Speaking at the annual Women in
Rail awards she made clear statistics which
suggest women only make up 5% of train drivers show
much more needs to be done if we want to make the best
use of available talent and achieve our country’s
ambitions.
With the industry needing 50,000 extra employees by
2033, Minister Ghani called for culture-change to
create more diverse teams in response to this gap. And
with research showing diverse team drive success, she
made clear improved diversity is fundamental to the
future health of the industry.
In her speech, the minister set out the steps companies
and the industry can take, including considering more
developed flexible working practices and placing a
greater emphasis of retaining talent from
under-represented groups.
Transport Minister said:
The rail industry isn’t yet doing enough: from
designing to engineering to construction to driving,
the rail sector needs to change.
Just 5% of train drivers are female. Decades behind
other industries. By not delivering enough
opportunities for women, the industry is letting
Britain down by not ensuring the broadest talent is
working on our network.
We need to nurture and embrace talent from
everywhere, ensuring that the brilliant women working
in rail now are joined by even more, for no industry
or country can reach its full potential if it only
recruits from a fraction of talent on offer.
Ensuring that the broadest talent is available to the
industry will form part of the Williams
Review commissioned by the Secretary of
State but the industry needs to step up ahead of
that. There are pockets of good practice and some
great work but it’s time for a step-change and the
whole industry to step out of the 1950s into the 21st
century.
The call to action follows government commitment to
boost diversity in the sector by increasing the
proportion of women taking up technical and engineering
apprenticeships to at least 20% by 2020.
This is alongside industry efforts, with the employer
led Strategic
Transport Apprenticeship Taskforce committing
to improving under-represented groups taking
apprenticeships in the transport sector.