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Labour council tells staff to stop calling parents ‘mother and father'
Labour council tells staff to stop calling parents ‘mother and father'

Telegraph

time21 hours ago

  • General
  • Telegraph

Labour council tells staff to stop calling parents ‘mother and father'

A Labour-run council has instructed staff to stop using the words 'mother' and 'father ' to refer to parents. Officials from Merton Council, in south-west London, say 'caregivers' is more appropriate as it does not make assumptions about a children's biological parents. The guidance is contained in a 27-page inclusive language guide compiled by the equality, diversity and inclusion team to encourage the use of 'gender-neutral' and 'person-centred' language. Other 'tips and suggested language' include avoiding gendered phrases such as 'man, mankind and workmanship' and instead saying, 'humans, humankind and quality of work or skills'. The guide adds that descriptive words in general – including references to race, gender, sexual orientation, disability, religion or age – are off the table unless they are 'relevant and valid'. In the section relating to age, the guide advises that staff 'avoid general terms as these imply that people of certain age groups or generations are a homogenous group, failing to recognise people's individuality'. Rather than 'old' or 'young', staff are advised to say 'mature individual', 'elderly person', or 'young person'. The council has even suggested banning the phrases 'man the phones' and 'man-made' in favour of 'attend the phones' and 'artificial'. Under advice to 'respect the preferences' of gender-neutral people, staff leading workshops have been warned against opening with 'welcome, ladies and gentlemen', with 'welcome to friends and colleagues' recommended as an alternative. Lord Young of Acton, the founder and general secretary of the Free Speech Union, said: 'I'm amazed that Merton council has time for this nonsense. 'I can only assume fly-tipping and potholes aren't a problem in Merton.' A council spokesman insisted: 'We aim to communicate with understanding and without making assumptions.' The council has previously come under fire as The Telegraph revealed it was the local authority with the highest percentage of minor roads in need of maintenance throughout England and Wales. According to analysis of Department for Transport (DfT) data, nearly 40 per cent of the borough's roads had potholes and were in need of major repairs. The data also showed the council had only fixed a mere 6.4 per cent of stretches needing attention.

One of Britain's wokest councils has banned staff referring to parents as mum and dad
One of Britain's wokest councils has banned staff referring to parents as mum and dad

The Sun

time2 days ago

  • General
  • The Sun

One of Britain's wokest councils has banned staff referring to parents as mum and dad

ONE of Britain's wokest councils has banned staff referring to parents as mum and dad. Officials say 'caregivers' is more appropriate. They also advise workers to avoid using the adjectives 'young' and 'old'. Merton Council in South London has warned its employees not to make assumptions about a child's biological parents. Bosses claim not saying the words 'mother' and 'father' helps to 'recognise diverse family formation'. The council's 27-page inclusive language guide — obtained by The Sun using Freedom of Information laws — also tells employees not to use 'young', 'old' or 'mature' for fear of being ageist. It also advises workers to use 'person-centred language' — and avoid gendered phrases such as 'man the desk'. The guidance, drawn up by the debt-stricken council's equality and diversity team, also warns: 'Avoid making assumptions about preferred names or nicknames without asking the individual first.' Free Speech Union boss Lord Toby Young said: 'I'm amazed that Merton Council has time for this nonsense. "I can only assume fly-tipping and potholes aren't a problem in Merton.' A council spokeswoman insisted: 'We aim to communicate with understanding and without making assumptions.' 1

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