Improving Diversity In Facility Management

Create a game plan managers can use to increase diversity, equity and inclusion in their departments


As if dealing with one of the worst pandemics in history isn’t enough, facility managers trying to meeting the challenge of guiding institutional and commercial facilities through the expanding impact of COVID-19 also are contending with another challenge – a rising tide of civil unrest highlighted by discrimination and racism, according to an article from Facility Maintenance Decisions on the FacilitiesNet website.

In fact, both events have caused us to realize that the systems that we have in place call for more flexibility and resiliency.

COVID-19 has caused the facilities management profession to re-evaluate the way managers design, operate and maintain the spaces in which we live, work, and play. At the same time, a series of deaths of Black citizens at the hands of police have turned a spotlight on the centuries-old problems of discrimination and racism within society and its institutions.

In light of these events and the ongoing problems they are targeting, managers struggling to address pandemic-related challenges need to demonstrate to their departments and their organizations the willingness to implement tangible strategies and tactics that foster diversity, equity and inclusion within facilities management.

The case for diversity

Why should managers make the case for diversity, equity and inclusion in the first place? There are a host of reasons these goals are essential for companies trying to maintain a competitive advantage in the marketplace.

Workplace diversity reduces employee turnover and insures a variety of different perspectives, and it leads to increased creativity, greater innovation, faster problem solving, higher-quality decision making, greater profits, higher employee engagement, enhanced company reputation and brand recognition and better hiring results, writes Anja Zojceska, a recruitment marketing specialist and head of marketing at a recruitment software company in her article, “Top 10 Benefits of Diversity in the Workplace.”

What profession wouldn’t want more creativity or more innovation? What company wouldn’t want greater profits and a better reputation? What manager wouldn’t want higher employee engagement and lower employee turnover.

These are all tangible benefits that would positively impact the facility management profession, and this is important because demographic data suggest the profession has much room for improvement regarding diversity.

About 105,000 workers used the title facility manager in their job descriptions, according to 2018 data from the U.S. Census Bureau. The subset of data relative to this population suggests the need for managers to be aggressive regarding increasing diversity. 

Of the 105,000 facility managers in 2018, 79 percent were male and 21 percent were female. With regard to race or ethnicity, 75.7 percent were White (Non-Hispanic). The second most common race or ethnicity in the occupation is Black (Non-Hispanic) at 8.4 percent.

In short, the numbers even suggest that facility management is a White, male-dominated profession.

Now let’s examine equity in light of the wage gap. Consider the wage gap that exists between men and women and, more specifically, between White and Black workers. The average wage gap between Black male workers and White male workers was 31 percent as of 2015, according to the Economic Policy Institute. This means that for every dollar that a White male worker makes, a Black male worker makes $0.69.

After controlling for racial differences in education, potential experience, region of residence and metro status, this gap between White male workers and Black male workers improves to 22 percent.

Read the full article.

 



October 6, 2020



Recent Posts

Designing Hospitals for Wellness

Thoughtfully designed spaces can transform the overall well-being of patients, staff and caregivers.


Baptist Health Announces New Cancer Care Center in Key West

The building will be two stories tall and span 4,300 square feet.


Waco Family Medicine Achieves Savings and Bold Design with Wood Selections

Case study: The healthcare facility incorporated over 25,000 square feet of wood and saved over $400,000.


Alleged Ransomware Administrator Extradited from South Korea

The Phobos ransomware has been used globally to target over 1,000 organizations, including healthcare.


Design Plans Unveiled for New Intermountain St. Vincent Regional Hospital

The new hospital will be a 14-floor, 737,000 square-foot facility in Billings, Montana.


 
 


FREE Newsletter Signup Form

News & Updates | Webcast Alerts
Building Technologies | & More!

 
 
 


All fields are required. This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.

 
 
 
 

Healthcare Facilities Today membership includes free email newsletters from our facility-industry brands.

Facebook   Twitter   LinkedIn   Posts

Copyright © 2023 TradePress. All rights reserved.