Government urged to increase diversity at top of federal public service
OTTAWA — The federal government faced calls Monday to add more diversity to the senior ranks of the public service, as black civil servants gathered in the national capital to share their experiences of racism and discrimination in the workplace — and discuss ways to prevent it in the future.
Several speakers at noted the lack of diversity at the top during the Federal Black Employees’ Caucus meeting, which coincided with Black History Month in Canada as well as the halfway mark of the United Nations’ Decade for People of African Descent that started in 2015.
Among those was Treasury Board President Jean-Yves Duclos, whose department is responsible for managing the federal public service as a workforce.
In his speech, Duclos noted the recent appointment of Caroline Xavier as associate deputy minister at Citizenship, Immigration and Refugees Canada — one rung below the department’s top bureaucrat. That makes her the most senior black federal public servant in Canadian history.