Gender Pay Gap
SKDC and the Gender Pay Gap – the starting point
April 2017 – first report published into the gender pay gap in SKDC
showing a mean GPG of 3.7% and a median GPG of 20%
• Task and Finish Group established
• What does this means for SKDC?
• How we compare to our district neighbours?
• How do we identify the root causes?
• What action needs to be taken in order to address our GPG?
• Is this just about a pay gap or is it about our culture?
SKDC and the Gender Pay Gap – Lightbox
At its first discovery session the task and finish group worked from the
problem statement:
“ At SKDC we have an identified imbalance in pay”
Knowledge and Understanding Opportunity Flexibility Impact
Does our lack of understanding re. equalities play a part in our gender pay gap?
Sometimes that’s hard for people to tangibly feel
How can this happen?
Opportunities to change balance
Best person for post whatever
Do we work flexibly enough?
Workforce Men Vs Women Ratio
Is it historical? Rising through the ranks
Has there been an impact over time re. local govt’ increments?
Its not always about gender. Skill / Ability/ Attitude
Upskilling staff to rebalance pay
Does pay include benefits? Holiday/Flexi
Unintentional imbalance
How do we compare with District Peer Councils?
We pay women and men the same rate for an identified role
Need to encourage equal opps. for job opps.
Flexible working
Do we really know how it impacts people?
Across what areas of business?
Work/lifestyle choices
Do we have role models within the Council to inspire women to seek promotion?
Pro-rate hours / flexible working factors
Not deliberate
Why? How is the imbalance identified?
Internal promotion not always the answer
Women are more likely to work part-time and this impacts the gender pay gap
More men are in senior positions than women in this authority
The Gender Pay Gap – and how we compare
March 2017 Mean/Median Ratio
Hourly rate comparison
South Kesteven District Council Mean 3.7% Women earn 96p for every £1 men earn
Median 20% Women earn 80p for every £1 men earn
Boston Borough Council Mean 10% Women earn 90p for every £1 men earn
Median 0% Women earn the same as men
City of Lincoln Council Mean 10.3% Women earn 90p for every £1 men earn
Median 18% Women earn 82p for every £1 men earn
East Lindsey District Council Mean -1.8% Women earn £1.02 for every £1 men earn
Median - 10% Women earn £1.10 for every £1 men earn
North Kesteven District Council Mean 13.8% Women earn 86p for every £1 men earn
Median 4.3% Women earn 96p for every £1 men earn
South Holland District Council Mean 0.85% Women earn 99p for every £1 men earn
Median -16.5% Women earn £1.16 for every £1 men earn
West Lindsey District Council Mean -10.8% Women earn £1.10 for every £1 men earn
Median - 22% Women earn £1.22 for every £1 men earn
SKDC and the Gender Pay Gap
“ At SKDC we have an identified imbalance in pay” 31 March 2017 31 March 2018
The mean gender pay gap 3.7% 6.2%
The median gender pay gap 20% 11.7%
Male Female £ Difference
Standard MEAN hourly rate 2017 £12.11 £11.66 £0.45
Standard MEAN hourly rate 2018 £12.41 £11.64 £0.77
Standard Median hourly rate 2017 £11.69 (SK9) £9.29 (SK7) £2.40
Standard Median hourly rate 2018 £10.64 (SK8) £9.39 (SK7) £1.25
SKDC and the Gender Pay Gap – How its calculated
• Mean: Combined salary of the total number of males, divided by the
total number of males on the payroll. Combined salary of the total
number of females, divided by the total number of females on the
payroll. This calculation gives an average amount paid (not a pay
scale). Percentage difference is calculated by dividing one by the other.
• Median: Middle salary point of the total number of males on the
payroll. Middle salary point of the total number of females on the
payroll This calculation will identify a pay scale. Percentage difference
is calculated by dividing one by the other.
SKDC Staff Gender ratio
2017 578 296 (M) 282 (F) 52% (M) 48% (F)
2018 586 311 (M) 275 (F) 53% (M) 47% (F)
SKDC and the Gender Pay Gap
Chief Executive (M)
Assistant Chief Executive
(M)
Strategic Directors
(1M, 1F, 1V)
Strategic Advisors
(1M, 1F)
Assistant Directors
(3M, 2F)
Heads of....
(5M, 3F)
SKDC and the Gender Pay Gap
Much is said when discussing the gender pay gap:
• It’s unfair treatment of women
• If there is unfair treatment – the inequality relates regardless of
gender
• Too many men are employed across the Authority
• Actually – in SKDC there are almost as many women on the
workforce as men.
• Women are disadvantaged because of other responsibilities and
demands on their time
• It is true that SKDC has more men in senior positions than women
but is this directly connected to society’s demands on women or on
the culture of this organisation?
SKDC and the Gender Pay Gap
Benefits
Customer Services
Housing
Legal and Democratic
Revenues
Building Control
IT
Markets
Planning
Street Care
The Gender Pay Gap - Causes
1. Role Models – A lack of diverse senior female role models
The group’s view of SK from the first session was that although the
Authority has women in senior roles they are greatly outnumbered by male
colleagues.
1a. Is that fact or fiction in relation to SK?
It is fact:
• More men are employed in senior positions in this authority
But we need to look wider than just the management team:
• There are departmental imbalances in relation to gender
The Gender Pay Gap – Causes (Role Models)
1b. Is this imbalance what was intended or has unconscious bias
played a part in the structure we have?
• There is no evidence to suggest positive discrimination or indeed
positive action have played any part in the recruitment process.
• Unconscious bias is a recurring theme and requires further investigation
which may lead to the need for training for those involved in the
recruitment and selection process.
• Blind recruitment will help to a point – but the reality is – blind
recruitment actually means blind short listing – the bias (unconscious or
not) could still come into play during the interview process.
The Gender Pay Gap – Causes (Role Models)
1c. Does the imbalance matter if the right person is in the role
regardless of gender?
• The group determined that particular gender is not a requirement of any
of the roles within the senior management structure or across the
Authority. However, the shortage of female role models in senior
positions might not inspire women to seek promotion
The Gender Pay Gap – Causes (Promotion)
2. Promotion – more men apply for promotion than women
2a. There is no obvious career ladder in SK
• We have a really good record of supporting and providing training for
people but without a promotion pathway we’re training people to leave
and take their skills, knowledge and innovative thinking with them for
other organisations to benefit from.
• Often the only move available to staff is sideways so even if we do train
them what the Authority has paid for, and the individual has worked for,
is wasted because they need to be re-trained in order to effectively
deliver in the role they’ve moved into.
• Can have a negative impact on long-serving members of staff – ‘if
there’s nothing to aspire to why bother’ attitudes can creep in and
people stagnate. We therefore don’t get their best.
The Gender Pay Gap – Causes (Promotion)
2b. Upskilling staff to rebalance pay
• Do we truly always get the right person for the job? We don’t have to
go outside to fill a vacancy if we upskill those who already work for SK
• Do we need to consider positive action in terms of upskilling women
already working for SK to create a change in balance?
• How effective is the Talent Programme in terms of opening up
opportunities for promotion?
The Gender Pay Gap – Causes (Promotion)
2c. The only means of promotion has historically been because of
length of service
• We have a history in some service areas of promoting people because
they’re good at the job they came here to do.
• People become line managers, team leaders etc without the skills to
carry out the role.
• This can lead to clashes within the workforce if the person with the
elevated position suffers ‘Imposter Syndrome’.
The Gender Pay Gap – Causes (Flexibility)
3. Flexible Working – a lack of well paid, part-time/flexible work in
senior roles
So far the subject of flexible working has only been touched on in a way
that raises questions. The answers need further investigation by members
of the group. There are perceptions/opinions that we don’t work flexibly
enough as an organisation by some members of the group, however, these
perceptions were challenged by others. We agreed to look into this subject
in more detail based on the premise that flexible working is not equally
applied across SK. How it’s applied depends on:
• Business need
• Capacity/resource within service areas
• Willingness of line management to allow flexible working
The Gender Pay Gap – Causes (Work vs Motherhood)
4. Work vs Motherhood – mothers provide 74% of childcare time
• Therefore there is an identified need for the Authority to work more
flexibly – not just about total hours worked but also location, flexibility
on timing of hours worked (early mornings, evenings, weekends etc)
capability in terms of equipment, networks etc for mobile working.
• Women are known to go for part-time roles to fit in with their other
responsibilities – this often means they are not considered for senior
positions (or don’t consider themselves for senior positions).
The Gender Pay Gap – Causes (Career Advice)
5. Career Advice – roles traditionally associated with women often
pay less
• As a District Authority we aren’t necessarily in a position to offer career
advice – however, we could consider a recruitment drive and career
advancement through:
• Job fares
• Visits to education settings (including FE and HE)
• Collaborations with Job Centre+
• Positive action
• Mentoring/Fast Track Programme
SKDC and the Gender Pay Gap – Lightbox
At its second discovery session the task and finish group worked from the
problem statement:
“ Inequality occurs through our structure at SKDC”
Bias/Culture Recruitment
Too many men at the ‘top’
Does a structure built by men create gender bias ?
Do we restrict advancement based on gender
Are recruiters swayed by the gender of applicants ?
The right people for the right job is what matters
Inequality occurs through/via relationships ‘Jobs for the boys’
Accountability – is the authority to blame or the individual(s)
Recruitment panel make up influences outcomes ?
Why aren’t all posts open for application?
Whose opinion matters ? (the most)
Higher positions dominated by males :- why ?
Learnt behaviours – males hire males and vice versa
How do we determine worth ?
Men deserve to be paid more because they are more powerful ?
Do we fairly recruit from disabled/migrant communities ?
Flexibility L & D Understanding equality
Behaviour
Does working part time impact upon whether a person is considered as management material ?
Social factors need to be considered – life commitments outside of work
Succession planning/ workforce development
Are we sure we truly agree on what equality means within SK ?
What about attitude ?
Is flexibility truly available in all depts. To enable equality
Development opportunities to rise through the ranks currently lacking
What does inequality really mean ?
Are women competitive naturally in the workplace ?
Do more women work part time in lower scale roles
What about talent ? Who does inequality affect ?
Competition
Same rules to apply to /to all services
Opportunities Inequality doesn’t exist – opportunities for all
It could be choice that some don’t seek promotion /what about individual choice
The Job Structures
Certain departments have predominantly more of one gender so this will effect equality
Does our male:female ratio effect our quality of service
Leaner/flatter structure with full transparency needed
Too many layers = confusion and sometimes inequality
Natural imbalance roles Women do admin – men make decisions
Fewer levels of jobs = less inequality
How can pay gap be lessened when ‘traditional’ roles fulfilled ?
Does each gender really veer towards traditional “male” or “female” roles ?
Similar job titles doesn’t necessarily mean similar jobs
Are some jobs more suited to males or women ?
How can we make our structure more equal
SKDC and the Gender Pay Gap – General observations
• Staff at SK are paid for the role they carry out
• There is, however, an imbalance in pay amongst people with the same
job title
• The job evaluation process should even out these discrepancies but it
doesn’t
• It has been identified that some service areas have gender imbalances
• The imbalance within SK is wider than simply a gender-based issue.
The culture of the organisation, its understanding of, and commitment
to, equality needs to be addressed
SKDC and the Gender Pay Gap – Next Steps
• We need to look at making flexible working a reality across the Authority
• We need to acknowledge that our lack of understanding of equality and
unconscious bias plays a part in our gender pay gap
• We need to determine whether we have the right processes in place to
support those in recruitment and selection
• We need to identify training needs and deliver programmes that not only
support career development but also ensure those with line management
responsibility have knowledge and capability that is fit for purpose
• We need to explore opportunities to promote careers to young women
SKDC and the Gender Pay Gap – Next Steps
– Utilising the findings of the second discovery session we identified
the next areas for further focused consideration: Flexibility and
Culture
– The next discovery session will focus on the flexibility of the
Authority
– Bias/Culture and Understanding Equality will be worked through
with the ongoing Culture Workshops
– be Flexibility
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