Gemma Bailey-Smith

she/they
Sustainability Manager and DEI Consultant

Award category:

Science, Engineering, Technology, Property and Construction

Bailey is a Sustainability Manager in construction, and a renowned advocate for employment equity, diversity, and inclusion, specialising in disability and neurodivergence. As a disabled, neurodivergent, wheelchair user, Bailey combines personal and professional experiences to promote workplace inclusion and accessibility. Their mission involves educating employers on best practices and empowering disabled and neurodivergent employees. Through partnerships with organisations like Green Jobs for Nature, EqualEngineering, and Evenbreak, Bailey champions disability inclusion in corporate and environmental careers.

With over five years of experience, Bailey has chaired award-winning employee network groups (ERGs), earning recognition at the Engineering Talent Awards and Ground Engineering Awards, now they advise ERGs in corporate settings. Individually, she has been featured in the Shaw’s Trust Disability Power 100 in 2023, making this the second year running. Bailey is dedicated to using these achievements to enhance workplace inclusion and accessibility, emphasising that “Accessibility benefits all, and it’s about time it’s not an afterthought.”

Their drive to diversify environmental careers and the construction industry comes from the lack of representation.

“I can vividly recall going to the careers officer at university as my disability progressed and asked ‘How will a career in the environmental sector work now I use a wheelchair?’. We searched and reached out for examples, looking for the representation I desperately needed to see at that time, but we couldn’t find it.

So I set a goal to become the representation I needed to see in the industry.”

We’re always told you have to ‘see it to be it’, but if that was true, I never would be in the career I am, as a wheelchair user, on construction sites managing the environment. So don’t let other peoples assumptions stop you from even trying.

Q&A

Gemma Bailey-Smith
Don’t let other peoples’ opinions, assumptions, worries and fears, be projected on to you. If it’s a career you want to go for, block out the noise, and go for it.
Through offering DEI consultancy, I can extend my reach wider than the business I am working at and successfully support employee resource groups and organisations DEI strategies.
From my experience, it has truly been the attitudinal barriers that have been the biggest blockers in my career. As a wheelchair user becoming an environmental professional in the construction industry I really thought it would be physical access! So I want to see a complete overhaul of attitudes towards disabled people. And I want to see employers empowering disabled people to have the careers they aspire to.
I get out in nature. Go for a long stroll and soak in the scenery.
My supportive family and friends
How people perceive disabled people
Attitudes to disabled people. Understanding the difference of equality and equity. Financial disparity for disabled people. Marriage inequality for disabled people. Disability employment gap. Disability pay gap. Infrastructure and travel accessibility. Access to fit for purpose mobility aids. Autonomy of care. Access to care. Accessible housing.

Areas of expertise

Accessibility, Employment, Engineering, Equality, Science

Disability Power 100 profile information is self-submitted by the profile subject. Shaw Trust understands and respects that disability and impairment descriptors and language use varies from person to person. Shaw Trust assumes no responsibility or liability for any errors or discrepancies in the content of this, or any other, profile page.