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THE RIGHTS OF PERSONS WITH DISABILITIES

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Title: THE RIGHTS OF PERSONS WITH DISABILITIES


1
  • _________________________________________
  • _____________________________
  • THE RIGHTS OF PERSONS WITH DISABILITIES
  • LAURIE LETHEREN YEDIDA ZALIK
  • ARCH DISABILITY LAW CENTRE

2
ARCH DISABILITY LAW CENTRE
  • WHAT IS ARCH?
  • Specialty legal aid clinic dedicated to defending
    and advancing the equality rights of people with
    disabilities in Ontario.
  • Governed by a volunteer board of directors, a
    majority of whom are people with disabilities.
  • Offer summary advice and referral service to
    Ontarians with disabilities
  • Provide education to people with disabilities on
    disability rights, and to the legal profession
    about disability law make submissions on matters
    of policy and law reform.
  • You can find more details on ARCHs website at
    www.archdisabilitylaw.ca.

3
ARCH DISABILITY LAW CENTRE
  • ARCHs Work
  • Promote social model of disability (disability is
  • caused by physical, social and attitudinal
  • barriers. Barrier to be removed to allow
  • full participation for all. Not that person
  • with disability must be fixed or must just fit
    in)
  • Cases we take on must have potential for a
  • systemic benefit for people with disabilities
  • in Ontario
  • Purpose is often to ensure that the
  • disability perspective is heard by court
  • or government committee

4
ARCH DISABILITY LAW CENTRE
  • Call ARCH if you
  • ARE A PERSON WITH A DISABILITY
  • and you
  • NEED ASSISTANCE OR HAVE A QUESTION ABOUT
  • your human rights
  • your attendant care services
  • your rights as a person living in a group home
  • your rights as a student or a worker
  • capacity to make your own decisions

5
Laws that Protect and Promote the Rights of
People with Disabilities
  • Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms
  • Ontario Human Rights Code
  • Accessibility for Ontarians with Disabilities Act
  • United Nations Convention on the Right of Persons
    with Disabilities

6
EMERGING ISSUES IN DISABILITY RIGHTS
  • Right to full inclusion in all aspects of society
  • Right to make own decisions and have disability
    needs accommodated in process
  • Right to have disability needs accommodated to
    allow for full participation
  • Use of Technology

6
7
Right to full inclusion in all aspects of
society
  • Right to live in neighbourhood of your choice
  • The Dream Team v. City Toronto, Sarnia, Smiths
    Falls and Kitchener Waterloo HRTO
  • Current application before the Human Rights
    Tribunal of Ontario
  • The Dream Team is a group of advocates who are
    psychiatric consumer survivors who promote the
    importance of safe, supported, inclusive housing
    for people with mental heath disabilities
  • Challenging the municipal restrictive by-laws
    that limit the proximity of homes for people with
    disabilities in a municipality
  • Most of Settled or are near settlement
  • Toronto in discussions

7
8
Right to full inclusion in all aspects of
society
  • Right to Attend Neighbourhood School with Peers
  • Emily Eaton v. Brant County Bd of Ed (SCC 1997)
  • First 3 years of school in fully integrated
    setting
  • School decided remaining in integrated not in
    Emilys best interests
  • Ontario Court of Appeal found that segregation
    did violate Emilys Charter Rights from earliest
    age children with disabilities should see
    themselves as part of society and children
    without disabilities should see them the same way
  • Board of Ed appealed to SCC

8
9
Right to full inclusion in all aspects of society
  • SCC determined that segregated setting did not
    violate Emilys rights
  • Segregation can be both protective of equality or
    can violate equality depending on circumstances
    and persons disability and dound in this
    situation segregation did not burden or
    disadvantage Emily
  • BUT
  • Must breakdown the structures and assumptions
    that result in the relegation and banishment of
    disabled persons from participation
  • Only when integrated setting cannot be adapted to
    meet the special needs of an exceptional child
    will a placement outside of this setting be
    required
  • Most school board policies ensure that inclusion
    in regular classroom is the first placement for
    all students

10
Right to full inclusion in all aspects of
society
Emily fought on. Before appealing the Div. Court
decision to the Court of Appeal, her whole
family was baptized. She switched to Catholic
Board and remained integrated in class with her
peers through all her school years. In 2010,
Emily and her family entered Chinas Forbidden
City step by step despite a declaration from
their tour guide that it would be impossible.
11
Right to make own decisions
  • Must start with assumption that person has
    capacity to make own decisions
  • Question to be asked is does the person
    understand the decision to be made and the
    consequences of making and not making that
    decision
  • Those assisting must do what is necessary to
    accommodate the disability needs of person so
    that they can make the decision. This may involve
    breaking down information into small parts
    allowing the person to communicate through
    symbols or gestures all them to have a support
    person.
  • People with mental health and intellectual
    disabilities have the right to make bad decisions
    just like everyone else

12
Right to make own decisions
  • R v. DAI Supreme Court of Canada
  • Young woman with intellectual disability advised
    teachers and police that she was victim of sexual
    assault
  • In court, person who does not swear an oath can
    communicate the evidence on a promise to tell the
    truth
  • At trial the judge forced the victim to explain
    abstract concepts of truth and lies and when
    she could not through out her evidence.
  • This was common occurrence.
  • Supreme Court of Canada said
  • Persons with mental disabilities are not required
    to meet a more onerous test than any other
    witness before they are even allowed to take the
    stand. If a witness can describe what happened to
    her she can testify after saying that she
    promises to tell the truth.
  • Also notes that the questioning of mentally
    disabled adults may require accommodation or
    individualized supports so that their evidence is
    best communicated in court.

13
Use of Technology
  • Jodhan v. Attorney General of Canada
  • Woman with vision disability could not access
    on-line government information and could not
    apply for jobs through the required job bank
    portal because governments computer code was not
    compatible with very basic screen reading
    software
  • Federal government appealed to Federal Court of
    Appeal and argued
  • Ms. Jodhan still had access to all the
    information because she could go down to a
    government office to make a request, could fax in
    job application, could order paper copies of
    documents (remember she is legally blind!)

14
Use of Technology
  • Government lost
  • Court understood that having to make in person
    applications or requests what not equal access
  • Her application would not be considered in same
    manner as others
  • Unlike others who can access information from
    home at any time, she was constrained by having
    to go through government offices

15
Right to have disability needs accommodated to
allow for full participation
  • Moore v B.C. Ministry of Education Supreme Court
    of Canada
  • When Jeffrey Moore was in Grade 3 he was found to
    have a Learning Disability
  • It was recommended that he attend a Diagnostic
    Centre run by school board for remedial literacy
    program
  • Just as he was to go, school board closed the
    Centre and did not put a similar program in place
  • Jeffrey ended up at a private school for the
    remainder of school as it was believed he would
    never learn to read in public system
  • It took almost 18 years to reach Supreme Court of
    Canada

16
Right to have disability needs accommodated to
allow for full participation
  • Moore v B.C. Ministry of Education Supreme Court
    of Canada
  • Supreme Court of Canada found
  • School board had discriminated against Jeffrey as
    a student with a disability by failing to provide
    him with an education that was to be available to
    all children, failed to provide him with the
    opportunity to reach full potential which was the
    objective of education
  • Accommodations of people with disabilities are
    not mere luxuries
  • Accommodations cannot be determined on mere
    efficiencies
  • When school board decided to make budget cuts it
    discriminated against students with disabilities
    in failing to consider the discriminatory impact
    of its decisions
  • Ordered school board to pay all private school
    fees
  • Ordered all legal costs of parents from the
    beginning to be paid by board

16
17
Convention on the Rights of Persons with
Disabilities (CRPD)
  • CRPD came into effect May 2008
  • Canada has ratified meaning Canada can be held
    accountable for violation of the provisions
    mentioned in the Convention
  • Canada has not implemented the Convention which
    means it does not consider the Convention to be
    law in Canada
  • Very important document to people with
    disabilities both for its substance and because
    of the way it was developed
  • Disability rights organizations ensured a role
    for disabled people and their organizations in
    the implementation and monitoring of what became
    the Convention.

17
18
Convention on the Rights of Persons with
Disabilities (CRPD)
  • Contains positive rights
  • live independently and participate fully in all
    aspects of life
  • equal recognition before law and
  • legal capacity of the persons with disabilities
  • guaranteed the right to inclusive education at
    all levels
  • full and effective participation and inclusion in
    society
  • Recognizes the importance of technology to people
    with disabilities

18
19
ONTARIO HUMAN RIGHTS CODE
  • Ontario Human Rights Code imposes duties on
    service providers such as community care workers,
    legal clinics, doctors, business etc to
    accommodate the needs of people with disabilities
    to the point of undue hardship.
  • Definition of Accommodations
  • Accommodations are changes that are made or
    things that are put in place to stop or prevent
    discrimination
  • Accommodations are steps taken so that the person
    with a disability is not disadvantaged and can
    be fully included

19
20
ONTARIO HUMAN RIGHTS CODE
  • Examples of Accommodations
  • Instead of refusing the job to a person who does
    not use a keyboard or mouse to type, find out
    what kind of tools they need to do the job in
    their own way
  • Instead of making the person with the wheel chair
    sit at very front or very back of movie theatre
    have a way to remove a chair so that she can sit
    with her friends
  • Allow a person to direct his care by using a
    symbol board or other device
  • Accessible websites, documents, communicate in
    ASL,

20
21
ACCESSIBILITY FOR ONTARIANS WITH DISABILITIES ACT
(AODA)
  • Customer Services Standard
  • Establish policies on service that promote the
    dignity, integration and equality of opportunity.
  • Establish a policy about the use of assistive
    devices
  • Communicate with a person with a disability in a
    manner that takes into account his or her
    disability.
  • Permit the use of service animals or support
    persons, and provide notice of cost of admission
    for support person
  • Train all persons policies, practices and
    procedures, Establish and provide for a
    feedback process,

22
ACCESSIBILITY FOR ONTARIANS WITH DISABILITIES ACT
(AODA)
  • INTEGRATED STANDARD
  • Information and Technology
  • Information in accessible formats
  • Websites Accessible
  • Employment
  • Must accommodate in recruitment, in job setting,
    develop individual accommodation plans
  • Must have return to work process
  • Must consider disability in job reviews

23
ACCESSIBILITY FOR ONTARIANS WITH DISABILITIES ACT
(AODA)
  • INTEGRATED STANDARD
  • Transportation
  • Training of employees
  • Fare charges
  • Use of Assistive Device
  • Alternative stops
  • Specification in vehicles
  • Stop announcements, lighting, grab bars etc.
  • All Standards have different application
    depending on size or organization
  • Most not in effect until 2014
  • Lots of good information at AccessON website

24
Status of Passport and Special Services at Home
Funding
  • In the past, some adults with a developmental
    disability received funding under the Special
    Services at Home (SSAH) Program.
  • Starting April 1, 2012, SSAH is for children
    only.
  • Adults with a developmental disability (or their
    families) who received SSAH funding are now
    supported entirely through the Passport program.
  • If you received SSAH funding in 2011-2012
  • You do not have to apply for funding in
    2012-2013.
  • You will automatically receive the same amount of
    money you received in 2011-2012.
  • The money you receive in 2012-2013 will be under
    the Passport program, not SSAH.
  • You can use your Passport funding in the same
    ways you used your SSAH funding.
  • There are 12 Passport offices across Ontario. If
    you have any questions, contact the one nearest
    you.

24
25
Status of Passport and Special Services at Home
Funding
  • Government stated reasons for changing Passport
  • Having a single direct funding program for adults
    with a developmental disability will make it
    easier for them to apply for services and
    supports.
  • Whats next
  • Government says it is expanding the Passport
    guidelines to cover a broader range of services.
  • Government says it will be introducing changes
    over the course of the next year.
  • Government has stated that before they make
    further changes, they will consult with
    recipients and their families, as well as
    Passport agencies.

25
26
For more Info on Passport and Special Services at
Home
  • SSAH Provincial Coalition http//www.ssahcoalitio
    n.ca to learn more about SSAH, resources and
    connect with families.
  • Individualized Funding Coalition for Ontario
    http//www.individualizedfunding.ca to learn more
    about individualized funding and supports that
    work. SSAH is one form.
  • Family Alliance Ontario http//www.family-allia
    nce.com to locate regional family networks,
    resources and connect with families.
  •  

26
27
  • THANKS

27
28
SCENARIO ONE
  • You are a person who uses a wheel chair for
    mobility. You see a job ad that states drivers
    licence required. You do not drive. You also
    learn that interviews will be held in a building
    that has three steps and no ramp to its entrance.
  • What can you do. You think you are very
    qualified for the job.

29
SCENARIO TWO
  • You work at a youth drop-in centre. You have
    drop in and chat sessions every Tuesday at
    430. On Thursday a young woman who is deaf comes
    to ask about the drop in. None of the employees
    speak ASL. What should the drop-in centre do?
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