
Task force rejects calls for special employment status for Jewish, Muslim public servants
CBC
Months before the eruption of the Israel-Hamas war ramped up ethic and religious tensions in many Canadian communities, a government task force rejected requests to recognize Muslim and Jewish public servants as separate groups facing systemic workplace barriers, CBC News has learned.
Muslim and Jewish public servants asked to be designated as employment equity groups under the Employment Equity Act nearly two years ago in submissions to the task force, set up by Employment and Social Development Canada.
CBC News obtained the Muslim Federal Employees Network (MFEN) submission through an access to information request, and the one from the Jewish Public Service Network (JPSN) by asking for a copy.
"The inclusion of religious minorities would provide obligations on behalf of the employer toward removing barriers to religious minorities in the public service, so that they may bring their whole selves to work, including Jews," says the JPSN's submission, which also asked that Jews be identified both as an ethno-cultural group and as a religious group under the law.
"Discrimination and socio-economic barriers continue to exist for Canadian Muslims. These barriers will not disappear without intervention," said the MFEN's submission. "We recommend that Muslims are added to the Employment Equity Act as a designated employment equity group."
The Employment Equity Act (EEA) was introduced in 1986 to knock down employment barriers facing four marginalized groups: women, Indigenous people, people with disabilities and members of visible minorities.
The legislation requires that federally regulated employers with more than 100 employees use data collection and proactive hiring to ensure that these groups are not under-represented in their workforces. No designated employment equity groups have been added to the EEA since its creation.
The MFEN and JPSN submissions were prepared in spring 2022, long before the latest deadly conflict erupted between Israel and Hamas in October of last year.
Labour Minister Seamus O'Regan shared the task force's findings with the media last December, after his office initially received them in April 2023.
The task force said it decided "not to recommend the creation of a separate category for some or all religious minorities at this time," but encouraged further study.
In its submission, the JPSN cited Statistics Canada figures showing Jews were the group most often targeted by hate crimes between 2017 and 2019.
It quoted a B'nai Brith Canada audit in 2021 that reported a "733 per cent increase of violent anti-Semitic incidents."
In its submission, the JPSN presented anonymous testimony from Jewish public servants. One Jewish employee said they were told they "really bring new meaning to Jews having a lot of money," after mentioning their background. Several Jewish employees also said they have been called "cheap."
The submission cited workplace barriers too, such as important meetings being scheduled on religious holidays, excluding observant Jews, or "managers scrutinizing and questioning the validity of leave requests for Jewish holidays."