Is this out of line? Or should I not say anything?
I would like some advice before I send the following email to a work colleague. The basic situation is that the guy I am writing to has not renewed another employee's contract for very flimsy reasons. Basically, I think that it's because this employee was the only woman in his department and hence didn't 'fit in'. I think that this is setting a very bad precedent, so want to say something before it becomes an issue. Or should I not say anything? Part of me doesn't want to be labelled as trouble maker, but another part of doesn't want to sit back and let something unjust happen. The industry is tertiary education.
This is what I want to write:
"This doesn’t really concern me directly, and I doubt that you are doing this deliberately, but basically here it is: It is not my place to say who you hire to work in your department, and I admit that I don’t really know the reasons behind you not re-hiring M, but I think that in the long term it is really detrimental to your department to have no female staff at all. As you are no doubt aware, there are only a small number of girls who enroll in your major or take your subjects, however a lot of these end up getting top marks and being very good students. Yet they have no one within the department to look up to as a role model or as a mentor. As long as you continue to organise things like golf games and call it staff development, this will always be the case, which I think is a bad thing in the long term. Just something to think about…"
Am I stepping out line by doing this? The manager in question has been known to make comments such as "girls are only good at admin", etc, so this is not really an isolated incident. Any thoughts??