26/06/2008

Government Sets Out Equality Plans

New Government plans announced today will allow further provision for women and ethnic minority job candidates.

Equality Minister Harriet Harman has set out plans to allow firms to adopt "positive discrimination".

The Equalities Bill will also demand that employers disclose salary structures to narrow the gender pay gap.

The plans, which will ban all age discrimination, will first be implemented across England then Wales and Scotland.

Ms Harman said that "a society which is equal and fair is one which is more at ease with itself".

The plans will also bring all previous discrimination law into a single piece of legislation.

The minister told BBC's Today programme that female part-time workers "earned 40% less per hour than their full-time counterparts".

"Women more equal than men? Chance would be a fine thing," she said.

The white paper will also outlaw discrimination in goods and services on the basis of age.

The bill will aim to stop pensioners being refused NHS treatment because of their age.

It is understood that elderly people have complained that they have been patronised by doctors and denied health and travel insurance.

The plans will also give women the right to breastfeed in public and outlaw "homophobic bullying" in the workplace.

Tory Theresa May has welcomed the proposals but has said that the bill "should seek to unite not divide" as it "confused the government's message" by allowing discrimination in certain cases.

Liberal Democrat spokeswoman Lynne Featherstone has also approved of the proposals and said that the government "must do more to end the growing discrepancy between the rules on pay for the public and private sector".

"Public sector equality rights are fast becoming an ivory tower that private sector employees can only dream off," she said.

The department will publish research today revealing the scale of discrimination in the provision of health.

Unison has called on Ms Harman to "fund equal pay in local authorities who are not facing up to their legal responsibilities".

(DS)

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