Times Colonist

Mormons’ female staff can now wear pants

Rule change follows years of complaints, women’s group says

- BRADY McCOMBS

SALT LAKE CITY, Utah — Women who work at Mormon headquarte­rs in Salt Lake City will be allowed to wear pantsuits and dress slacks instead of only skirts or dresses, the church announced this week, in a move that one Mormon women’s group called a step in the right direction.

The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints sent employees a memo on Wednesday about several changes that also include expanded maternity leave and allowing men to remove their jackets in hot weather.

The religion’s leaders made the decision about women’s clothing to help employees feel more comfortabl­e, said church spokesman Doug Anderson. He declined to say how many people, or women, the church employs, saying only it’s in the thousands.

Last year, the church began allowing female missionari­es to wear dress pants in parts of the world with mosquito-borne diseases.

The role of women in the conservati­ve religion has been an ongoing debate for years with some members of the faith pushing for more equality and increased visibility and prominence for women.

Women hold leadership positions in the Mormon church, but aren’t allowed to be bishops of local congregati­ons or presidents of stakes, which are geographic­al areas similar to Catholic dioceses. The church’s highest leaders, including the president and his support group called the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles, includes only men.

Debra Jenson, executive board member of the Mormon women’s group Ordain Women, called the clothing change a small step toward breaking down rigid gender roles. She said she had heard complaints for years from women who work for the church.

“Gendered dress expectatio­ns are one piece of a culture that views women as different or differentl­y capable,” said Jenson, of Ogden, Utah. “So when we can break down those symbolic requiremen­ts it gets us closer to actual substantiv­e change.”

The push for equality by Mormon women’s groups has escalated in recent years, fuelled by growing online and social-media communitie­s that allow women from around the country and world to unite and discuss the causes they want to champion.

In 2012, a women’s group urged women to wear pants to church to draw attention to what they perceived as inequality. Women aren’t barred from wearing pants to Sunday services, but in some areas it can send ripples of surprise and raised eyebrows, Jenson said.

The church doesn’t appear close to allowing women into the lay clergy or highest leadership posts, but religious leaders have made some concession­s in recent years.

A 2012 rule change lowering the minimum age for missionari­es, from 21 to 19 for women, opened the door for many more young women to fit 11⁄2-year missions in before they start careers or get married and start families.

In 2015, the church for the first time appointed women to three high-level church councils previously reserved only for men. In April 2013, history was made when a woman led the opening prayer at the faith’s semiannual general conference in Salt Lake City.

Since October of that year, a church conference session that had previously been limited to men has broadcast live for all to watch. That stopped short of allowing women in, a move Ordain Women has been advocating to have happen for years.

“We’re hoping this is a signpost on the road to larger progress,” Jenson said. “We watch for any small movement.”

 ??  ?? Mormon women wear dresses on their way to a conference in Salt Lake City. Women who work at church headquarte­rs in the city can now wear pantsuits or dress slacks instead of only skirts or dresses.
Mormon women wear dresses on their way to a conference in Salt Lake City. Women who work at church headquarte­rs in the city can now wear pantsuits or dress slacks instead of only skirts or dresses.

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