You could use a couple of different lenses to answer that question, and one is a lens around accommodation. Would Canada Post then be making accommodations to have a specialized service for people with disabilities? Yes, that would be the case, but if you really look at it from an equal rights perspective, the door-to-door service allows people with disabilities to have the same service as anybody else who receives door-to-door service. Then there is no singling out of a group of people; there's no special sign that you have to put on your house; there's no special application that you have to go through to get the service. It's the same service as everybody else. That's what equal rights are, so that people have the same rights as everybody else.
On October 5th, 2016. See this statement in context.