Military needs to be 30-per-cent women for real change: vice-admiral
OTTAWA — Nearly a third of members of the Canadian Forces should be women to bring about a real culture change in the military, says the admiral in charge of the Forces’ human resources, while acknowledging the real trouble they’re having getting the proportion up to a quarter.
Speaking to the Ottawa Conference on Security and Defence on Thursday, Vice-Admiral Haydn Edmundson struck a cautiously optimistic tone in explaining how the military is looking at different ways to recruit and retain more women — and the challenge it entails.
The drive to increase female representation in the Forces stems from an order that Gen. Jonathan Vance delivered in February 2016, shortly after he took command of the military. He said he wanted one of every four service members to be a woman within the next decade.
“I like tough goals,” Edmundson said. “We’re not going to come off that goal. We’ve been told to get to that target. We’re going to aim at that target. We’re going to use some innovative ways in order to try to increase the attraction base for women to come into the Armed Forces.”