15 June 2012

Jenny Marra MSP : Youth Unemployment


Jenny Marra MSP

Speech in the Scottish Parliament debate

Youth Unemployment

14 June 2012

When Michael Moore, Iain Duncan Smith, John Swinney and Angela Constance went to Dundee in March to discuss ways to tackle unacceptably high levels of youth unemployment, I was encouraged that they might focus on Dundee.

Kezia Dugdale and I sat in Dundee College that morning and listened to the minister talking about youth unemployment.

She also took questions from young unemployed people and local businesses in Dundee.

At that point, I believed that we could try together to tackle rising youth unemployment in our city.

However, I was disappointed.

Three days after the SNP ministerial car had swept out of Dundee, it was announced that £9 million would be shared across Scotland to tackle youth unemployment, but not one penny would come to Dundee, which was the venue for the Scottish youth unemployment conference.

Angela Constance: Is Ms Marra aware of the methodology? This is the first time she has raised the issue with me. One stream of funding was targeted at six local authorities that have the most acute problems. That is not to say for one moment that Dundee, Fife, West Lothian and West Dunbartonshire do not have problems, but money was targeted to other areas on that occasion. As we proceed to the medium term with our strategy, Jenny Marra should welcome the fact that we have European social fund money with which we can move forward and ensure that other areas of Scotland will also benefit.

Jenny Marra: I will go back and look at the minister‟s methodology, because my understanding is that Dundee‟s youth unemployment rates are worse than those of three of the five areas at which she targeted that investment.

I am sure that she and I can correspond on that matter in the future.

The SNP came to Dundee with warm words and assurances, but did not regard the city‟s youth unemployment problem as being big enough to deserve investment.

Furthermore, when asked why Dundee‟s young people had been overlooked, a Scottish Government spokesperson replied that money had been earmarked for areas that have particular youth unemployment problems.

Let me tell the minister about the extent of youth unemployment in Dundee, so that next time she will not do us the disservice of sharing a platform with the Tories in Dundee and telling us how concerned she is, but will instead addresses the problem with hard investment.

In Dundee today, 1,705 16 to 24-year-olds are claiming unemployment benefit while Dundee has 674 modern apprenticeships, so it is clear that that number should be multiplied by three.

The Scottish Government's statistics show that during the past year the number of 16 to 24-year-olds in Dundee who have been claiming unemployment benefit for six months or more rose by a staggering 109 per cent, and the number who have been claiming for a year or more soared by 642 per cent.

I would like to think that the Scottish Government simply did not know the true extent of the problem in Dundee before its spokesperson told our young people that they are not a priority for the Government.

For too long, the Government has used its flagship policy on modern apprenticeships as an excuse for ignoring the problem.

The Government has claimed countless times that 25,000 modern apprenticeships have been created.

We now know, as a result of Kezia Dugdale‟s assiduous research, that the claim is spurious and that the reality is that the Government cannot even administer a modern apprenticeships scheme effectively, let alone transform apprenticeships into sustainable jobs for unemployed youngsters.

When I think of Dundee, I think of our potential. I think of our life sciences and technology sectors and our future as a renewables hub.

I think of our proud manufacturing history—NCR, Timex and Kestrel—I think of all the young people I meet who tell me that they desperately want to work, and I think of the young men and women who want to work in construction and engineering, who want to work with their hands and make things.

Some people stopped me in the street in Dundee last week to ask me when the renewables jobs will come.

So far, the Government has failed to deliver on those jobs, despite our city‟s promise.

The investment from Gamesa did not come to Dundee, and although it is almost six months to the day since the First Minister came to Dundee to sign a memorandum of understanding with Scottish and Southern Energy, we still wait to hear the outcome.

We still do not know how much our portion will be of the national renewables infrastructure fund or when it will come to Dundee.

Perhaps the Government will tell us today—or soon.

We owe it to Dundee‟s youngsters to give them every opportunity to meet the expectations that we teach them their hard work will allow them to achieve.

On behalf of our young people, I urge the Government to make youth employment an even higher priority.

Jenny Marra MSP -  Women’s Representation on Public Sector Boards



Speech in the Scottish Parliament debate

Women’s Representation on Public Sector Boards

14 June 2012

I am delighted to be able to open a debate on equality in the Scottish Parliament in this, the United Nations year of empowering women.

I note that this appears to be the first time that the Scottish Parliament has ever debated women‟s representation on boards, but I hope that it will not be the last time.

Throughout Europe and the rest of the world, the debate about gender quotas has come to the fore. Now, more than ever, European nations that the Scottish Government seeks to emulate are taking action to make boardroom equality a standard practice in their businesses, public bodies and Parliaments.

It can be done.

It has been almost 10 years since the Norwegian male Conservative Minister of Trade and Industry, Ansgar Gabrielsen, completed Norway‟s transition from a state that operates a 40 per cent quota on public boards to one that includes the private sector in that quota system.

It took just two years for Norway to reach its quota of 40 per cent female representation on its public limited company boards. Its boardrooms have equalised, both in the private sector and in its public bodies.

It took Finland six years, from 2005, to bring all of its public boardrooms from 30 per cent representation of women to up to 44 per cent.

Iceland's target of 50 per cent was achieved in just one year.

Gender quotas for public boards are in place in Denmark, South Africa, Israel, Quebec, Berlin and—at a local level—Nuremberg, and have been proposed in Belgium, Canada and Italy.

They are becoming a more and more attractive choice for nations where, as is the case in Scotland, diversity strategies, leaflets, DVDs and the mentors that the Scottish Government proposes are simply not working.

The attraction of quotas has grown so much that, just last week, the majority right-wing European Parliament backed a European Commission recommendation to bring gender quotas into the boardrooms of all of Europe‟s companies by 2020.

Angela Merkel has called the gender composition on Germany's boards scandalous, and even David Cameron has said he will not rule out quotas for gender representation.

However, two days ago in committee, the Scottish Government rejected the amendments to the Police and Fire Reform (Scotland) Bill that would have introduced quotas.

In light of all the evidence and all the progress that is being made around us, I ask the chamber this: when did the Scottish Government become less progressive on equality than a Conservative Prime Minister in London?

Labour's motion suggests that Scotland would benefit by learning from progressive policies in other European countries that have successfully balanced their boards—a course of action that all sides of this chamber should agree upon.

At the heart of the matter is the fact that, as all sides of this chamber agree, gender should not matter, and board appointments should be made on merit and merit alone.

However, what the Scottish National Party Government and the Tories fail to realise, but the Scottish Labour Party always has, is that no matter how much we will it to be irrelevant, the reality of the culture for those seeking positions at Scotland‟s boardroom level is that gender matters, and that the situation is usually to the detriment of women.

Humza Yousaf (Glasgow) (SNP): Why, in the 13 years when it was in power, did the Labour Government not bring in a 40 per cent quota for public sector bodies?

Jenny Marra: We have always supported equal representation in our party and it is something that we will look towards in the future.

We have been out of power for quite a few years in Scotland, but we will certainly look at the matter for the future.

We understand that, at the heart of Scotland‟s public boards, there is a deep-rooted culture that ensures that the merit of a man is worth more than that of a woman.

It is something that diversity strategies alone have not, and cannot, address.

No amount of application information to highly skilled and qualified women through Government DVDs, brochures and e-mailed vacancies are changing a culture where the statistics show us that women fight an uphill battle for board positions, because they know that they will lose out to men.

Pretending otherwise is simply burying our heads in the sand.

Gender equality at boardroom level has not happened organically in the 13 years that the Parliament has existed, and the statistics tell us that it is unlikely to happen organically in the next 13 years either, unless we take bigger, bolder steps to make it happen.

As a solution, quotas offer us the ability to join other European nations to make a strong statement about our Government's commitment to the equal value of women‟s merit, as well as men‟s, and the 40 per cent model that we have proposed does so elegantly.

Let me explain it.

Boards would require 40 per cent women and 40 per cent men, with flexibility of 20 per cent for boards with an uneven number of members, or in cases where there was an insufficient number of either gender.

The model is taken from the highly successful Finnish equality act and it has been proven to work.

For as long as we agree that the merit of a man is equal to that of a woman, we should not object to each having an entitlement to a minority 40 per cent representation on the boards that govern all our public services.

I lodged two amendments to the Police and Fire Reform (Scotland) Bill that would have introduced a 40 per cent quota on the boards of Scotland‟s new police and fire service.

I lodged the amendments after learning about the shocking rate of representation of women on the scrutiny boards of our police forces.

Those boards hold the police to account.

Officers deal with gender-based issues such as domestic abuse and prostitution every day, but the boards that scrutinise the police comprise only 18 per cent women.

John Wilson (Central Scotland) (SNP): Can the member indicate how the appointments to the current police boards are made? My understanding is that the majority of the appointments come from local authorities, some of which are dominated by the Labour Party.

Jenny Marra: I think that the member will find, if he looks at gender representation among councillors in Scotland, that Labour has a much better record of electing women to local authorities and to this Parliament than the Scottish National Party.

He only has to look to Dundee City Council, where 16 SNP councillors were returned and only two of them were women.

I think that the same happened in Glasgow City Council, but perhaps the minister will correct me on that.

The boards of Scotland's police forces comprise only 18 per cent women.

In Northern Constabulary, only two of 22 members were women.

In Dumfries and Galloway, just one of 10 members was female and there were no women at all on the Central Scotland police board, which had 11 members.

Where are the women's voices to scrutinise and hold our police services to account?

When we look at other boards across Scotland, we find that the situation does not improve.

Christine Grahame: The member is concerned about gender balance and interventions. However, does she agree that the Justice Committee took the view that it is quality on the board, be it a man or a woman, that counts, and not a gender balance?

Jenny Marra: If the member had been listening to my speech, she would have found that I have already made the case that a quota enforces the idea of a meritocracy and that we should not be scared of saying that women's merit is equal to that of men and that, as Alison McInnes MSP eloquently put it in committee a couple of weeks ago, equal representation is not happening organically so it needs a hand along.

In Shona Robison's portfolio, sportscotland's governing board has a gender balance of 78 per cent men to just 22 per cent women.

The average percentage of women on Scotland's public limited company boards is a shocking 11 per cent.

In fact, men comprise 80 per cent or more of board members on boards such as those of the Accounts Commission, Architecture and Design Scotland, Creative Scotland, the Scottish Legal Aid Board, VisitScotland, the Scottish Law Commission, Transport Scotland, Scottish Water and the Cabinet Secretary for Health, Wellbeing and Cities Strategy‟s own NHS 24.

Those are just a few examples.

There is not a single board on the Scottish Government's register of public bodies in which the reverse trend can be seen.

It is therefore little wonder that the motion has gained support from the likes of Oxfam, Engender, the Scottish Trades Union Congress and the National Union of Students Scotland and that it has been further welcomed today by the Electoral Reform Society.

It is timely that gender quotas have been recommended to the Cabinet Secretary for Education and Lifelong Learning, Mike Russell, in his commissioned review of higher education governance.

Professor Ferdinand von Prondzynski has recommended the 40-40-20 model because the balance in university governing bodies is 72 per cent men to 28 per cent women.

The rest of Europe has grown tired of inequality, and it is high time that Scotland balanced its boards.

I move,

That the Parliament believes that women and men play an equal role in Scotland's public sector; notes with concern that women continue to be underrepresented on the boards of Scotland‟s public sector organisations; understands that barriers continue to exist for women gaining a place on such boards; further understands that nations across Europe such as Finland, Norway, Denmark and Iceland have introduced a quota system that has been successful in promoting equality of representation on public bodies and publicly owned company boards; notes that the European Parliament voted to recommend a 40% quota on company boards throughout Europe by 2020; further notes the recommendations of Professor Ferdinand von Prondzynski in the Scottish Government's Report of the Review of Higher Education Governance in Scotland to introduce a 40% gender quota for Scottish university courts, and believes that such measures should be replicated throughout Scotland‟s public bodies to bring about equal representation.

Jenny Marra MSP - Scottish Labour to lead debate on Gender Quotas for Public Sector Boards


Jenny Marra MSP


13 June 2012

Scottish Labour will use some of its allocated debating time in the Scottish Parliament to launch a national debate in support of gender quotas on the boards of public bodies.

The debate comes a week after the SNP and Tories in the Scottish Parliament combined to vote down a specific proposal to ensure that the board of the new single police service contains 40% women and 40% men.

Labour’s debate on Thursday will call for wider consideration of gender quotas on boards across the public sector – something that happens in other parts of Europe.


Labour MSP for North East Scotland Jenny Marra, and deputy convenor of the justice committee, said:


"It is clear that the SNP needs to take action so people are fairly represented on public bodies.

“As one MSP said this week, voluntary action to bring women into these positions has not worked, so it is time to help it along.

"This is why I tried to get the SNP Government to put a gender quota on police boards last week.

“I discovered that many police boards in Scotland have only a couple of women on them, and some did not have any women at all.

“If women’s voices are not being heard in decision-making, that will have an inevitable impact.

“Police deal with gender issues like domestic violence, sexual crimes and prostitution every day, so having that perspective on boards is extremely important.

"Other countries have gender quotas on every public body with decision making powers, and some go further, by extending the requirement to public limited companies.

“More equal societies tend to be fairer societies.

"The chair of the Scottish Government’s University Governance Review has recommended the same gender quotas for University governance.

“Hopefully Alex Salmond will take his advice and then look to putting quotas in place across all public decision making bodies.

"It would be a striking move if Scotland could start with one of our most important public services – the police – to make sure that the scrutiny of the new single service is representative of everyone in Scotland, and then extend that across the public sector."

Judith Robertson, Head of Oxfam in Scotland said:

"The right to gender equality underpins all of Oxfam’s work around the world.

"Women’s participation, and indeed leadership, is a matter of justice and an effective means of promoting accountability.

"We should do everything we can to remove barriers to equal participation.

"Measures such as the 40% quota being proposed by Jenny Marra MSP have proven a useful tool in boosting women's participation in governance in many countries and will give a much-needed boost to women's representation on public bodies within Scotland."

A spokesperson for Scottish Women’s Aid said:

"Scottish Women’s Aid works to end domestic abuse by tackling its root cause – women’s inequality.

"Increased representation of women in public bodies has proven far-reaching benefits, not just at an organisational level, but throughout society.

"Therefore, we support the call by Jenny Marra to introduce gender quotas."


Ann Henderson, STUC Assistant Secretary, said:

"The issue of women’s representation on boards is becoming a hot topic across
Europe.

"When we look to countries like Finland and Norway we can see that gender quotas have worked at reducing inequality at the highest levels of decision making.

"The STUC led the 50/50 campaign in Scotland in the 1990s which brought far more women into the Scottish Parliament.

"We urge we urge the Government to think seriously about implementing them in Scotland’s public sector boards."