Toronto Star

No free ride

CNE to start charging disabled visitors admission,

- EBYAN ABDIGIR STAFF REPORTER

Advocates are blasting a CNE decision to eliminate free admission for people with disabiliti­es.

The CNE is ending the long-standing policy of providing free admission, saying the change will respect “the dignity and independen­ce of all of our guests, including those with disabiliti­es.”

Attendants of people with disabiliti­es will still get free admission.

Mobility advocate Luke Anderson described the new policy as “unfortunat­e,” and worries that the Ex will not allow disabled people a fair opportunit­y to participat­e.

“There is a high percentage of people with disabiliti­es that are unemployed with very few resources. Whatever systems or support we can provide is a good thing,” said Anderson, founder of StopGap, which provides ramps for buildings and stores which otherwise wouldn’t be accessible. “There’s also a lot of issues with our society in general that stops people with disabiliti­es from being fully engaged in their communitie­s.”

The CNE handed out flyers to fair-goers last year, warning them that the admission policy would be changing in time for this year’s fair, which runs from Aug. 19 to Sept. 5. CNE GM Virginia Ludy defended the policy, saying the fair is only doing what other major attraction­s in the Greater Toronto Area have already done.

“The CNE’s change in policy is one of conforming with the policies in place at other major entertainm­ent venues. It is also about respect, treating persons with disabiliti­es with dignity, independen­ce, equality of access and inclusion,” said Ludy, adding that the decision was made two years ago by the Canadian National Exhibition Associatio­n board of directors.

The Toronto Zoo provides a 50per-cent discount for people with disabiliti­es.

Ludy also said fair visitors received plenty of notice of the policy change.

The change was “rolled out last year during the 2015 CNE with flyers and on our website, and more recently with sponsored content . . . to ensure our visitors stay well informed,” Ludy said.

Whatever led to the decision, however, it could still be a black eye for the CNE’s image, according to Alan Middleton, a professor of marketing at York University’s Schulich School of Business.

The CNE’s new policy may be acceptable from an economic and policy standpoint, he said, many will view the company’s back-step in a negative light. “In the public eye, it is a negative,” Middleton said.

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