White people with disabilities completely kicked out of affirmative action
White people with disabilities will be completely kicked out of affirmative action processes, trade union Solidarity said today. According to Solidarity, the latest proposed amendments to the Broad-based Black Economic Empowerment Act (BBBEE Act) will lead to the exclusion of white people with disabilities from the definition of the designated group in the Employment Equity Act.
Solidarity today called for the inclusion of white people with disabilities in all forms of empowerment aimed at curtailing unfair discrimination during a presentation to the Minister of Trade and Industry, Rob Davies. Solidarity wants to put a stop to the increasing exclusion of white people with disabilities from empowerment and therefore lobbied for the inclusion of this group in all definitions in legislation regulating empowerment.
The deadline for commenting on the proposed amendments to the BBBEE Act was today.
White people with disabilities are currently included in the definition of the designated group in the Employment Equity Act which regulates affirmative action, but have already been removed from the BBBEE Act's definition of the designated group. According to the new amendments, the definition in the BBBEE Act carries more weight and will apply if tension arises between the two Acts' definitions of the designated group.
What this means in effect is that if a company employs a white person with a disability, it will not earn points for its BEE scorecard. If the company appoints a well-off black person without a disability, it will earn points for the appointment in terms of the BBBEE Act. If a white person with a disability sues the company in terms of the Employment Equity Act, the BBBEE Act's definition of the designated group, which excludes white people with disabilities, will apply.