Top of page
Education and Employment

Canada creates Disability Inclusion Business Council to improve workplace accessibility

woman in a wheelchair past the security gate in the office

Approximately 2.2 million working age Canadians with disabilities are employed, and an additional 645,000, who are not employed and not in school, have the potential to work1 and could help fill vacant job positions across the country. Persons with disabilities are disproportionately underrepresented in the labour force and face a range of physical, attitudinal, and institutional barriers that prevent access to the workforce. For these reasons, as part of its Disability Inclusion Action Plan (DIAP), the Government of Canada is taking action to increase accessibility and inclusion in Canadian businesses and workplaces.

Minister of Employment, Workforce Development and Disability Inclusion, Carla Qualtrough, announced the creation of a Disability Inclusion Business Council (DIBC), and met with Council members virtually on the evening of December 6, 2022, at their inaugural meeting. The DIBC is made up of business leaders from a wide array of sectors across the country, who are dedicated to promoting cultural change on disability inclusion in the workplace.

The Council includes the following members:

  • Paul Clark, co-chair (TD Bank Group),
  • Anita Huberman, co-chair (Surrey Board of Trade, representing the Canadian Chamber of Commerce network)
  • Jad Shimaly (EY Canada)
  • Naveed Irshad (Manulife Canada)
  • Tamara Vrooman (Vancouver Airport Authority)
  • Stephen Liptrap (Former CEO of Lifeworks)
  • Karl Blackburn (Conseil du patronat du Québec)
  • Andy Canham (SAP Canada)
  • Diane Brisebois (Retail Council of Canada)
  • Dave McCann (IBM Canada)

As a supporting element of the Employment pillar of the DIAP, these senior business leaders form a Council that will:

  • provide a final report detailing advice and recommendations to the Minister on how to improve workplace inclusivity and support for Canadian businesses to become more disability confident and inclusive of persons with disabilities; and,
  • incubate, design and launch a pan-Canadian independent disability business network by late 2023, which is led by and for employers.

You might also like

Woman Working in Textile Factory Smiling Woman Working in Textile Factory Smiling

ILO urges stronger social protection amid shifting world of work

A new International Labour Organization (ILO) report calls for a…

two kids with smiling in the classroom two kids with smiling in the classroom

Fiji Human Rights Commission issues final deadline for disability study

The Fiji Human Rights and Anti-Discrimination Commission (FHRADC) has issued…

A disabled child in a wheelchair being cared for by a care worker A disabled child in a wheelchair being cared for by a care worker

New Zealand lifts purchasing rules for disability support

People with disabilities with flexible funding will gain more choice…

young woman in wheelchair with colleagues working in office young woman in wheelchair with colleagues working in office

UK introduces mandatory ethnicity and disability pay gap reporting

Minority ethnic groups and people with disabilities are to benefit…