10-POINT PLAN FOR A DIVERSE CIVIL SERVICE
1 Nov 2005 01:15 PM
Sir Gus O'Donnell, Cabinet Secretary and Head of the Home Civil
Service, today unveiled a 10-Point Plan to raise the pace towards a
representative workforce. The Plan introduces a major programme of
change aimed at achieving a diverse workforce at all levels of the
Civil Service, including the most senior. It reaches further than
previous work by embedding diversity as a key measure of performance
for Permanent Secretaries.
Speaking at today's launch, Sir Gus said: 'I want the Civil Service
to be a beacon for change and a model of best practice for all
organisations. A truly representative workforce, including at the
most senior levels, will enable policies and services to be developed
in ways which will result in better outcomes for everyone in society.
That is why this must happen.
'Diversity is a key part of the wider Civil Service reform programme.
Together with improved leadership and professionalism, improved
diversity is essential to build the Service's capacity to deliver.
'I can also announce that I have appointed Bill Jeffrey as the new
Civil Service Diversity Champion. He will have a leading role in
making this plan work.'
The 10-Point Plan was developed following a review of diversity and
equality in employment across the Civil Service. Implementation of
the plan will be driven by the Diversity Champions' Network, which is
chaired by the Civil Service Diversity Champion. It commits to a
programme of significant change in 10 key areas including:
* maximising use of positive action in recruitment practices,
including equality-proofing recruitment panels;
* making all Senior Civil Service and feeder grade posts available on
a flexible working pattern basis wherever possible;
* development schemes in Departments to build a diverse talent pool
and
* meaningful diversity objectives for all, linked to reward.
John Hutton, the Minister for the Cabinet Office, also speaking at
the launch, said: ' The Civil Service has made good progress towards
increasing diversity at senior levels. However, as our 2005 targets
show, more work needs to be done and the 10-Point Plan will build on
this progress and towards the 2008 diversity targets.
'The Civil Service is key to driving wider Public Sector Reform and
to be able to do so it needs to be in touch with the diverse
communities it serves, to develop policies that include everyone in
society and to deliver services in ways appropriate and sensitive to
all.'
How the Civil Service has fared against its 2005 diversity targets
was also announced at the launch. ( See Notes to Editors below).
Notes to editors
1. The full version of Delivering a Diverse Civil Service - A 10
Point Plan is available online at:
http://www.diversity-whatworks.gov.uk/10_point_plan/index.asp
2.The Civil Service reform programme was launched in 2004 with the
publication of Civil Service Reform: Delivery and Values. Further
information at:
http://www.civilservice.gov.uk/the_future_of_the_civil_service/delivery_and_reform/index.asp
3. 2008 Diversity targets. As part of the Spending Review 2004, the
Government committed to new diversity targets for the Senior Civil
Service (SCS accounts for the top 4,000 posts) to achieve by 2008.
All four targets were set and will be measured using Cabinet Office
workforce data on the SCS. The Cabinet Office will publish progress
towards the 2008 targets every six months. Current published figures
show:
Oct 2003 April 2004 April 2005 2008 Target
(Baseline)
Women 27.5% 27.8% 29.1% 37%
Women in top 23.9% 24.4% 25.5% 30%
management
posts
BME staff 2.4% 2.6% 2.8% 4%
Disabled 2.1% 3.7% 2.9% 3.2%
staff
4. 2005 Diversity targets. In 1998 the Government introduced targets
for diversity in the SCS by 2005. The ethnicity and disability
targets were based on National Statistics data collected on the
overall Civil Service workforce. Figures for 2005 show:
April 1998 April 2005 2005 Target
Women 17.8% 29.1% 35%
Women in top 12.7% 25.5% 25%
management posts
BME staff 1.6% 3.2% 3.2%
Disabled staff 1.5% 2.3% 3%
The new targets for 2008 build on progress made, and establish new
challenging benchmarks to ensure that the Service continues and
accelerates progress.
5. The Diversity Champions' Network is a network of senior people
with responsibility for leading on diversity issues in their
organisations. It is chaired by the Civil Service Diversity Champion
and supported by the Chief Diversity Adviser, Waqar Azmi. The
Diversity Champions' Network will report on progress annually to the
Civil Service Management Board.
6. The role of the Civil Service Diversity Champion is to be an
advocate and guardian of the aspiration to achieve a Civil Service
where equality and diversity are embedded in our behaviour and in the
quality of the services we deliver. The Champion leads the Diversity
Champions' Network. The Champion is accountable to Sir Gus O'Donnell,
Secretary of the Cabinet and Head of the Home Civil Service.
7. Bill Jeffrey was recently appointed as the new Permanent Secretary
of the Ministry of Defence. He spent the early part of his career in
the Home Office. He moved to the Cabinet Office as Deputy Head of the
Economic and Domestic Secretariat between 1994 and 1998. He then
became Political Director of the Northern Ireland Office, where he
was principal adviser on the political process there to the Secretary
of State for Northern Ireland and the Prime Minister. He moved in
2002 to become Director General, Immigration and Nationality
Directorate, in the Home Office. While in this post he was a member
of a diversity sub-group of the Civil Service Management Board,
shaping corporate strategy on diversity. He was also disability
champion at the Home Office and sponsor of IND's ethnic minority
network.
8. Bill is currently Security and Intelligence Coordinator where he
has been the principal adviser to the Prime Minister on intelligence,
security and counter-terrorism strategy.
9. . Further information about equality and diversity in employment
in the Civil Service can be found at: www.diversity-whatworks.gov.uk
10. Speaking notes from the launch are available on request
Cabinet Office Press Office 70 Whitehall LONDON SW1A 2AS
www.cabinetoffice.gov.uk