Nothing Without Us and the Accessible Canada Act
Canada flexes its accessibility superpower muscles by passing the Accessible Canada Act and beginning the campaign “Nothing Without Us”
Man wearing dark leather zippered jacket partially opened to reveal a Canadian flag t-shirt
As a Canadian, I couldn’t be prouder of Bill C-81, the Accessible Canada Act: An Act to Ensure a Barrier-free Canada, and the “Nothing Without Us” campaign. Even more proud that the bill passed unanimously — that doesn’t happen very often, and special note should be taken of that.
Accessible Canada Act — The Beginning
How did Canada do this? In a way, Canadians are well-known for — publicly, and fairly. It started with the Government of Canada consulting 6000 Canadians, holding 18 public hearings, and summarizing the findings in July 2016 in a report titled “Creating new national accessibility legislation: What we learned from Canadians”
Who is covered under the Accessible Canada Act?
Then, the Canadian Parliament unanimously passed the Accessible Canada Act, which applies to the following four groups of “regulated entities” :
Parliament, including the Senate, the House of Commons, the Library of Parliament, and the Parliamentary Protective Service (with some tailoring of compliance and enforcement provisions to respect parliamentary privilege);
the Government of Canada, including government departments, Crown Corporations, and agencies;
the federally regulated private sector, including organizations in the transportation sectors, broadcasting and telecommunications services, and the banking and financial sectors; and
the Canadian Forces and the Royal Canadian Mounted Police (RCMP), while allowing for considerations related to bona fide occupational requirements, such as certain physical requirements necessary in order to carry out certain jobs.
What is included in the Accessible Canada Act?
The Accessible Canada Act outlines how to identify and remove accessibility barriers and prevent new barriers, including:
Built environments (buildings and public spaces);
Employment (job opportunities and employment policies and practices);
Information and communication technologies (digital content and technologies used to access it);
Procurement of goods and services;
Delivering programs and services; and
Transportation (by air as well as by rail, ferry, and bus carriers that operate across a provincial or international border).
Nothing Without Us
Finally, last week during National AccessAbility Week, the Government of Canada launched its first-ever accessibility strategy for the Canadian public, setting the conditions to identify, prevent, and remove barriers in the workplace for persons with disabilities. This strategy, called “Nothing Without Us” is focused on:
improving recruitment, retention, and promotion of persons with disabilities
enhancing the accessibility of the built environment
making communications technology usable by all
equipping public servants to design and deliver accessible programs and services
building public service that is confidently accessible
The “Nothing Without Us” strategy will be reviewed in 2021.
What do all these things put together mean?
When you link these three components— in particular:
“Government of Canada” and “regulated private sector”;
employment, and;
procurement
It is unavoidably clear that, at least part of the intent of this legislation is to help more people with disabilities obtain and retain employment in the public sector and the private sector that is regulated by the government. This should naturally include software sold by anyone anywhere in the world to these types of organizations for covered Canadian employees’ use.
What is in the ACA?
Like the Americans with Disabilities Act, the ACA is really an extensible framework, and there are still many pieces that need to be set in place.
Perhaps, the most important of the six principles outlined in the ACA is the following:
Principle 6(f)
the development and revision of accessibility standards and the making of regulations must be done with the objective of achieving the highest level of accessibility for persons with disabilities.
The highest level of accessibility currently defined is WCAG 2.1 Level AAA (not AA). It will be interesting to see how this is interpreted as the office is set up and the framework filled in. Because passing bills through any government legislature is slow and difficult everywhere, the ACA framework allows things like standards to be set by executive administrators. This is super important for keeping forward momentum going as accessibility standards are evolving fairly quickly. For example, could Accessible Blockchain be included even though it is not specifically delineated in the ACA? I certainly hope so — banks are specifically identified as regulated entities so hopefully, when blockchain enters widespread use in Canada, it would come under these guidelines as well.
The ACA managed to learn from one of the most significant pitfalls of the ADA and ACA by defining an extremely detailed complaint process. It is highly doubtful that lawsuits would be a primary source of enforcement of this law by people with disabilities in Canada.
Conclusion
The next step for this bill is Royal Assent (which is typically a rubber stamp of approval, the big step was getting it approved by parliament).
In the meantime, companies doing business in Canada that are impacted by guidelines will need to develop an accessibility plan similar to AODA and really should start thinking about accessibility, if they haven’t done so already.
“Impacted by” is a much broader list than the government groups and “regulated entities.” Likely any company whether or not they are in Canada that *sells* to these organizations is “impacted by” the ACA since the regulations clearly call out protecting employees which presumably would include the software acquired for use in their jobs.
I haven’t found the updated version of the Act online yet (one that includes the Senate amendments). So far, I’ve only seen the version that was passed at the Third Reading in November 2018.
Canada has really taken a leap over the US and the EU in establishing these guidelines. I am excited to see this happening, and can’t wait to see more steps as the details start to fill in.