Human Rights Tribunal of Ontario orders government to end gender pay gap for midwives

Ad blocking detected

Thank you for visiting CanadianInsider.com. We have detected you cannot see ads being served on our site due to blocking. Unfortunately, due to the high cost of data, we cannot serve the requested page without the accompanied ads.

If you have installed ad-blocking software, please disable it (sometimes a complete uninstall is necessary). Private browsing Firefox users should be able to disable tracking protection while visiting our website. Visit Mozilla support for more information. If you do not believe you have any ad-blocking software on your browser, you may want to try another browser, computer or internet service provider. Alternatively, you may consider the following if you want an ad-free experience.

Canadian Insider Ultra Club
$432/ year*
Daily Morning INK newsletter
+3 months archive
Canadian Market INK weekly newsletter
+3 months archive
30 publication downloads per month from the PDF store
Top 20 Gold, Top 30 Energy, Top 40 Stock downloads from the PDF store
All benefits of basic registration
No 3rd party display ads
JOIN THE CLUB

* Price is subject to applicable taxes.

Paid subscriptions and memberships are auto-renewing unless cancelled (easily done via the Account Settings Membership Status page after logging in). Once cancelled, a subscription or membership will terminate at the end of the current term.

Human Rights Tribunal of Ontario orders government to end gender pay gap for midwives

Canada NewsWire

TORONTO, Feb. 24, 2020 /CNW/ - In a landmark legal decision, the Human Rights Tribunal of Ontario has ordered the Ford government to take concrete actions to end the gender pay gap midwives experience as a result of the Ministry of Health's discriminatory actions.

Mary Cornish, human rights lawyer and counsel for the Association of Ontario Midwives champions pay equity. (CNW Group/Association of Ontario Midwives)

"Government needs to immediately implement the orders aimed at closing the gender pay gap now and into the future. The orders call for substantial monetary Human Rights Code adjustments and changes to ministry compensation setting practices. Once implemented, the orders will work to ensure midwives no longer take home substantially less compensation because our work is so deeply associated with women. The orders will ensure midwives no longer suffer from prejudice and stereotypes about the value of our work," said Elizabeth Brandeis, Toronto midwife and president of the Association of Ontario Midwives.

"The tribunal has ordered government to set the compensation of midwives using a gender analysis – including its overlapping scope of practice with medicine and the fact that midwives, family physicians and obstetricians are considered equally competent by government as providers of low-risk care for pregnancy and birth," said Elizabeth Brandeis.

"The Tribunal has spoken, the way forward is clear. The time has come for government to stop spending tax dollars and resources by continuing to wage its 7 year legal battle against midwives. We are calling on government to withdraw its judicial review of the tribunal decisions and comply with the tribunal orders," said Elizabeth Brandeis.

"I'm one of 963 midwives in Ontario. As midwives, we know what systemic gender discrimination is and what it looks like. We live with discrimination and its impact in our own lives and we witness discrimination and its impact on the lives of the people who come to us for care each and every day. The tribunal confirmed this experience. It confirmed we experience discrimination in the compensation we are paid by government because our work and the health care we provide is so deeply and historically associated with women," said Liz Fraser, Ottawa midwife.

The human rights legal system in Ontario has upheld the rights of midwives by ordering government to close the gender pay gap.

"This is a precedent setting decision that will have positive ripple effects for human rights in Ontario and across the country, especially for equity seeking groups impacted by systemic forms of discrimination and those in jobs historically associated with women. The tribunal's decision means that those who set the compensation of sex segregated workers and other protected groups must proactively ensure their compensation practices are free of bias," said Mary Cornish, human rights lawyer and AOM counsel.

A copy of the Human Rights Tribunal decision and orders can be viewed at www.ontariomidwives.ca.

SOURCE Association of Ontario Midwives

View original content to download multimedia: http://www.newswire.ca/en/releases/archive/February2020/24/c6501.html

Copyright CNW Group 2020

Comment On!

140
Upload limit is up to 1mb only
To post messages to your Socail Media account, you must first give authorization from the websites. Select the platform you wish to connect your account to CanadianInsider.com (via Easy Blurb).