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Planning for public sector diversity

A group of workers in an office setting
BAME and white workers in an office setting. Photograph: FS Productions/Getty Images/Blend Images

There was an example of a programme to address the whiteness of the town planning profession initiated over a decade ago (A decade of cuts has set back diversity in the public sector, 19 September).

The chief inspector, Chris Shepley, knew he could not recruit enough BAME inspectors to meet the then civil service target. He therefore set up a programme to give a boost to the chances of young BAME graduate planners to rise through the profession so that they would be eligible to become senior planners and perhaps enter the ranks of inspectors. Funding was given to participating mentors so that these young planners could be given extra coaching in management training and experience. I don’t know how many of those who participated have gone on to become team leaders, heads of departments or planning inspectors, but I know that the programme no longer exists.
Ros Ward
Durham

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