Thursday, December 06, 2012

College told construction crew to stop working until 'sexist' Men Working sign was removed

An Ohio community college demanded that a construction crew stop working on campus until it removed a “Men Working” sign that an administrator deemed “sexist.” Sinclair Community College in Dayton, Ohio, made the call after a female employee raised concerns that the construction company’s sign was too biased.

The construction company, Jcrane Inc., said that it has used such signs “frequently and have never had a problem before.” “It is our obligation to the students of Sinclair to provide them with a safe learning environment,” the company said in a statement, adding that safety is its top priority. In no way is the signage provided by Jcrane, in particular a ‘men working’ sign, sexist."



A spokesman for Sinclair said that while the move may have been a step too far, the school is sticking to its policy of fostering a culture of openness. “While it may not have been necessary to suggest that work be stopped, Sinclair stands by its commitment to providing an environment that is inclusive and non-discriminatory,” Adam Murka, Sinclair’s director of Public Information, said in a statement.

Dayton residents fell on both sides of the argument. Sarah Belden pointed out that the sign was accurate. “There was no women in the crew working on the building, it was politically correct," she said. Alex Henry, on the other hand, suggested a compromise. "I'd rather have crew at work or construction going on, something more broad," he said. Jcrane has since taken down the sign and the project remains on schedule.

There's a news video here.

3 comments:

BoS said...

"There was no women in the crew working on the building"

Of course there weren't. Feminists only like the idea of equality, not the nasty, dirty, dangerous, low paid actualité.

Brixter said...

Right on, BoS

shak said...

I used to work in the medical dept. at a steel mill. It was my job to do various tests to ascertain if applicants could do the jobs in the steel mill. We had plenty of females come in there and apply. Every single one passed. There weren't any lightweight jobs in that steel mill. You had to be able to lift a certain amount of weight, the same as any man. So much for your theories, guys.

Having said that, I think this is absolutely ridiculous PC nonsense. The warning sign is more important than the wording. Tired of this way of thinking.