新澳门六合彩开奖结果2023

Skip to Content
View site list

Profile

Pre-Bid Projects

Pre-Bid Projects

Click here to see 新澳门六合彩开奖结果2023’s most comprehensive listing of projects in conceptual and planning stages

Associations, Labour

OGCA Women in Construction panel opens up about struggles, successes

Angela Gismondi
OGCA Women in Construction panel opens up about struggles, successes
LINDSEY COLE 鈥 Jennifer Khan, VP of inclusive diversity at EllisDon; Jennifer Green, director of competitions and business development, Skills, Ontario; Natasha Braganza, national program co-ordinator, Maple Reinders; and Meg Mathes, senior manager 鈥 diversity, equity and inclusion, Modern Niagara Group, had a candid conversation about women鈥檚 issues in the construction industry during the Women in Construction Gala.

As an openly transgender woman, Meg Mathes, senior manager of diversity, equity and inclusion at , said one of the most difficult things she鈥檚 ever done in her life is coming out as transgender.

鈥淚 kept hoping and wishing and praying that someone else would go before me, someone else in some kind of a senior position or someone else in the trades. It just never happened,鈥 she said.

Mathes was part of a panel of women who spoke to over 500 delegates at the Women in Construction Gala, organized by the in partnership with the in Vaughan, Ont.

Meg Mathes, an openly transgender woman, talked about how she got into the construction industry and the strides she has made since.
LINDSEY COLE 鈥 Meg Mathes, an openly transgender woman, talked about how she got into the construction industry and the strides she has made since.

鈥淚 knew when I was about five years old that I was transgender,鈥 she recalled. 鈥淚 didn鈥檛 know that鈥檚 what it was called but I knew there was something different. At age seven when I wanted to talk to my parents about it, my older sister in high school had a transgender person in her class and they decided to make fun of that person at our dinner table, so I knew that it wasn鈥檛 really a safe space for me at home.鈥

She kept it bottled up until she was about 14. Then she tried to come out again.

鈥淭hat time I was kicked out of the house. I lived in a psych ward for six months,鈥 Mathes said. 鈥淭hey talked about conversion therapy, so I just lied to them and I said I was seeking attention and got out of there. I lived in foster care for a bit and then I lived on my own and started working at Burger King.鈥

She ended up getting into the trades because she was working the night shift and when the equipment would break, she kept trying to fix it instead of calling the repair company.

鈥淭hey (the repair company) saw me as a threat and an opportunity and they offered me a job,鈥 said Mathes. 鈥淚鈥檝e had a very successful career in the trades. I worked in the field for about 12 years. I worked in leadership positions for about another 12 after that. But at the end of the day I was just never being true and authentic to myself. I was being the best version I could be because of the stereotypes, because of the bias, because of the systems that were put in place.鈥

Since coming out and being accepted by her family and children, she has dedicated much of her time to advocating for inclusive workplaces.

鈥淚鈥檓 very thankful to the folks at Modern Niagara for supporting me, encouraging me and allowing me to take that space in your organization,鈥 she added.

 

There is power in 鈥榶es鈥

In her experience, Natasha Braganza, national health and safety administrator at , said women, who tend to be people pleasers, are always told to learn to say no.

鈥淚 also want to tell you there is great power in yes,鈥 she pointed out.

聽She remembered times when she was given menial tasks like taking meeting minutes.

鈥淚 could have very easily said, 鈥楴o, I am above this,鈥欌 she said. 鈥淚 had good reasons to say no, but I said yes. I learned things in those meetings. I learned things from senior managers that they were talking about things in the company that nobody else knew about, but I knew about. I learned how people do business. I learned how to address certain people and their problems. 鈥淒on鈥檛 get steamrolled鈥ut learn that there is a power in yes. There is power in saying, 鈥業 can do this task and not only am I going to do it, I鈥檓 going to kill it.鈥欌

 

Giovanni Cautillo, president of the Ontario General Contractors Association, welcomed over 500 delegates, mostly women, to the Women in Construction Gala at the Universal Event Space in Vaughan, Ont.
LINDSEY COLE 鈥 Giovanni Cautillo, president of the Ontario General Contractors Association, welcomed over 500 delegates, mostly women, to the Women in Construction Gala at the Universal Event Space in Vaughan, Ont.

 

Being a public company, showing support and having your employees鈥 backs is also important, said Jennifer Green, director of competitions and business development with . 聽

鈥淲hat is your program for women in the trades? What is your program for DEI? How are you there for your employees?鈥 asked Green. 鈥淭ell them, be public. When they Google and look at your website they know that they鈥檝e got my back. If anything ever happens to me I know that they鈥檙e going to help me.鈥

 

鈥楽top making yourself small鈥

Jennifer Khan of said she has spent the last 20 years of her life 鈥渄e-bitchifying.鈥

鈥淢y 18-year-old self was not a very nice person,鈥 she said. 鈥淚 was successful in my role. I knew what I needed to do. I thought that everyone should do it the way I wanted to because it was the right way. In the last 20 years I鈥檝e learned ways to let go. I found ways to accept who I am and I found ways to thankfully 鈥 de-bitchify,鈥 said Khan. 鈥淭hat process for me was important to find happiness and important for me to find self-care and important for me to find the energy, instead of being not so nice to do something that was actually meaningful.鈥
She had a piece of advice for women in the room.

鈥淪top making yourself small,鈥 she said. 鈥淲hy have I spent so many years making myself so small so somebody else can feel big 鈥 think my biggest obstacle, to this day, is me.鈥

 

Women talk time of the month

The women also tackled a topic the most men onsite rarely want to address 鈥 menstrual health.

鈥淚 spent two years talking about menstruation to people who don鈥檛 menstruate,鈥 Khan explained, adding EllisDon offers menstrual products on sites and in offices. It costs about $10 a month per site.

鈥淢enstruation is no big deal. We鈥檙e really talking about providing products that half of the population uses at some point in their lives.鈥

Braganza said it鈥檚 also important to have open communication about these topics as it relates to fit for duty.

鈥淪ome people get terrible cramps and take very strong painkillers,鈥 said Braganza.

鈥淚 don鈥檛 want a lady or a person that menstruates to have an accident on a site because they just couldn鈥檛 say to somebody, 鈥楾oday, I can鈥檛 operate this machinery because I鈥檓 on some medication.鈥欌

Follow the author on X/Twitter @DCN_Angela.

Print

Recent Comments

comments for this post are closed

You might also like