new problem for us in the RCMP. This has been going on for at least 25 years that I can research back into the particular lawsuit that was raised yesterday here in Canada.
Part of the rationale from the head of the RCMP is that they did not have the ability to fire people. It was just a matter of shuffling people around and transferring people from one place to the other, rather than dealing with the issue head on.
One of the gentlemen I met within the RCMP last week said that when you make a complaint, you become a target because you are labelled a troublemaker even though you were very legitimate in what your concerns were, but they will just transfer you. Then there are units that wouldn't even want to accept you because you're labelled a troublemaker, and they don't want that either.
It's really intimidation in many ways.
What would you suggest our response to some of those comments should be?
:
I don't know whether this will translate into French because it's an alliteration in English. This is so common, moving someone who has been found to have been a sexual harasser to another job. We call it pass the perpetrator. It happens all the time and it's completely inappropriate.
Individuals who have some sort of pattern of harassing either need to be educated....There needs to be an intervention of some sort for the person, not simply a sanction, but also some sort of intervention if you're going to keep them in the workplace, because if they have not changed their behaviour, obviously they are going to do it somewhere else.
Having said that, I'll recommend another researcher to you. His name is Dr. John Pryor. He has done research which shows that men differ in their likelihood to sexually harass, but even men who have a high likelihood to sexually harass, based on a measure he developed, will not harass if they are in an organization where there are sanctions and things he calls management norms, where the managers are modelling this. Sometimes it's the manager who is actually doing the harassing. That's communicating to the men in the organization that if their boss is doing it, they can do it too.
Dr. John Pryor has some good things to say about offenders.
:
Thank you, Madam Chair.
I loved your pass the perpetrator reference. That was the first time we on this side, and probably both sides, heard that.
I want to talk about some of the recommendations as far as it would go for, say, an employee assistance program.
On February 25, Stats Canada released a report, “Measuring violence against women: Statistical trends”. The report notes that following an incident of violence, Canadian women are statistically more likely than men to disclose the victimization to family and friends: 80% of women versus, say, 56% per men.
Would you say there's a need for access to social and personal support networks alongside the reporting and mediation of an incident of sexual harassment in the workplace? The reason I'm asking is that federal public service employees actually have access to an employee assistance program which provides e-counselling and referrals to local counsellors to assist public service employees in dealing with personal or workplace-related issues, but this service has only been raised once during our meeting.
I wanted to get your thoughts on that.
:
That was a multi-point question, so I'll try to answer all of them. If I leave one out, let me know.
I think the first question was on how to address it. I had started to explain it. If you look again at the model in terms of job gender context, job gender context predicts harassment. When the job gender context is skewed in the direction of males, then there is more harassment. The context includes the number of males compared to the number of women in the workplace.
For example, in jobs that tend to be male dominated, such as construction, the military, and policing, those sorts of traditionally male occupations where there are more men than women, that leads to more harassment. You're absolutely right. If you're a woman working in a context in which there are more men than women, then harassment is more likely to occur.
It also is more likely to occur if you work in a workplace where there are more male supervisors. If there are female supervisors, that kind of gender parity tends to reduce the harassment. You need leaders who are women, and you also need to have a more balanced job gender context.
For the second part of your question on how we can fix this if there is this hierarchical structure, I would again refer you to Dr. John Pryor. He looked at the issue of how it is that harassment occurs in an organization, and from the offender's perspective. He found that some men will never harass, regardless of whether or not they have power over a woman. They're low in the likelihood to sexually harass. There are some men who are high in the likelihood to sexually harass.
You can't give employees a test to find out who's high and who's low, because we'd get into profiling. The good news is that when you have management norms, where the managers are modelling no harassment—
:
Thank you very much, Dr. Collinsworth, for being with us today to share your wealth of experience and knowledge. We really appreciate it.
I'm going to try to drill down a little bit, but before I do that, I want to go back to something. One of my colleagues across the way may have left a different impression about the legislation we have coming forward that involves the RCMP.
I think I heard you say that at the corporate level they get it, that it is a very important thing with change, so that organizations are dealing appropriately with sexual harassment. In answering the question of whether the organization takes it seriously, you said leadership is a really important issue. You expressed some concern about whether that meant one person at the top making a snap decision to fire someone, or whatever.
I wanted to give a bit more information about the RCMP in Canada. We've heard directly from their commissioner that they've hired harassment advisers. They have electronic reporting forms as well as personal reporting. There are multiple methods for reporting, including formal and informal. They have a code of conduct. They've implemented a zero tolerance policy. All complaints are investigated. Early reporting is encouraged. They have penalties ranging from demotion right up....
What would you think about that kind of process now that you know a little bit more about it?
:
Thank you, Madam Chair.
Ms. Collinsworth, thank you kindly for your participation today.
I want to pick up on what my colleague Mr. Morin was saying regarding the challenge of making it easier for women to freely report their harasser. The witness who appeared before you said that many victims of sexual harassment at the RCMP were afraid to talk or complain.
In very large organizations with hierarchical structures, like the RCMP, it can be difficult to confide in someone without fear of reprisal. Perhaps some of those fears are imagined, but as you mentioned, there are genuine concerns in male-dominated workforces.
One solution that's been proposed to the committee is the creation of an independent oversight board. Victims could go to the board to report their harasser and describe what they've experienced without fearing reprisal from their superiors or worrying about losing their job.
What are your thoughts on that?
:
I fully understand what you're saying, but that's not quite what I was getting at. I didn't mean a place where people could make confidential reports. What I meant was an independent board that would take complaints in cases where the individual didn't want to report the behaviour to a superior. The board would then decide on the consequences. Earlier we talked about suspensions and other possible forms of discipline.
It's just an idea. It's not easy to explain in the short time we have. Basically, the board would conduct investigations. As things stand, the RCMP has a long history of problems across the entire organization, throughout the ranks. This approach would address the problem externally, from outside the RCMP structure, in order to deal with the real issue. At any rate, it's one suggestion.
I would also like to talk to you about your article, “In Harm's Way: Factors Related to Psychological Distress Following Sexual Harassment”. You did a lot of work on the myths surrounding rape. Could you briefly explain to us how, through your research, you were able to come to the conclusion that we need to work on dispelling those myths?