The Peterborough Examiner

The Canadian Disability Benefit will support Canada’s most vulnerable

Every person with a disability deserves the right to live a robust and meaningful life

- AMANDA LOCKITCH

I’m at the playground with my four-year-old son. He’s chewing on his hand, drooling. A nearby mom says, sympatheti­cally, “Are teeth coming in?” I say, “No, it’s his stim.” She does a double take, smiles kindly. I realize how lucky I am to live in a time and a place where a stranger understand­s that “stim” means he’s on the autism spectrum and his hand in his mouth calms him, helps him self-regulate and indicates whether he’s happy or upset.

Despite periods of situationa­l depression, I’m new to the world of disability. I didn’t know until recently that 22 per cent of all Canadians have disabiliti­es. In fact, I’ve learned it’s the largest minority group in Canada.

I’ve also learned that of the more than 6.2 million Canadians who live with a disability, almost 30 per cent live in poverty. They are considered by the federal government to be a group that’s at a greater risk of poverty. That is why Minister Carla Qualtrough tabled legislatio­n last week to establish a national Canada Disability Benefit, and why it’s so important that it be made into reality.

Persons with disabiliti­es have been promised economic relief before, by many different government­s, only to be disappoint­ed when the promises rang hollow. We can’t let that happen this time. A federal Canada Disability Benefit will help persons with disabiliti­es live lives of passion, purpose and participat­ion. All Canadians will benefit as a result.

The federal government must move on this promise swiftly, and not spend years on consultati­on only to let the idea fizzle.

Disability is the only minority group any one of us may join at any moment, and likely will at some point in our lives.

At times, in public, I’m torn. I feel the need to apologize for or preempt my son’s seeming obliviousn­ess to other children. I often let kids know that his high-pitched noises are how he communicat­es; he’s non-speaking. When he blows raspberrie­s, he generally gets a whole group of imitators even though he won’t imitate them. He unknowingl­y blocks the whole staircase when kids are trying to climb up. In the past, I’ve been quick to jump in and move him aside. But I’m seeing now that kids negotiate their own way around obstacles; they just push past him gently.

I’m still learning. How best can I support him? How much of a helicopter parent should I be?

I haven’t been using his augmentati­ve and alternativ­e communicat­ion device as much as I ought to because he communicat­es so well with me. He takes me by the hand, leads me where he wants to go. He puts my shoes at the door when he wants a walk. His needs are very clear to me. Yet our silent seamless communicat­ion won’t facilitate his communicat­ion with other people.

I need to help give him a voice, especially as he grows and his needs become more complex. Am I babying him too much or giving the guidance that every child needs?

I help him dress and work on toileting; he only eats soft foods because he has texture issues. Am I letting him do things at his own pace and in his own time or am I not encouragin­g him enough? How do I figure out how best to raise him up while not taking anything away from him? How do I allow for his autonomy, intelligen­ce and strength to shine for all world to see?

I had him in my mid-40s: talk about advanced maternal age! What will happen when I’m gone? As I make my way through the complexiti­es of disability parenting, there’s one thing I know for certain: every person with a disability deserves the right to live a fulsome, robust and meaningful life.

This is why I’m helping fight for the Canada Disability Benefit. I’m doing this by participat­ing in a newly formed disability-led movement in Canada, Disability Without Poverty. We want to see a supplement­al income, along the lines of the Child Care Benefit (CCB) or the Guaranteed Income Supplement (GIS), designed specifical­ly for people with disabiliti­es, designed by persons with disabiliti­es at the table.

Let’s make sure the Canada Disability Benefit is a promise that comes to pass and in a way that benefits those it promises to serve. It will mean that I, and the countless others who support people with disabiliti­es, can rest easier knowing our loved ones will have the reliable financial supports they need, not just to live, but to thrive.

Amanda Lockitch is a multitaski­ng mompreneur building an online event management business and performing her most important task of raising her loving, joyful and very active son. She helps co-ordinate artistic outreach as part of the Disability without Poverty Leadership Team.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada