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Issue link: https://digital.canadianlawyermag.com/i/1418027
4 www.canadianlawyermag.com UPFRONT NEWS ANALYSIS IN THE wake of a global reckoning on race last year, the largest Canadian law firms, ordinarily fierce competitors, came together and signed on to the BlackNorth Initia- tive, which pledged to address anti-Black systemic racism. The BNI law firm pledge expressed broad principles, but it also gave specifics. By 2025, firms committed to invest 3 per cent of their corporate donations for the Black community, hire at least 5 per cent Black students and have 3.5 per cent of their senior leadership roles held by Black or visible minorities. While 2025 is still a few years away, diversity advocates have not forgotten the pledge, and several firms are beginning to achieve their goals. Raphael Tachie, Canadian Association of Black Lawyers president and senior counsel with TD Bank Group, was not directly involved with BNI, which originated in corporate Canada. However, many of the law firms who signed the pledge realized it needed to be amended to address the specific challenges that Black lawyers face, so they approached CABL and other Black-led legal groups for their input. Tachie says that BNI "opened up a space" to change how law firms support the Black community. However, his concern is that when the "news cycle changes," the legal community may lose interest in BNI's goals. But Tachie is hopeful and points to several long-term law firm commitments. He cites CABL's legal advocacy work supported by McCarthy Tétrault LLP, a professional development program funded by Blake, Cassels & Graydon LLP, and ongoing support from Fasken, Borden Ladner Gervais LLP (BLG) and Norton Rose Fulbright. He says CABL is also continuing to discuss programs with several other firms. "Those are firms that are not only talking the talk but actually doing more to highlight their commitment," says Tachie. "It's not just this year. It is ongoing continuing support." Tachie says while most large law firms did sign the BNI pledge, not all are genuinely committed to the long term. "Most people have signed it, but very few are actively and publicly doing stuff around it." Dave Leonard, the CEO of McCarthy Tétrault LLP, says his firm is well on its way to fulfilling the BNI pledge. McCarthy has made several funding announcements, and says they are "deeply committed to improving the diversity across multiple lenses of our organization, right from articling students coming in all the way to the top." Leonard says law firms are particularly challenged with the pledge on senior leadership roles since equity partners hold many of those roles, and they take years to achieve that position of seniority. For "the lawyer positions, we're not at the target yet," says Leonard. "Those are firms [making long-term commitments] that are not only talking the talk but actually doing more to highlight their commitment." Raphael Tachie, Canadian Association of Black Lawyers Revisiting the BlackNorth pledge 2020 was a watershed year for putting diversity at law firms on the radar, writes Tim Wilbur. But how many firms are committed to the long term?