bjarvis: (Brian Jarvis)
[personal profile] bjarvis
Our LGBT employee group co-ordinator at work circulated a PDF file of HRC's latest corporate equality index. My own employer has improved over last year but still earns less than a 100% rating.

Looking through the tables, I was surprised how low some major corporations rank still. I wasn't surprised that Daimler Chrysler, Ford and Toyota ranked 100%, but was shocked that Nissan was dragging at the bottom of the list with a score of only 29.

Almost a dozen large financial firms scored 100%, but Morningstar and Franklin Templeton don't even have nondiscrimination clauses in their policies.

Pharmaceutical giants GlaxoSmithKline, Johnson & Johnson and Pfizer ranked 100, but Bayer only 29.

Retail firms Best Buy, Borders, Estee Lauder, Replacements, SC Johnson & Son, Sears, Walgreens and Staples all scored 100, but Radio Shack, Rite Aid and Meijer were all bottom-feeders. All that could be said about Meijer (score 14) in the report is that they weren't currently an active sponsor of anti-LGBT activities!

I find it slightly ironic that HRC offers an affinity Visa card via Providian Financial, an organization which scores only 86, admittedly an improvement over last year's 71.

More info at: http://www.hrc.org/Template.cfm?Section=Press_Room&CONTENTID=28963&TEMPLATE=/ContentManagement/ContentDisplay.cfm

Date: 2005-09-20 03:59 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] otterpop58.livejournal.com
hmmm. I'm disappointed to see that Adobe is not at 100 (and Macromedia isn't listed). Perhaps I'll drop a note to the President/CEO.

I'm familiar with BuyBlue - perhaps we also need a BuyPink!

Date: 2005-09-20 04:04 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] allanh.livejournal.com
I can testify from many years of working with High Tech Gays (HTG) to get antidiscrim policies in individual companies and antidiscrim laws at a county level ... creating change in large companies can take years.

Ironically, it often doesn't take a large effort, just persistence. I've seen huge companies in Silicon Valley activate antidiscrim policies after just one person went to HR and enquired. (Usually, it takes several trips to HR and to senior execs to get the message across ... but just one person can make a tremendous difference.)

Date: 2005-09-20 05:47 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] dr-scott.livejournal.com
Just to note that the reality on the ground may be different from such scorings based on written policies. Some companies with enlightened cultures wouldn't dream of supporting discrimination or harrassment, but haven't gotten around to embedding that in their written policies -- "we just don't do that kind of thing!" And conversely, just because HR droids have put out a written policy doesn't mean the management effectively supports it. The financial industry (for example) is notorious for allowing personal bias of managers to determine conditions of employment, with nearly perfect deniability. Morningstar, for example, is supposed to be terrific despite a lack of written policies. Meanwhile, evaluations like this one just encourage hypocrisy.

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