Thursday, December 11, 2025
ADVT 
National

Advocates warn federal budget cuts could reduce diversity and inclusion initiatives

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 25 Aug, 2025 10:26 AM
  • Advocates warn federal budget cuts could reduce diversity and inclusion initiatives

Advocates are raising concerns that upcoming federal budget cuts and expected job losses in the public service will jeopardize programs intended to hire and promote people with disabilities.

"(Diversity, equity and inclusion) is often an add-on, right? It's never a core, no matter how hard we try. So usually it's the first to be cut when times are tough," said Rabia Khedr, the national director of Disability Without Poverty.

Khedr said people with disabilities often have to overcome significant barriers to get hired. "They have to prove themselves, they have to be a hundred times better than the able-bodied person to shift the hiring manager's attitudes," she said.

Linda Simpson is the director and founder of Performance Plus Rehabilitative Care in Ottawa. Her organization provides employment services to people with disabilities and other marginalized groups, including newcomers to Canada.

She said the job market was already highly competitive, but since the new Liberal government took over and began talk of cutting costs, "we're just on sort of a holding pattern, because they don't know what's happening in their department."

Most federal departments and agencies have been directed to find savings of up to 15 per cent by 2028.

The Liberals promised during the election campaign to cap, and not cut, the public service, but the Canadian Centre for Policy Alternatives warned in a recent report that budget cuts could result in almost 57,000 fewer jobs in the public service.

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.

Just 62 per cent of working-age Canadians with disabilities have jobs, compared to 78 per cent of people without disabilities. The federal government's employment strategy for Canadians with disabilities aims to close that gap by 2040.

As of 2024, 21,089 people with disabilities were working in the federal public service, up from 12,893 in 2021, according to the most recent employment equity report for the public service.

That is below the rate of workforce availability, which is the metric used to measure the share of the Canadian workforce that's eligible for work in the federal public service. But the report did find representation of people with disabilities among government executives was above the rate of workforce availability.

Simpson said some government departments are falling behind when it comes to providing meaningful accommodations, and the return to mandatory in-office work is an added challenge.

"There are some stellar departments, but there is a lot of work to be done. I interface with people every day and people leave their jobs because there's no sense of belonging," she said.

Prime Minister Mark Carney's leaner cabinet eliminated a minister of diversity, inclusion and persons with disabilities. Responsibility for the portfolio falls to Jobs and Families Minister Patty Hajdu, and to Leslie Church, Hajdu's parliamentary secretary.

Hajdu was not made available for an interview, and her office referred questions to the department.

"As part of our commitment to an accessible and inclusive public service, we have hired nearly 7,000 employees with disabilities in the past five years," said a statement from an Employment and Social Development Canada spokesperson.

The statement noted the government had a target of hiring 5,000 people between 2019 and 2025. It did not say whether a new target has been set.

The statement, and the minister's office, did not directly answer whether the government would commit to maintaining such hiring practices even as it seeks to slash costs. The statement said the government is "dedicated to removing barriers and furthering inclusive hiring, retention, and career progression."

The planned federal budget cuts come at the same time as a broader chill on diversity, equity and inclusion programs.

The U.S. president has vowed to end DEI, claiming it is discriminatory. Donald Trump has signed a series of executive orders that eliminate federal offices and programs, end grant programs and force federal contractors to certify that they do not operate DEI programs.

The result of the policy change and recent court decisions has been that major companies like Boeing, McDonald's, Meta and Walmart have dropped their DEI commitments.

That's led to concerns that diversity and inclusion programs will fall by the wayside in corporate Canada, too.

"A lot of companies are multinational," said Inclusion Canada CEO Krista Carr. "All of this stuff trickles."

Carr said advocates have long struggled for recognition even within inclusion initiatives.

"One of the things we struggle with is when people think about diversity, they actually don't usually think about people with disabilities," she said.

And advocates say not having a minister dedicated to the file signals that it's less of a priority for the Carney government.

"We don't think that the issues of people with disabilities are as (much of a) priority around the cabinet table as they used to be. So we have our work cut out to keep sharing the struggles," Khedr said.

Picture Courtesy: THE CANADIAN PRESS/Adrian Wyld

MORE National ARTICLES

China announces 75.8 per cent tariffs on Canadian canola

China announces 75.8 per cent tariffs on Canadian canola
China's Ministry of Commerce published the details of the plan on Tuesday, claiming the "dumping" of Canadian canola into the Chinese market is hurting its domestic canola oil market.

China announces 75.8 per cent tariffs on Canadian canola

B.C. woman injured, hospitalized after being struck by beer can thrown from truck

B.C. woman injured, hospitalized after being struck by beer can thrown from truck
RCMP say it happened close to midnight on Saturday near Lake Cowichan in the area of Youbou and Meades Creek roads.

B.C. woman injured, hospitalized after being struck by beer can thrown from truck

B.C. court squelches Vancouver bylaw that forced ride-hailing firms to pay fees

B.C. court squelches Vancouver bylaw that forced ride-hailing firms to pay fees
Uber Canada took the city to court over the bylaw, claiming it overstepped a municipal government's power to regulate so-called "transportation network services."

B.C. court squelches Vancouver bylaw that forced ride-hailing firms to pay fees

B.C. to appeal landmark Aboriginal title ruling over land in Metro Vancouver

B.C. to appeal landmark Aboriginal title ruling over land in Metro Vancouver
Niki Sharma says the government strongly disagrees with last week's B.C. Supreme Court decision granting fishing rights and Aboriginal title over the parcel of land on Lulu Island in Richmond, B.C.

B.C. to appeal landmark Aboriginal title ruling over land in Metro Vancouver

BC Hydro says Site C dam near Fort St. John now fully operational

BC Hydro says Site C dam near Fort St. John now fully operational
The dam in northern B.C. is now able to generate 1,100 megawatts of electricity -- enough to power half a million homes per year -- after the sixth and final power-generating turbine came online. The first of the six turbines started to generate power in October 2024.

BC Hydro says Site C dam near Fort St. John now fully operational

Vulnerable people lack access to cooling amid stifling heat across Canada: advocates

Vulnerable people lack access to cooling amid stifling heat across Canada: advocates
Heat warnings from Environment Canada stretch from the country’s western to eastern coasts today, with temperatures expected to reach the low to mid-30s and humidex values at around 40 C.

Vulnerable people lack access to cooling amid stifling heat across Canada: advocates