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Focus on the work, not who does it, says Women in 麻豆传媒高清ion panellist

Angela Gismondi
Focus on the work, not who does it, says Women in 麻豆传媒高清ion panellist

If you could snap your fingers and change one thing about the construction industry to encourage more women to join or make it better, what would it be?

That鈥檚 the question a panel of female leaders in construction needed to answer during the Women in 麻豆传媒高清ion webinar hosted recently by the Residential 麻豆传媒高清ion Council of Ontario.

鈥淭he most important thing I鈥檝e learned about women in construction is that you can鈥檛 talk about women in construction without talking about men in construction,鈥 said Maggie Hall from Tridel.

鈥淲e are so dependent on this workplace culture which, frankly, is dominated by men. So, if I could do one thing it would be really to have that lightbulb moment where you鈥檙e working with men where it鈥檚 less focused on the gender of who does it and more of the aptitude and the skills to do it. We always say it doesn鈥檛 matter who you are, it matters that you鈥檙e hardworking, it matters that you are on time and it matters that you are conscientious and you value the work.鈥

Emily Lynch, a member of LIUNA Local 183, who works with a highrise builder in downtown Toronto, said work culture is the biggest thing that needs to change.

鈥淚 think respect is the biggest part of the umbrella,鈥 she said. 鈥淲ork culture comes along with that and that starts from the very top, even between guys onsite correcting each other, correcting yourself鈥y boss corrected me the other day…I said, 鈥業鈥檓 too weak, I can鈥檛 do this.鈥 He said, 鈥楬ave you seen what you鈥檝e done onsite? You鈥檝e got this.鈥欌

Lisa Pryce from the LIUNA 183 Training Centre agreed the biggest thing is the culture on jobsites.

鈥淭here are certain sectors of construction, where I鈥檝e been told鈥︹榃e don鈥檛 really have women onsite,鈥 and I鈥檓 like, 鈥榃ell let鈥檚 try one and let鈥檚 see what happens,鈥欌 Pryce told the viewers.

鈥淲hen they see that you are just dedicated, you put your head down and you work like I would tell any of my apprentices, they stop and they say, 鈥楢re there more like you?鈥 Not that you鈥檙e a woman but that you鈥檙e just a hard worker and you are an asset to that company.鈥

Emily Lynch, a labourer with Local 183, talked about her experiences, positive and negative, as a woman on jobsites.
SCREEN GRAB – Emily Lynch, a labourer with Local 183, talked about her experiences, positive and negative, as a woman on jobsites.

She also said unions need to do more to reach young women.

鈥淭here鈥檚 a part on us, on stretching our outreach even further than we already do and really pushing boundaries and thinking about things outside the box to really reach out to women and tell stories of individuals like Emily,鈥 she explained.

鈥(What) we have started to do with our social media is really showing people who look like Emily, who have been through her similar circumstances, who thought, 鈥楳aybe this isn鈥檛 for me. Can I do it? I鈥檓 not so sure.鈥 Then they see someone like her or some of our other apprentices and say, 鈥榊ou know what, I can do it.鈥欌

Lynch has had mixed experiences while working on jobsites.

鈥淚 have been overcoming and learning about my masking within construction and trying to be one of the guys,鈥 she admitted.

鈥淚鈥檓 trying to step away from that, especially more recently now that I鈥檓 on a site with an extremely supportive foreman, extremely supportive super and team that backs me up even though I鈥檓 the only woman onsite. Every day I come to work and I am respected and treated like a member of the team, which I am鈥 see a huge change, especially within the last year.鈥

So how can construction companies create a more supportive workplace culture?

鈥淭he importance of top down and having the message be extremely clear from the leadership level all the way down to those who are onsite,鈥 said Hall.

鈥淲hen women who are on our sites feel as though there is a sense of allyship, that they are safe, that if they need to say something they are not personally worried about the repercussions on their career, on their future psychological or physical safety, that the company is actually going to follow up and do something, that鈥檚 what I heard has been the strongest and most important thing that we as a developer can do.鈥

While negative experiences can get you down, Lynch said it鈥檚 important to stay positive.

鈥淚 would remind myself I worked so hard to get here,鈥 she noted. 鈥淚 work 10 times harder than everybody else onsite it feels like a lot of the time, but I know I put a lot of effort in it all the time and I can鈥檛 just throw that away. I just tell myself keep going, keep pushing.

鈥淚 often say I鈥檓 also doing it for the next generation because I wish I had gotten into construction at a younger age,鈥 she added. 鈥淚鈥檓 doing it to help change the culture and the way people talk to each other.鈥

Follow the author on Twitter @DCN_Angela

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