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Monday, 2nd November 2009 Change Date Latest Issue

Public bodies alerted to shake-up in sex bias law

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Published Date: 01 February 2007
SCOTLAND'S public bodies were put on alert today ahead of new duties which will require them to promote gender equality and eliminate sex discrimination.
Councils, police forces, quangos and the health service are among the organisations covered by the new "gender equality" duty which comes into effect in April.

The Equal Opportunities Commission said it meant instead of relying on complaints from
individuals who feel they have been the victim of discrimination, public bodies would have to be proactive in tackling sex inequality.

Ministers today placed an order in the Scottish Parliament, paving the way for the new rules. It is the first time Scotland has introduced different equality legislation from the rest of Great Britain.

And the EOC said that Scottish law was stronger than in the rest of Britain, including a requirement for Scottish ministers to publish three-yearly "state of the nation" overviews of gender equality with suggestions for next steps to be taken across the public sector.

Rowena Arshad, Edinburgh-based EOC Scotland Commissioner, said: "The gender equality duty is the most significant change to sex equality legislation in 30 years and its implications for Scotland's public sector are huge.

"For the first time it is up to the leaders of our public services to take responsibility for ending sex discrimination and inequality."

She said measures to remove discrimination in employment were crucial in tackling the current pay gap between men and women of 14 per cent for full-time workers and 38 per cent for part-time workers.



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  • Last Updated: 01 February 2007 10:18 AM
  • Source: Edinburgh Evening News
  • Location: Edinburgh
  • Related Topics: Women and work
 
1

Bill C,

01/02/2007 13:08:15

This could be great news for men. Anyone in receipt of an occupational pension may well find that a female colleague is paid more than a male because of "actuarial calculations" and greater life expectancy. I would advise those in the categories above to check it out and, if there is an imbalance, to take it up with your employer or pension provider.
Those who have already left and retired may be liable for back dated increases in pension to become equal to females.

2

Scaramouche,

01/02/2007 13:20:37

I fuly believe in the equality of women. If they can do the job, they deserve equal pay and the same in promotion.

Men have still had too much of it their own way for too long!

If my wife want's to do the job, of course she can. I'll just take early retirement!

3

bikerider1,

01/02/2007 13:27:07

more p.c. nonsense. no doubt these public bodies will now have to employ people to be proactive about sex discrimination. more waste of money

4

Immutable Name,

of Toll-X 01/02/2007 17:19:22

There goes the woman's hour in the public baths. Or will it? I think not, regardless of the notion of "gender equality in public services".

5

Pete39,

Tassy 02/02/2007 08:56:14

Aye and another ten years from now the female of the species will decide that she would rather be at home looking after the kids. (Dafter things have happened) So it starts all over again. I would suggest handling it through tax concessions. A single man or woman works, same wage, no concessions. A married man and woman work, the woman has a slightly lower wage but an increase in employment concessions. Family orientated fathers, or mothers, the variations are pretty enormous. I believe that the problem is so complicated that it cannot be worked out. You guys ever hear of a tool called a spreadsheet. You get it free if you buy a new computer. It is rumoured that the Bank of Scotland used a basic one to calculate the viability of North Sea oil, I would think that now a days even the free ones would be capable of processing literally thousands of variables on the financial requirements of modern family life. Anyone you know or have recently elected have the experience to operate one of those programs, you have, well that's good. The work in selecting the data, calculating the relationships and effect should belong to your average Scottish IT student. This is not the kind of thing you go offshore to find a solution. In fact if any Scottish politician takes it into his mind that India is more capable, he should be set afloat on the Firth of Forth with a herring stuck to his head. I am really needing a diversion to get off this hanging flogging, tawse and other sick methods of punishment that keep revolving round my brain.


 

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