Ontario selects two from U of T Scarborough for key roles on accessibility

David Onley at the Toronto Pan Am Sports Centre
The Hon. David Onley has been appointed to lead a review of the Accessibility for Ontarians with Disabilities Act (AODA). (Photo by Ken Jones)

Ontario has appointed the Hon. David Onley, CM, O.Ont., senior lecturer in the Department of Political Science at the University of Toronto Scarborough and Ontario’s 28th Lieutenant Governor, to lead a review of the Accessibility for Ontarians with Disabilities Act (AODA).

The AODA’s goal is to make Ontario accessible for people with disabilities by 2025, helping build a fair society in which everyone can contribute their skills to our economy. Section 41 of the Act calls for a comprehensive review of the legislation and its effectiveness every few years.  The review includes consulting with the public, in particular people with disabilities, in order to make recommendations.

This will be the third legislative review. Charles Beer, former minister of community and social services, conducted the first review in 2009-10; Mayo Moran, former dean of the U of T Faculty of Law, led the second review.

“It’s an honour to be asked to undertake this Legislative Review of the AODA,” says Onley. “True accessibility occurs only when disabled people can completely participate in all aspects of social, cultural and economic life, when people can achieve their full potential. That is the aim of the AODA, a truly ambitious piece of legislation.”

Since the Act was unanimously passed, standards have been developed in five key areas: customer service; information and communications; employment; transportation; and the design of public spaces. Onley notes that this next review comes with the shift to a more mature phase of AODA’s implementation, and as the federal and international landscape has also changed significantly. In addition to upcoming federal accessibility legislation, Ontario is currently developing standards for health and for education.

U of T Scarborough Director of AccessAbility Services Tina Doyle will chair the Government of Ontario’s new Education Standards Development Committee for Post-Secondary Education, which is charged with recommending new guidelines as part of the Integrated Accessibility Standards Regulation. Doyle previously served as chair of the Inter-University Disability Issues Association and is currently a participant on the Ministry of Advanced Education and Skills Development’s Financial Aid Working Group.

“Both David and Tina are dedicated and well-respected champions for accessibility,” says Professor Bruce Kidd, University of Toronto vice-president and principal, U of T Scarborough. “We’re proud that they have been invited to serve Ontarians’ aims for equity and inclusivity.”

The AODA uses the same definition of disability as the Ontario Human Rights Code, which includes both visible and non-visible disabilities.

About 1.85 million people in Ontario have a disability—that’s one in seven people or more than 15 per cent of the population and more than 40 per cent of those over age 65. As the population ages the number will rise to one in every five Ontarians. More than half of the population has a friend or loved one with a disability.