logo
What people with disabilities want to hear from party leaders in this election

What people with disabilities want to hear from party leaders in this election

CBC16-04-2025
Election Day is less than two weeks away, but Rowena Edwards is still unsure who she should vote for.
"Honestly, I don't like any candidates," the 63-year-old told CBC News through an email interview.
Edwards is one of more than eight million Canadians living with a disability. She says she spends around 20 hours a day in a hospital bed at home in Sherwood Park, Alta. — by herself and unable to work.
She said she feels forgotten by Canada's federal party leaders.
"Our leaders don't even think about us," she said. "I have no faith that things will change for us."
She's not the only person who feels that way. Disability activist and retired lawyer David Lepofsky, who is blind, told CBC News people with disabilities are victims of a "vicious cycle that muzzles their voice."
Lepofsky says Canada is "miles behind" other countries when it comes to disability support programs and accessibility. And while U.S. tariffs are understandably an important issue in this year's federal election, he says it's not the only one.
"The next government that takes power after this election in Ottawa is gonna be mandated to govern for four years," he said. "Not just about tariff barriers, but about all barriers, including those which impede people with disabilities from equal opportunity in our society."
"There's no good reason why our politicians shouldn't be answering what they would do to tear those barriers down," said Lepofsky, who is also chair of the Accessibility for Ontarians with Disabilities Act (AODA) Alliance.
More disability benefits
Last week, Lepofsky hosted a debate to hear what the federal parties were promising in this election.
Candidates from the Liberal, NDP and Green parties — but not the Conservatives — attended the debate.
"We're looking for real concrete commitments from all the politicians and all the parties on key issues that matter to over eight million people with disabilities and everyone else in Canada who's gonna get a disability later in life," he said.
I wish each candidate had to live our lives for one week, only then do I believe things would change​​​​​ -Rowena Edwards
Part of that includes improving on the Canada Disability Benefit (CDB) Act, which came into effect in 2024. The act established the CDB, which gives working-age, low-income people with disabilities up to $200 a month if they qualify — a "paltry" amount, according to Lepofsky.
"People with disabilities don't just have the cost of living that everybody else has," he said. "There are added costs associated with living with a disability, possibly getting supports or expensive technology or services."
Even if you factor in provincial support plans, Lepofsky says people with disabilities are going to be left "languishing in poverty."
"For example, a person with a disability in Ontario, if they're living in poverty, can qualify for the Ontario Disability Support Plan," he said. "It will give an individual a maximum of … under $1,400 a month. The poverty line is over $2,000 a month."
"The paltry $200 a month maximum [of the new CDB] … is not going to lift the vast majority of impoverished people with disabilities," he said.
This is a greater challenge for people with disabilities who can't work, such as Edwards.
She says her disability income for 2024 was just over $22,000, which she mainly uses on rising grocery costs and hired labour. She said she often has to keep her meals between a dollar or two, and set her thermostat to just 14 C on winter days "because I can't afford the heating bills."
"It's been years since I bought a steak, even though I dream about having one, but I can't justify spending the money," she said.
That's why some advocates are calling for an increase in benefit payments, by "$1,000 to $2,000 a month, at least," said the Disability Justice Network of Ontario's Brad Evoy.
"An extra thousand [dollars] a month would be life-changing," Edwards said. "Maybe I could have my heat at 16 next winter, what a luxury that would be."
Furthermore, most disability benefits have an end date at age 65, including the CDB and Canada Pension Plan disability benefits.
Some benefits may kick in at that stage, like the Old Age Security (OAS) pension. OAS eligibility isn't determined by employment history, but it is determined by how long a person has lived in Canada after the age of 18.
Still, some people are concerned about losing CBD and provincial benefits when they turn 65.
"Don't kick us off of disability when we reach 65," she said. "We are still disabled. This is extremely important and this part of the system has definitely failed us."
Streamlining appliations
Disability activists also want to see politicians streamline the benefit application process.
Since she first started having disability difficulties in 2011, Edwards has moved from Alberta to British Columbia and then back to Alberta.
She said it took her four to five years to get an official diagnosis due to the difficulty of the application process.
And even when she got on B.C.'s provincial benefits, she had to start the whole process again when applying for federal benefits.
"Once you are on provincial disability, you must apply for federal disability and start the whole process over, with it again being very difficult to get accepted," she said.
"And what needs to change is there is no interprovincial acceptance. So when I moved back to Alberta in 2022, I had to apply for a third time on [the Assured Income for the Severely Handicapped program]."
Lepofsky says he predicted this problem when the CDB was before the House of Commons in 2024. He said disability organizations asked that "anyone who qualifies for disability benefits should automatically qualify for the federal top-up to those benefits."
"That's not what Parliament did. Instead, they restricted the Canada Disability Benefit to the very problematic qualifications and bureaucratic way to qualify for the narrow Canada Disability Tax Credit," he said.
"So they've set up a legal barrier to people who are in poverty, who need the Canada Disability Benefit, and a process that costs money potentially to even apply for it. It's a catch-22."
WATCH | During Ontario's election, disability advocates called for accessible polling stations:
Accessibility at voting centres needs to be prioritized, disability advocates say
2 months ago
Duration 2:12
Taking the pledge
With just weeks to go until Election Day, Lepofsky is calling on all parties to make the Accessible Canada Pledge, which he says would tackle a significant number of barriers impacting Canadians with disabilities.
"So far, the only party that's answered us and commendably made the Accessible Canada Pledge is the Green Party," he said. "It's time for the other four candidates for prime minister to step up to the plate and to show us that people with disabilities in Canada matter too."
But Edwards says she has little faith in things changing for the better for people with disabilities post-election.
"I wish each candidate had to live our lives for one week, only then do I believe things would change," she said.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Waning cross-border travel hurting Canada's already beleaguered duty-free industry
Waning cross-border travel hurting Canada's already beleaguered duty-free industry

Vancouver Sun

timean hour ago

  • Vancouver Sun

Waning cross-border travel hurting Canada's already beleaguered duty-free industry

John Slipp took over his father's duty-free store in 1994, which had been started more than a decade earlier. This month, he closed the Woodstock Duty Free Shop Inc. as lower traffic at the U.S.-Canada border dealt the final blow to a business already weakened by the COVID-19 pandemic. Now, at 59, Slipp says he will have to find another source of income and is advocating for more government support for stores like his. Fewer Canadians have been heading south in recent months in response to U.S. President Donald Trump's trade war with Canada, his comments about annexing the country and because of fears among travellers about treatment at the border. In the duty-free industry, Slipp said less border traffic directly correlates to fewer sales. Start your day with a roundup of B.C.-focused news and opinion. By signing up you consent to receive the above newsletter from Postmedia Network Inc. A welcome email is on its way. If you don't see it, please check your junk folder. The next issue of Sunrise will soon be in your inbox. Please try again Interested in more newsletters? Browse here. 'It was very difficult. The business had many good years. I certainly didn't want to be in the position of calling an end to a business career, giving up, calling it quits, both personally and in terms of my late father,' Slipp said. At the store's peak in the early 2000s, Slipp said there were about 15 people on staff. In March 2020, he said he laid off four people and reopened after the pandemic with two employees. Late in the summer of 2021, Slipp said duty-free stores were 'all starting from zero to rebuild again.' By the end of 2024, his business was still down about one-fifth from where it was in 2019. Then Trump returned to the White House. From January to April this year, things got worse for Slipp's store, and he ultimately decided to close based on declining sales and traffic numbers. 'Just realizing that even after the U.S. administration changes down the road, in our industry, we do not expect the border traffic to change overnight as a result of that. We believe it's going to take years,' he said. Recent figures from Statistics Canada noted that return trips from the U.S. dropped again in July as Canadians continue to shun travel to the U.S. The number of Canadian residents returning from the U.S. by automobile was down 36.9 per cent on an annual basis in July, marking the seventh consecutive month of year-over-year declines. Barbara Barrett, executive director of the Frontier Duty Free Association, said the stores her association represents have been feeling the decline in traffic for months. 'I would describe our industry as being in a full-blown crisis, and we've been saying that for a number of months now,' she said. Sales at duty-free stores have fallen between 40 and 50 per cent year-over-year across the country since late January, with some remote crossings reporting annual declines of up to 80 per cent, the association said. Barrett added that duty-free stores are often a microcosm of what is happening at the border. 'This should be our busy season during the summer, but it is not; it is pandemic-level traffic in the parking lots, and it has led to one store closing in the east. We are unfortunately afraid that we will likely see more closures as we draw to the end of the summer,' she said. Unlike airport stores, which are often owned by international companies, Barrett noted all of the land border stores are independently owned and are often family-run businesses. While Canadians shun U.S. trips, travel expert Claire Newell said many are opting for domestic and other international destinations. 'We live in a country where it's still very expensive to travel domestically. And while there are many people who are choosing to travel within Canada, we also see more people heading to popular destinations,' she said. She said she doesn't see Canadians changing their travel habits back to normal until there is a trade deal 'that feels fair.' As lower border traffic weighs on the industry, Barrett said she is advocating for 'small regulatory changes.' 'We have some taxes on our products that, believe it or not, in a tax- and duty-free industry that our U.S. competitors don't have. So we're asking for those to be changed so we can be more competitive,' she said. 'Also, we're asking to qualify for some of these tariff relief programs or pandemic-level supports along the lines of what they did during the pandemic with wage subsidy or rent subsidy.' Barrett said the government is the landlord for many duty-free stores and said a rent deferral or subsidy would help the industry until travel patterns normalize. She added that there have been conversations between her organization and senior government officials. Barrett said those officials agreed the association was putting forward 'small asks' to support the industry. An Aug. 2 release announcing the Woodstock Duty Free Shop's closure mentioned that the federal and provincial governments had promised tariff relief support programs to help businesses impacted by trade tensions. 'I pinned a lot of hopes on those when both levels of government made those announcements. I was reminded of the pandemic support programs,' Slipp said, adding that his business had benefited from such programs. His attention has now turned to advocating for rent deferral programs for duty-free shops renting land from either the federal government or from a bridge authority as well as loan programs for duty-free stores. When he looks at the future of the industry, he said the prospects 'are not bright.' 'I'm grieving the loss of my business, but I'm also accepting the reality that the business environment has changed and there is nothing in the bag of tricks that would suggest positive changes in this industry in the short to medium term,' Slipp said. 'I'm feeling bad that I was not able to succeed in the end and that I am having to lay to rest this business that my father and I have built and spent so many years working so hard on.' Our website is the place for the latest breaking news, exclusive scoops, longreads and provocative commentary. Please bookmark and sign up for our daily newsletter, Posted, here .

Lawyer insists foreign adversary is behind Canadian diplomats' Havana Syndrome
Lawyer insists foreign adversary is behind Canadian diplomats' Havana Syndrome

Edmonton Journal

timean hour ago

  • Edmonton Journal

Lawyer insists foreign adversary is behind Canadian diplomats' Havana Syndrome

Article content A lawyer for Canadian diplomats and their families says he believes the mysterious ailments they suffered in Cuba were caused by a foreign adversary, despite a federal government report that dismisses the theory. Article content Eight years after foreign service officials and their dependants began reporting such symptoms as headaches, memory loss, mood changes, vision problems, nausea and nosebleeds, a legal action against Ottawa over the health problems is still grinding along in Federal Court. Article content Article content Article content The 17 plaintiffs, who seek millions of dollars in damages, allege the Canadian government failed to protect them, hid crucial information and downplayed the seriousness of the risks. The government has denied negligence and wrongdoing. Article content Article content A Global Affairs Canada report completed in August 2024 says the department has concluded that the unexplained health incidents 'were not the result of a malicious act of a foreign actor.' Article content The report, drawing on the work of an interdepartmental task force and external experts, says pre-existing medical conditions, environmental factors and conventional illnesses 'were likely to have been important factors in many of the symptoms experienced.' Article content Article content The report adds that the findings 'do not cast doubt on the authenticity of the symptoms reported by staff members and their dependants.' Article content Article content Paul Miller, a lawyer for the plaintiffs, told The Canadian Press he is 'very confident' a foreign actor is to blame for the Canadians' health difficulties. Article content 'I really trust the people that I have spoken with and met with,' he said. Article content 'I have absolutely no faith in the (Global Affairs Canada) report because they are trying to put out the narrative that works for them.' Article content The plaintiffs' court action, filed in 2019, remains unresolved. Article content Three years ago, the parties agreed to the appointment of a former Supreme Court judge to mediate the claims of nine family members in the case. Article content Miller said the two days of talks in early 2023 'just went nowhere.' Article content He said he has made efforts to file new information in the case but the material is being treated as confidential pending the resolution of concerns about the disclosure of sensitive or potentially injurious information, as defined by the Canada Evidence Act.

The Bookless Club: What happened in Vegas for you?
The Bookless Club: What happened in Vegas for you?

Vancouver Sun

time5 hours ago

  • Vancouver Sun

The Bookless Club: What happened in Vegas for you?

Vegas is in the news of late. Not because of yet another Cirque de Soleil show or a star-studded line-up at the Sphere. Nope. Vegas is in the news because, despite perennially topping the list of holiday destinations in North America, traffic is down. Way down. We did that. Canadians. We're angry, and our anger is being felt. Measurably so. In fact, there's even a name for the effect of alienated tourists on tourism. They're calling it the Trump Slump, and it's putting the squeeze on Nevada's economy. Las Vegas hotel occupancy was down 15 per cent in June this year compared to June of 2024. International visitors dropped by 13 per cent in the same period. Air Canada saw a drop of 33 per cent in passengers flying to Vegas this June compared to last June. WestJet saw about the same stats, and Edmonton-based Flair Airline experienced a 62 per cent plummet in the number of people traveling to Vegas in June this year versus a year ago. A daily roundup of Opinion pieces from the Sun and beyond. By signing up you consent to receive the above newsletter from Postmedia Network Inc. A welcome email is on its way. If you don't see it, please check your junk folder. The next issue of Informed Opinion will soon be in your inbox. Please try again Interested in more newsletters? Browse here. All this means that unemployment is spiralling upwards in the state. Las Vegas has the third-highest unemployment rate of major cities in the U.S., and Nevada has the highest state unemployment rate, nationally. Now, it's not just Canadians impacting the Nevada economy. California is Vegas' bread and butter. One out of every five people who visit Vegas come from Southern California. One quarter of all employees in Vegas are immigrants. Some industry insiders say that Immigration and Customs Enforcement raids are casting a long shadow on tourism, a shadow felt by both visitors and workers alike. We haven't even touched upon currency issues, but it wasn't so long ago that Vegas offered such good value that currency conversion was offset by cheap buffets and free drinks. All that's gone now. Vegas is anything but a bargain. In its heyday, Vegas was a swift, affordable little getaway. A couple of hours on a direct flight took you to reliable weather and great shows. What's not to like? I can say that as my losses at the tables probably never totalled more than $14.67, but it was sure fun watching the high rollers sweating behind a stack of chips. The trouble is, there are fewer and fewer high rollers. Realizing this, the Las Vegas Convention and Visitor Authority decided back in 2003 that they needed to rebrand Vegas as more than just a place to lose money. The idea became to capitalize on the sort of hijinks that adults can get into when they're a long way from home. That idea became the now infamous slogan, 'What happens in Vegas, stays in Vegas'. The ad agency that came up with this line said the concept was all about 'adult freedom and empowerment.' They were using the word 'adult' here in its loosest, third margarita, sense. The big question in Nevada is, when the Trump Slump ends, will things go back to business as usual? If not, what sort of bait are they going to need to lure us back? Jane Macdougall is a freelance writer and former National Post columnist who lives in Vancouver. She writes The Bookless Club every Saturday online and in The Vancouver Sun. For more of what Jane's up to, check out her website, Question: What happened in Vegas for you? Any stories you can share? Send your answers by email text, not an attachment, in 100 words or less, along with your full name to Jane at thebooklessclub@ . We will print some next week in this space. Question: Do you compost? Any tips? • We have weekly pickup of our yard waste/compost bins. I insist on layering in my bin, starting with yard trimmings, then compost, then yard trimmings, etc. I reserve a bucket or so of spare yard trimmings for using in winter when there is less of it available. Layering helps control the mess and odours, especially when the weather is hot. This also helps deter the local raccoons from dumping and looting the bin. Pam Holley • I live on the Sunshine Coast where we have a local company called Salish Soils that runs the curb-side green bin program. They turn our kitchen scraps and green waste into wonderful garden compost products. I was shocked to hear from them that they have to 'divert' a lot of the green bin contents (which means place in the dump) due to those pesky little plastic stickers that retailers insist on attaching to fruit and vegetable skins. The labels do not biodegrade, and contaminate the process. So, wherever you live, please be sure to remove those annoying plastic labels from all products before placing them in your compost bin. Mother Nature thanks you. Michele Libling • Maybe a bit off the topic, but important to me. Composting is important, but can be messy at times. And what to do with the grease, oil, bones, and fruit stickers? My solution would be selective composting, all the rest, including garbage and non-recyclables, would be incinerated. It may produce some toxic waste, but so do all other forms of disposal. Added benefit would be energy to heat our homes. Henk Hengeveld • In 1973, we purchased our property in Surrey. That is when I began having a five-gallon bucket in our lunchroom at work. On Saturdays, we would travel out to our property and deposit the compost in our organic pile. After our house was built and our company expanded, I had two five-gallon buckets each week. Now, 52 years later, I still have two or three piles on the go. I mix finished compost, garden soil, leaf mould and wood ashes to create my potting soil. Do not add meat, bones or cooked food to your compost. We utilize a milk jug, sitting near the sink, with the top cut off, to collect all our organics. Feed the soil and the soil will feed you. Robert Dares • I sometimes make my own bone meal for the garden. I've been known to save up chicken bones and then dessicate them when running the oven for dinner. The dried bones then get smashed with a hammer — wear goggles — and added to the soil. Works a charm and doesn't cost a cent. D. Ng • I have a bowl on the counter for scraps when preparing a meal. Then it all goes into a recycled lunch paper bag in the freezer. When that is full, off to the bin from the city that we apartment dwellers have. I miss my old house with a big composter. But as someone who started composting in the 1960s (my dad grew up in small northern Ontario sawmill villages where nobody wasted food), I can't imagine not composting. Deni Loubert

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store