Pay, Employment Equality Review for Massey
Thursday, November 19, 2009
The University, in
partnership with the tertiary education sector unions, is to
undertake a pay and employment equity review to determine
the extent to which gender affects women's pay and
employment experiences, and to find ways to remove barriers
and achieve better outcomes for all staff.
The review
was announced by the University's Assistant Vice-Chancellor
for People and Organisational Development, Alan Davis, and
the Tertiary Education Union National Women's Officer
Suzanne McNabb.
Mr Davis says it has been planned for
several months and is an integral part of a range of
initiatives signalled in the University's Road to 2020
strategy in relation to women and leadership and equal
employment opportunity.
Early next year Massey staff
will be invited to participate in a voluntary, confidential
on-line survey about their experiences around pay and
employment equity. The survey information will be
considered alongside payroll and human resources data that
has been analysed by gender.
A review committee, to be
chaired by Professor Sylvia Rumball, is being established to
analyse and interpret the information that is gathered, and
to understand the extent of any gender-driven differences in
pay and employment experiences – specifically if and how
gender contributes to lower pay for women and lower levels
of representation in some types of work and in senior
positions. Staff members are today being invited to express
interest in participating on that committee.
Fifty-six
per cent of Massey staff are women and 47 per cent of the
academic staff are women, Mr Davis says, but only 17 per
cent of professors and 33 per cent of associate professors
are women. "We are seeing some pleasing trends in the
success rate of women in academic promotions rounds, but, if
we are to achieve our goals of excellence in everything we
do we need to accelerate this and we need to establish a
reputation as an enabling workplace free of practices that
might hold talented people back."
Ms McNabb says
Massey is the first New Zealand university to undertake a
comprehensive review of pay and employment issues for women.
"The Tertiary Education Union has a long history of working
towards pay and employment equity and is proud to be working
in co-operation with management to conduct this review.
Women workers care about pay and employment equity in the
workplace – they want to be sure that they have the same
opportunities to develop their skills, be promoted and
participate at senior levels of the organisation. Above all
women want equitable pay. They want the work they do fairly
recognised, valued and paid
accordingly."
ENDS