Monday, July 6, 2026
ADVT 
National

Panasonic Decides To Recognize Employee's Same-Sex Marriages

The Canadian Press, 18 Feb, 2016 10:38 AM
  • Panasonic Decides To Recognize Employee's Same-Sex Marriages
TOKYO — Panasonic Corp. said Thursday it will recognize same-sex marriages in its employment policies in a rare move for a major Japanese manufacturer.
 
Although details are being worked out, some of the benefits currently allocated to married employees include maternity leave, health insurance and a small cash bonus, said spokeswoman Chieko Gyobu. Panasonic said the new policy will come into effect from April.
 
The Osaka-based maker of Viera TVs and Lumix digital cameras says it has been studying lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender issues for more than a decade. It is one of Japan's biggest companies and counts the U.S., Europe and China among its overseas markets.
 
Japan doesn't recognize same sex marriages, but a handful of local governments, such as Tokyo's Shibuya Ward, which attracts startups and a youth culture, allow same-sex couples to register their unions.
 
Tetsuya Senmatsu, human resources manager at Panasonic, said the company, which employs 250,000 workers, will forge ahead with diversity efforts.
 
"Our basic thinking is that individuals must be respected and their uniqueness must be recognized and nurtured," he said in a statement.
 
Policy changes by major and usually conservative companies such as Panasonic are likely to be influential in conformist Japan and other companies may follow suit.
 
Panasonic is a sponsor of the 2020 Tokyo Olympics, and one of the games principles is opposing discrimination by sexual orientation.
 
In the past, Panasonic has pioneered other initiatives, such as rewarding workers for taking time out to exercise. Even that was unusual at that time because Japanese workers tended to keep long hours, glued to their desk, and did not bother keeping healthy.
 
Panasonic was founded in 1918 by Konosuke Matsushita, who believed in the power of the individual worker and even cleaned company bathrooms himself, but he also believed his company must go global.

MORE National ARTICLES

Canadian Couple Document Centuries-Old Oral Language In Effort To Sustain It

Canadian Couple Document Centuries-Old Oral Language In Effort To Sustain It
Erik Anonby and Christina van der Wal have dedicated nearly a decade to comprehensively documenting the language of Kumzari in a way no one appears to have done before.

Canadian Couple Document Centuries-Old Oral Language In Effort To Sustain It

Two Drown In St. Lawrence Near Cornwall In Suspected Human Smuggling Attempt

Two Drown In St. Lawrence Near Cornwall In Suspected Human Smuggling Attempt
CORNWALL, Ont. — Two men have drowned in the St. Lawrence River near Cornwall, Ont, in what authorities suspect was a failed human smuggling attempt.

Two Drown In St. Lawrence Near Cornwall In Suspected Human Smuggling Attempt

Unions Need To Present Better Case To The Public In Rights Battle: Labour Leader Hassan Yussuff

Unions Need To Present Better Case To The Public In Rights Battle: Labour Leader Hassan Yussuff
Canadian Labour Congress president Hassan Yussuff said more has to be done to talk about the value of unions and their role in society.

Unions Need To Present Better Case To The Public In Rights Battle: Labour Leader Hassan Yussuff

Canada's Complex Rules For Refugee Settlement, Here's How The Process Works

Canada's Complex Rules For Refugee Settlement,  Here's How The Process Works
Here's a look at how the process works:

Canada's Complex Rules For Refugee Settlement, Here's How The Process Works

Toronto's Favourite Dead Raccoon Now Memorialized In Butter

Toronto's Favourite Dead Raccoon Now Memorialized In Butter
First he was toast, now he's butter. Conrad the raccoon is back, sculpted into a slab of butter at Toronto's Canadian National Exhibition.

Toronto's Favourite Dead Raccoon Now Memorialized In Butter

Criminal Justice Branch Seeks High-risk Designation For B.C. Dad Allan Schoenborn Who Killed Kids

Criminal Justice Branch Seeks High-risk Designation For B.C. Dad Allan Schoenborn Who Killed Kids
The man who killed his three children at their Merritt, B.C., home in 2008 began living in a psychiatric hospital two years later.

Criminal Justice Branch Seeks High-risk Designation For B.C. Dad Allan Schoenborn Who Killed Kids