Monday, March 30, 2026
ADVT 
National

Accessibility office in limbo as it calls out federal government's failures

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 25 Nov, 2025 11:57 AM
  • Accessibility office in limbo as it calls out federal government's failures

The federal Office of Public Service Accessibility is in limbo months after it produced a document accusing the government of falling behind on supports for public servants with disabilities.

The document, obtained by The Canadian Press through information access law, says the government is lagging on plans to accommodate employees with disabilities.

Prepared by the Office of Public Service Accessibility for the Treasury Board president in June, the report says the government has achieved its goal of hiring 5,000 new employees with disabilities by 2025. It also said the government has made progress on offering anti-bias training and developing centralized workplace accommodations processes.

But the government has fallen behind in "several important areas," the report says, citing the fact that government departments have different ways of assessing their progress on accessibility.

"Some use clear and measurable indicators, while others rely on general descriptions," said Rola Salem, a spokesperson for the Treasury Board of Canada Secretariat.

The document also cited what it called a "lack" of external consultations with people with disabilities. It said such consultations would provide "essential feedback" from the public to help government departments and agencies design and deliver better services.

"The recommendation was for broader, deeper consultation to ensure barriers are fully identified and removed," Salem said, noting that departments are encouraged to consult before designing services. "This applies to both workplace accessibility for public servants and, where relevant, improving services for Canadians with disabilities."

The document also says accommodating employees with disabilities remains "a challenge" in the public service, especially when barriers are complex or hard to identify, such as those that are "mental health and neurodiversity related."

"Collectively, more progress is required to fully embed accessibility into the culture and the operations of the public service," the document says.

Salem said accommodation processes vary across government and employees "may face delays if tools, technologies or expertise aren’t immediately available in their organization."

Salem said some of the most common barriers identified by employees relate to noise in the workplace and problems with workstation equipment. She said recent data shows that barriers related to IT requests and changes to the built environment "may be among those that take the longest to implement."

Salem said there are initiatives underway to reduce delays and make access to accommodations more consistent by "streamlining procurement processes for adaptive technologies."

The Office of Public Service Accessibility, which was created in 2018, has a mandate to prepare the public service to meet or exceed the requirements of the Accessible Canada Act.

The office provides guidance to departments and agencies on how to improve the hiring, retention and promotion of people with disabilities. It also gives them advice on how to support employees with disabilities.

Salem said Budget 2024 renewed the Office of Public Service Accessibility funding until March 31, 2026, but provided no details about its longer-term fate. She said "further details regarding its mandate after that date will be shared once available."

The document says the Office of Public Service Accessibility is working to build "an inclusive and productive digitally enabled public service" by hosting government-wide workshops and providing guidance and worksheets to tell departments how to track and report on accessibility.

The federal auditor general is planning to release a report next year that examines the recruitment, retention and promotion of people with disabilities in the federal public service.

The most recent employment equity report for the public service said since March 2020, the number of people with disabilities had increased steadily in the core public service — the federal government departments and agencies that fall under Treasury Board.

As of 2024, 21,089 people with disabilities were working in the core federal public service, up from 12,893 in 2021.

Picture Courtesy: THE CANADIAN PRESS/Adrian Wyld

MORE National ARTICLES

New and familiar faces on the bus as Eby introduces B.C. NDP cabinet

New and familiar faces on the bus as Eby introduces B.C. NDP cabinet
A bus carrying members of Premier David Eby's new cabinet has arrived at Government House in Victoria, with passengers including both new and familiar faces. Among newly elected members of the NDP caucus on the bus were former broadcaster Randene Neill and Vancouver Police Department veteran Terry Yung, while cabinet veterans including Mike Farnworth, Adrian Dix and Ravi Kahlon, also walked off the bus.

New and familiar faces on the bus as Eby introduces B.C. NDP cabinet

Man police linked to neo-Nazi group pleads not guilty to terrorism charges

Man police linked to neo-Nazi group pleads not guilty to terrorism charges
An Ottawa man is pleading not guilty to charges of terrorism and hate-speech related to the promotion of a far-right group. RCMP charged Patrick Gordon Macdonald in July 2023, alleging he took part in activities of a listed terrorist organization.

Man police linked to neo-Nazi group pleads not guilty to terrorism charges

Indecent act in Richmond

Indecent act in Richmond
Police are looking for a man who followed a woman who was walking in Richmond and then exposed his genitals to her.  They say it happened in the area of Number 3  Road and Goldstream Drive back on November 6th. 

Indecent act in Richmond

Fatal rollover crash on Hwy 99

Fatal rollover crash on Hwy 99
Mounties in Surrey say they are investigating a fiery overnight crash that killed two people and caused a partial shutdown of Highway 99. Mounties say they closed the road between 16th Avenue and 32nd Avenue northbound and are asking people to use alternate routes.

Fatal rollover crash on Hwy 99

B.C. nursing student attacked with knife during first clinical placement: union

B.C. nursing student attacked with knife during first clinical placement: union
The Vancouver Police Department said officers responded to the scene around 9 a.m. following reports of an assault inside the hospital, which left the 37-year-old victim with non-life-threatening injuries. Vancouver police spokesman Sgt. Steve Addison said a 48-year-old man, who was a patient at the hospital, was arrested.

B.C. nursing student attacked with knife during first clinical placement: union

B.C. charities worried Canada Post strike will affect fundraising efforts

B.C. charities worried Canada Post strike will affect fundraising efforts
Some B.C. charities and not-for-profits said they are worried the Canada Post strike will jeopardize their year-end fundraising efforts. Nicole Mucci, a spokeswoman for Union Gospel Mission in Vancouver's Downtown Eastside, said 50 per cent of the organization's revenue normally comes between Thanksgiving and Christmas, and a mail strike at this time of the year is "detrimental" since so many donations come in the mail. 

B.C. charities worried Canada Post strike will affect fundraising efforts