Hamilton commission recommends actions for a more diverse F1
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[July 13, 2021]
By Alan Baldwin
LONDON (Reuters) - A commission set up by Formula One champion Lewis
Hamilton to help boost the number of Black people in British
motorsport published its report on Tuesday with 10 recommendations
for change and some damning insights into the industry.
The report, led by the Royal Academy of Engineering, found that none
of the seven British-based Formula One teams or 4,000 UK motorsport
companies had ethnicity data for employees.
An estimate, however, suggested that only 1% of the 40,000 strong
workforce was Black.
Rhys Morgan, director at the Royal Academy, told reporters the
research also found examples of "quite horrible racist comments",
which he said were waved away as 'banter'.
One Formula One engineer said he had experienced jokes about Black
people, afro combs, fried chicken, crime rates and poverty in Africa
while a Black female race marshal spoke of people addressing her in
a Jamaican accent.
The commission found a number of barriers to diversity, including
hiring from a select group of top universities, the rural locations
of teams and systemic under-achievement in schools.

There was also a feeling among Black students that motorsport was
not for them, while a cost cap introduced this season created a
potential barrier for taking on more apprentices.
Recommendations include asking Formula One teams to implement a
diversity and inclusion charter for motorsport and possible cost cap
exemptions for taking on staff from Black backgrounds.
"A lot of the teams are responsive on this," said Morgan. "We are keen
to explore that further with the FIA and Formula One."
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Mercedes' Lewis Hamilton arrives at the
circuit ahead of practice REUTERS/Leonhard Foeger/File Photo

The report, released in the week of
the British Grand Prix at Silverstone, proposed the establishment of
a fund to develop programmes to address the factors contributing to
high school exclusion rates among students from Black backgrounds.
It also suggested the piloting of new approaches to increase the
number of Black teachers in subjects leading to careers in
engineering and the creation of scholarship programmes.
Hamilton, the sport's sole Black driver who was expelled from school
as a youngster, hoped the report would start "a ripple effect" for
change and saw it as a big part of his motorsport legacy.
"I would be like to be remembered for much more than just winning
championships, which of course is an amazing thing on its own, but
actually helping people and changing the industry and the
viewpoints," he said.
"We all bleed the same. There's just no reason why it shouldn’t be
as diverse as the world around us. If I am able to somehow shift the
needle ... that's what I'm working towards."
Formula One chief executive Stefano Domenicali hailed a
"comprehensive and impressive" report.
"We will take the time to read and reflect on all of the findings,
but we completely agree that we need to increase diversity across
the sport," he said.
(Reporting by Alan Baldwin, editing by Richard Pullin)
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