The Guardian (Charlottetown)

Disability council dissolved

Auditor general’s report had reprimande­d government for absence of council

- STU NEATBY

A key council establishe­d to advise the province on decisions related to people with disabiliti­es has been dissolved despite a recent auditor general’s report chastising the province for its absence.

On Thursday, Social Developmen­t and Housing Minister Ernie Hudson told MLAs that the seven-member AccessAbil­ity Advisory Council has not met since April of 2018. The terms of the members of the council have also expired.

The 2020 auditor general’s report stated that the council is mandated to meet six times per year and to advise the minister on disability supports in the province.

Hudson said a new staff member was hired in November by his department to improve programmin­g for persons with disabiliti­es.

“One of her actions has been to contact the members of the council to see if they are still interested in being a part of the council. That work was slowed down by COVID, but the council will resume this year,” Hudson told the legislatur­e on Thursday.

The council was establishe­d when the previous Liberal government revamped disability supports on P.E.I., introducin­g the AccessAbil­ity Support Program. The introducti­on of the new program followed a human rights panel that found that existing disability support programs discrimina­ted against people with mental illness.

Although many disability advocates on P.E.I. heralded the AccessAbil­ity Support program as an improvemen­t, the auditor general found that the program had been implemente­d before key policies were in place and that the program was “not well managed”.

Hudson’s remarks on Thursday were in response to questions levelled on Wednesday from Green MLA Hannah Bell.

“According to the most recent auditor general’s report, that advisory council has not met for two years, including the period of time when the new policies and legislatio­n were developed for people with disabiliti­es and implemente­d,” Bell said.

“Why has the council not met and who are you getting input, consultati­on and advice from in its absence?”

In response, Hudson said he took the report seriously but said the report’s release coincided with the beginning of the COVID-19 pandemic.

In an interview, Hudson said he gave the previous government credit for implementi­ng the AAS program.

“But at the same time, was it maybe rushed a bit? I would say,” Hudson said.

Hudson also said his department plans to implement all of the auditor general’s recommenda­tions by the end of 2020.

However, he acknowledg­ed the AccessAbil­ity Advisory Council does not currently exist.

“The reason it doesn’t is that the terms of the individual­s who sat on that council had expired,” Hudson said.

“Staff had reached out to some of them – as I understand to all of them – to make them aware that the advisory council is going to be put in place once more.”

In an op-ed published in The Guardian on Thursday, Marcia Carroll, executive director of the P.E.I. Council of People with Disabiliti­es, listed numerous areas in which people with disabiliti­es have been negatively affected by the province’s COVID-19 response.

The areas included a lack of access to medical supports, such as physiother­apy, and the lack of sign language interpreta­tion in government briefings on COVID-19.

“During the COVID-19 pandemic we have seen the disability rights movement regress, and the rights and needs of Canadians living with disabiliti­es have been, for the most part, left out of the conversati­ons and response,” Carroll wrote.

 ?? SCREENSHOT ?? Social Developmen­t and Housing Minister Ernie Hudson speaks before the legislatur­e on Thursday. Hudson confirmed that the province’s AccessAbil­ity Advisory Council has not met since 2018.
SCREENSHOT Social Developmen­t and Housing Minister Ernie Hudson speaks before the legislatur­e on Thursday. Hudson confirmed that the province’s AccessAbil­ity Advisory Council has not met since 2018.

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