Accessibility advocates meet with Minister of Employment, Workforce Development and Disability Inclusion

Image of meeting screen of Minister of Employment, Workforce Development & Disability Inclusion

Last week, the Minister of Employment, Workforce Development and Disability Inclusion Carla Qualtrough met virtually with some exceptional advocates in Windsor-Essex for people with disabilities including the Law, Disability and Social Change Project (LDSC) at Windsor Law.

Led by Windsor Law Associate Dean (Research & Graduate Studies) Laverne Jacobs, who is also the LDSC Project Director, the LDSC group had seven Windsor Law students in attendance including third-year JD/MSW student, Deborah Willoughby.

“The opportunity to speak with Minister Qualtrough was encouraging as she underscored the importance of the research we are doing for the LDSC project and how it is contributing to real change in the community by providing accessible information,” says Willoughby. “Our discussions highlighted how our legal advocacy for accessibility can extend beyond law school in various exciting contexts as there is continuing work to be done.”

Dr. Jacobs adds: “The LDSC Student Researchers and I were grateful for the opportunity to meet with Minister Qualtrough. She had numerous, insightful experiences to share as both a lawyer and the minister responsible for improving disability inclusion in Canada."

The Minister was Introduced by Windsor-Tecumseh MP Irek Kusmierczyk, who also took the opportunity to engage in an informative discussion about a shared vision for potential in our community.

“It has been an absolute honour to serve as Minister Qualtrough’s Parliamentary Secretary, working hard to ensure all Canadians have the support they need to get through this pandemic,” says MP Kusmierczyk. “It was inspiring to hear Dr. Jacobs and law students reflect on their recently released Annotated Accessible Canada Act directly with the Minister responsible for crafting Canada’s first piece of national accessibility legislation.”

The meeting was part of a larger plan to build a strong Disability Inclusion Action Plan in Canada.

Read this story on the DailyNews website.