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Provincial Accessibility Legislation in Canada

Welcome back to the Blogging to Berlin series, where I try to cram as many blogs on disability rights in Canada as possible into the remaining weeks until the 2025 Global Disability Summit!

This week, we’re travelling coast to coast (for my international friends, Canadians LOVE saying this) and exploring provincial accessibility legislation across Canada!

Spoilers: 8/10 provinces have enacted accessibility legislation. Quebec was WAY ahead of the curve back in 1978, and New Brunswick only recently joined the party in 2024!

(Fun Fact: NB was SO recent I wrote this entire blog and had to revise it when I found out New Brunswick does have legislation during my fact-checking process…)

I won’t make you google it: Alberta and Prince Edward Island have yet to enact provincial accessibility legislation. But shockingly, it’s actually not that straightforward!

Alberta has embedded accessibility considerations into their National Building Code and enacted the Office of the Advocate for Persons with Disabilities, while PEI has their Supports for Persons with Disabilities Act – but that just generally outlines what all provinces provide for disabled people anyways.

If someone from PEI can explain to me what on earth is going on there, that would be sick.

With all of that background aside, let’s get into this provincial legislation!

1978 Act to Secure Handicapped Persons in the Exercise of Their Rights with a View to Achieving Social, School, and Workplace Integration

Read It Here

Carly Commentary: While I think it’s a shame more Canadians can’t speak French and enjoy everything Quebec has to offer – it keeps this province as a hidden legislative gem. Quebec is the only province to have legislation revolving around disability instead of accessibility, and did this only one year after the Canadian Human Rights Act was introduced!

Also, don’t dunk on them for using ‘handicap’ – there’s really no great French alternatives for disability. But for my bilingual friends, personnes en situation de handicap is the more appropriate term these days – which is basically just “person experiencing disability” for the anglophones out there.

2005 Accessibility for Ontarians with Disabilities Act

Read It Here

Carly Commentary: Boo! Tomato, tomato! Jokes aside, this is the perfect example of an accessibility law with no “teeth” – aka enforcement measures. The province has essentially decided not to enforce any regulations except for making most of us take their poorly developed Customer Service training – and as someone living in Ontario, I can report we did NOT become barrier-free by 2025. I’d be shocked if we can beat the (much more catchy) federal goal of barrier-free by 2040 at this rate.

2013 Accessibility for Manitobans Act

Read It Here

Carly Commentary: I think I might actually be Manitoba’s #1 fan because of their accessibility legislation and disability community. I have lost track of how many times I point to Manitoba as a legislative best practice, and their Accessibility Office is a dream to work with! I’ve actually done two speaking engagements in this province – which, population wise, is totally hitting above its weight.

2017 Act Respecting Accessibility in Nova Scotia

Read It Here

Carly Commentary: I give this legislation one “womp, womp.” Don’t get me wrong, I LOVE Nova Scotia – Cape Breton is literally my home away from home, and the home of Canadian folk artist and arthritic icon Maud Lewis! In fact, Nova Scotia is the most disabled province at 37.9% (source)

Which brings me to my real question – what the hell are they doing in Nova Scotia??? This legislation was very bare bones, and pretty much copy and pasted from Ontario. For our most disabled province, with a great culture of knowing your neighbours and helping out your community, I would expect a lot more.

I actually went back to re-review the legislation to see if I could squeeze out any more bullet points around notable features. I found that the preamble was fairly decent in terms of a progressive understanding of disability – but this only made the lack of guiding principles even more noticeable.

2021 Accessible British Columbia Act

Read It Here

Commentary: BC was the first province to officially recognize sign languages, AND still the only province to meaningfully ensure consultation with Indigenous persons and nations directly in the legislation. Now, BC does have a very organized Indigenous population and a number of self-governance treaties they’re legally bound to recognize, but you would expect more provinces (looking directly at you again, Nova Scotia) to follow suit here.

2021 Newfoundland and Labrador Accessibility Act

Read It Here

Carly Commentary: At this point in the analysis, I kept convincing myself I was just re-reading the Accessible Canada Act. Mandating a minister, creating a board, publishing standards – all great stuff! I just would have loved to see a better regional vibe here. You’ll notice transportation is missing from this legislation – that’s no mistake, because the terrain out there is notoriously difficult to get around, disabled or not!

2023 Accessible Saskatchewan Act

Read It Here

Carly Commentary: Again, we’re pretty deep in the analysis and everything looks the same. But then you get a stand-out win, like Saskatchewan requiring CRPD considerations in standards, and perk up a little bit! I’m also loving the accessibility principles, but my Day One Homie Manitoba did it first.

2024 New Brunswick Accessibility Act

Read It Here

Carly Commentary: Reading this legislation was an emotional rollercoaster. The introduction of housing and sports/recreation under accessibility areas was exciting! Then, lumping in non-disabled people working in disability was pretty disappointing and a direct reversal of a promising trend. But then, New Brunswick continued the positive trend of requiring CRPD compliance in accessibility standards! All of this to say, this is definitely a province I’ll be watching over the next few years.

Key Takeaways

As I get really nerdy in school and further studying institutional economics, I’m learning about path dependency – where your past or present actions shape future ones. For me, a critical juncture was when Canada chose to opt for accessibility-focused legislation over disability rights legislation, despite Quebec’s progressive disability-centred law from 1978, and the Americans with Disabilities Act in 1990 setting a clear precedent for impactful legislation. While I know that this legislation is actively removing accessibility barriers – I wonder how our country will look, if we achieve that barrier-free Canada by 2040 without a parallel shift in including and empowering persons with disabilities.

Another nerdy thing I noted was just how intriguing the differences in accessibility areas are between provinces! What made Nova Scotia include transportation, while Newfoundland and Labrador steered away from it (no pun intended?) Why would Newfoundland and Labrador include accommodations as a distinct area, on top of employment and education? Why has only Saskatchewan mentioned service animals, and what made New Brunswick include sports and recreation for the first time?

I am particularly impressed by the legislative requirement to ensure accessibility standards organizations and advisory committees are majority-led by disabled people. We’ve seen Accessibility Standards Canada absolutely thrive under this approach, so I’d love to think they played a key role encouraging the provinces to follow suit. However, this makes me look down on New Brunswick just a little bit more for including non-disabled people as adequate substitutes for disabled people. Luckily, they could be just the third-last province to enact legislation, so I don’t see them significantly deterring this pattern of mandated representation in the long-run.

But most importantly, overall, I was shocked by how similar the provinces’ accessibility legislation was. I mean, these bills were enacted by political parties of all different stripes. And while I would love to see disability become a non-partisan issue, this more likely suggests that governments are pursuing the bare minimum of accessibility without accompanying expansions in disability income supports, employment programs, and educational services.

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