r0wly86
Head Pro
Good lawyering. So as long as when I hire people I give everyone the same opportunity what happens afterwards doesn't matter! I don't have to have female or disabled toilets in my building - I don't even need to pay them the same as men. As long as getting through the door is equal.
Is your law practise still in business?
You are conflating two very different issues, I mean they are so different I can't even understand how you have managed to confuse them.
You have basically said, we want a Vibrant and active membership for everyone therefore we should be able to discriminate against certain groups in order to get a better spread of genders. You have confused that with not discriminating is somehow the same as not providing toilets. Your initial point is essentially "we have built female toilets, therefore we must get more women in the club". They are also covered by different areas of law.
Any place that serves food and drink must provide an adequate number of toilets, this will be provided under Local Government policies and probably enforced through planning/building control.
You have to make reasonable adjustments for those who are identified as having a disability, please note this does not mean you have to attract more diabled people to join the club.
What we are discussing here is discrimination, and the law is quite simple. You cannot discriminate directly based on gender, you just can't despite what your end goal is. As Imurg pointed out, it doesn't actually solve anything either, if the goal is to get more women to join and stay then the product needs to be good enough to keep them there.
England Golf have said that it is possible to reduce fees for women if they are under represented, however:
o Discounts should be a last resort: There are many ways to encourage female representation (see Example Part 1). Discounts are unlikely to be proportionate if a club has any other means of encouraging female representation which is less discriminatory towards men;
o There is always a risk: Even if granting discounts is the only way to encourage female participation it is still risky. A judge may still find that the discriminatory effect caused by the discount outweighs the benefits of the positive action.
They are claiming it is possible, however i cannot see how a judge would ever see it as proportionate, especially where you are talking about 50% reduction in fees