Vancouver Sun

Disabled voters feeling left out during campaign

Metro woman says she hoped leaders would address their issues during debates

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Amy Amantea tuned in to the English-language federal leaders’ debate with modest hopes there would be at least some discussion of issues relevant to disabled Canadians.

The first half of the campaign had passed with barely a reference, even from the party that had delivered a historic achievemen­t in national disability policy. Earlier this year, the Liberals made good on a 2015 campaign promise when the Accessible Canada Act received royal assent, marking the first time any government had enacted accessibil­ity legislatio­n at the federal level.

ONE IN FIVE

The government estimates one in five Canadians over age 15 is disabled, and Amantea, who is legally blind, hoped leaders would use the Oct. 7 debate to address some of the many issues they face. But those hopes faded as the debate progressed, giving way instead to doubts about how Canada’s disabled residents would fare after the Oct. 21 election.

“We have a lot of very unique needs and circumstan­ces in our community that don’t get addressed,” said Amantea, of Vancouver.

“Just a nod, just a mention would have been kind of nice, but it was not to be.”

Amantea said that relative silence has persisted into the final week of the campaign, giving rise to concerns throughout Canada’s disabled community. Many fear that parties who fail to make mention of key issues facing disabled Canadians while courting votes may prove even more dismissive once those votes have been cast.

They point to party platforms and public pledges, most of which make scant mention of either the Accessible Canada Act or disability-specific measures on issues such as infrastruc­ture, health and affordable housing.

The Liberals’ response to questions on disability policy largely focused on past achievemen­ts. Spokesman Joe Pickerill did offer some future plans, including doubling the disability child benefit, establishi­ng a $40-million-peryear national fund meant to help disabled Canadians find work, and simplifyin­g the process veterans use to access disability benefits.

The Green party didn’t respond to a request for comment, and the People’s Party of Canada said its platform contained “no policy related to disabled persons.”

The NDP didn’t provide comment to The Canadian Press, but made several commitment­s to strengthen the Accessible Canada Act in a letter sent to an Ontario-based disability advocacy group.

The act, while widely acknowledg­ed as a significan­t milestone, was also broadly criticized by nearly a hundred grassroots organizati­ons across the country as too weak to be truly effective. Such critiques continued even after the government agreed to adopt some Senate amendments sought by the disability groups, who hoped future government­s would continue to build on the new law.

Only the NDP agreed to do so when approached by the Accessibil­ity for Ontarians with Disabiliti­es Act Alliance, which contacted all major parties in July.

“The Liberals hailed this bill as a historical piece of legislatio­n. But without substantia­l amendments, it is yet another in a long line of Liberal half-measures,” reads the NDP’s response.

“New Democrats are committed to ensuring that C-81 actually lives up to Liberal party rhetoric.”

The Conservati­ves pledged to “work closely with the disability community to ensure that our laws reflect their lived realities.” Spokesman Simon Jefferies noted party members pushed to strengthen the act, but saw their amendments voted down by the government.

The vagueness of these commitment­s troubles Gabrielle Peters, a wheelchair user and writer.

“Canada’s approach to accessibil­ity has been to grant it as a gift they give us rather than a right we deserve,” Peters said.

“Now that we have the ACA, the concern is that the broader public and the government think the issue is resolved when this law is, at best, a beginning.”

Other disabled voters expressed concerns about the handful of relevant promises that have been put forward on the campaign trail.

In addition to pledging expanded eligibilit­y for the disability tax credit, the Conservati­ves have said they would implement a $50-million national autism strategy focusing on research and services for children.

The NDP and Greens have followed suit with similar proposals and larger pots of cash.

While widely lauded among parent-led advocacy groups, some autistic adults view the proposals with skepticism.

Alex Haagaard, who is autistic and uses a wheelchair, said that while much modern disability policy including the ACA tends to apply a social lens, discussion of autism is still framed through the outmoded medical model that positions the disability as an ailment to be cured rather than a part of a person’s identity.

Haagaard said action is clearly needed to help parents seeking supports for their children and teachers working to integrate autistic students into their classrooms, but said current attitudes at the heart of the campaign rhetoric are troubling.

Haagaard said a national strategy also risks underminin­g the goal of broader inclusion for other disabled population­s.

“That is counter to the goals of disability justice to silo autism as this individual condition that warrants this level of attention compared to other disabiliti­es,” Haagaard said.

Like Amantea, Peters felt let down by the leaders’ debates, citing the prevalence of discussion around medical assistance in dying over other issues that affect disabled people. The subject is polarizing, with many advocacy groups and individual­s asserting such legislatio­n devalues the lives of disabled people and places them at greater risk.

Such a narrow focus, Peters said, shows all parties’ failure to reckon with or address the diverse, complex needs of an overlooked demographi­c.

“What strikes me as missing in policy and in this election is us,” she said. “Disabled people: the not inspiratio­nal, not motivation­al, not middle-class, not white, disabled people of this country.

“In other words, most of us.”

 ??  ?? “We have a lot of very unique needs and circumstan­ces in our community,” says Amy Amantea, who is legally blind.
“We have a lot of very unique needs and circumstan­ces in our community,” says Amy Amantea, who is legally blind.

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