Friday, December 19, 2025
ADVT 
National

'We are not a priority:' Disability advocates say lack of minister sends a message

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 14 May, 2025 01:22 PM
  • 'We are not a priority:' Disability advocates say lack of minister sends a message

The lack of a minister for disabilities threatens to sideline the needs of millions of Canadians during what Mark Carney promises will be a period of transformation, advocates said Wednesday.

The prime minister announced his smaller, "purpose-built" cabinet meant to deliver change on Tuesday, but the 38-member team doesn't include anyone explicitly responsible for representing the interests of disabled Canadians.

"Not having big and bold disability inclusion and accessibility as part of a ministerial portfolio headline sends a message," said Rabia Khedr, national director of Disability Without Poverty.

"Unfortunately, people with disabilities are being left behind."

She worries there won't be improvements to the Canada Disability Benefit, which offers a maximum of $200 per month to those eligible. That's not enough to accomplish the government's goal of lifting disabled Canadians out of poverty, she said. 

"According to the government's own data, it will lift 25,000 people out of poverty, when we know that there's 1.6 million Canadians living with disabilities in poverty," she said.

"We got the legislation, great. We made history after a lot of work. We got the budget but it was really disappointing. The regulations were adopted, but there's still work to be done to make them as robust as they should be."

There's also the question of the Accessible Canada Act, a piece of legislation that was passed in 2019 with the goal of making Canada "barrier-free" by 2040. It's already woefully behind schedule, she said.

"The Accessible Canada Act truly needs a champion at the cabinet table to ensure that the Disability Inclusion Action Plan (developed in 2022) is indeed adopted through a whole-of-government approach, advancing accessibility in all facets of governing this country," she said. 

David Lepofsky, chair of the Accessibility for Ontarians with Disabilities Act Alliance, said the need for a disability minister goes beyond accessibility-specific legislation.

"This is a prime minister who has an ambitious goal of restructuring Canada's economy, building new infrastructure and restructuring the federal government," he said.

"They're huge goals. More than ever, that's when you need a strong voice because people with disabilities so often get left out, get forgotten."

Take the issue of housing, for instance.

"We've heard tons of talk about housing and needing to increase the amount of housing in Canada — affordable housing. What they don't talk about is the need for a dramatic increase in the amount of accessible housing. We have an accessible housing shortage that is a crisis," he said.

Lepofsky said he remembers what it was like trying to advocate for accessibility before 2015, when the disability minister role was created, and he fears returning to that era. 

"If you don't have a voice at the cabinet table, if you don't have a cabinet minister who could walk over to the prime minister — as a minister — and have a direct conversation about needing more action, you are really in a far more vulnerable position," he said. 

Representatives for the Prime Minister's Office did not immediately respond to a request for comment about the criticism, or which cabinet member would be responsible for accessibility legislation. 

Heidi Janz, a disability advocate and adjunct professor at the University of Alberta, said that in Carney's interim cabinet, which was in place from the time he became prime minister following the Liberal leadership race until the election campaign, the disability file fell to the employment minister.

"The danger of linking disability with employment is that the only disability issue becomes how to get disabled people employed," she said. "Linking disability with employment is missing the whole point of having a disability minister."

Picture Courtesy: THE CANADIAN PRESS/HO-Disability Without Poverty 

MORE National ARTICLES

Annual inflation rate jumps to 2.6% in February with tax holiday end: StatCan

Annual inflation rate jumps to 2.6% in February with tax holiday end: StatCan
The annual rate of inflation accelerated sharply to 2.6 per cent in February as the federal government’s temporary tax break came to an end mid-month, Statistics Canada said Tuesday. February’s figures are well ahead of the consensus among economists polled by Reuters, which called for 2.2 per cent inflation in the month.

Annual inflation rate jumps to 2.6% in February with tax holiday end: StatCan

Four to be charged after organized crime-related police operation in Kanesatake

Four to be charged after organized crime-related police operation in Kanesatake
Sgt. Marc Tessier says police arrested three men in their forties along with a 31-year-old woman and seized drugs and weapons in Kanesatake, about 40 kilometres northwest of Montreal. Tessier says a fifth person detained by police was released.

Four to be charged after organized crime-related police operation in Kanesatake

Carney announces plans to boost Canada's military footprint in the Arctic

Carney announces plans to boost Canada's military footprint in the Arctic
Prime Minister Mark Carney says Ottawa will expand the Canadian Armed Forces’ presence in the Arctic and turn to Australia's over-the-horizon radar tech to monitor threats from adversaries such as China and Russia. Carney is also pledging $253 million in new funding for Indigenous reconciliation initiatives in the North.

Carney announces plans to boost Canada's military footprint in the Arctic

It's not business as usual for Canadians who want to stay in the U.S., lawyers warn

It's not business as usual for Canadians who want to stay in the U.S., lawyers warn
Immigration lawyers say the case of a Vancouver woman detained in the United States over a denied visa is a warning to other Canadians that it's no longer business as usual when crossing the border for work. Jasmine Mooney returned to Vancouver this weekend after she was detained for about 12 days when she tried to cross the border near San Diego, Calif.

It's not business as usual for Canadians who want to stay in the U.S., lawyers warn

Meet the 2025 DARPAN Power Women of Influence Panel

Meet the 2025 DARPAN Power Women of Influence Panel
The Power Women of Influence Gala 2025 comprises of a power-packed panel that includes Roshaneh Zafar, Founder and MD, Kashf Foundation, Farah Mohamed, Senator and social entrepreneur, Belle Puri, CBC journalist, Anoop Virk, TEDx executive producer & award winning Canadian actress Supinder Wraich of CBC's TV show Allegiance. Robin Gill, former Global National reporter and anchor is panel moderator.

Meet the 2025 DARPAN Power Women of Influence Panel

RCMP in Northwest Territories believe fatal shooting tied to illicit drug trade

RCMP in Northwest Territories believe fatal shooting tied to illicit drug trade
RCMP say the illicit drug trade could be tied to a shooting that killed one and injured two others in the Northwest Territories over the weekend. Officers were called to a home early Saturday morning in the hamlet of Fort Providence, where they found one person dead and two others injured.

RCMP in Northwest Territories believe fatal shooting tied to illicit drug trade