Thank you very much for inviting CCRW to present to you today.
My name is Maureen Haan. I am the president and CEO of the Canadian Council on Rehabilitation and Work, and this is my colleague, Elizabeth Smith. She is the manager of the Ontario workplace inclusion program.
You have asked us here today because you've recognized that CCRW is the only national not-for-profit organization that supports people with disabilities in the achievement of their career goals and entry into the workforce. We believe in meaningful and equitable employment of persons with disabilities.
Carla came to CCRW after experiencing sudden vision loss that resulted in her inability to continue her work from her home-based company. She came to our Toronto program in 2010 after being referred to us by the CNIB with the following doubts: Who would hire me? What can I contribute as a blind person? How will I be able to make the commute to work?
Through her involvement with our Toronto program, Carla stated, “I learned how to manage disclosure and understand the accommodations I require. I experienced an increase in confidence and was able to focus on my skills and unique perspective.” Through her relationship with the CCRW Toronto job developer, Carla secured a challenging full-time internship position with Scotiabank that has led to full-time employment. In fact, Carla works in the diversity and inclusion team at Scotiabank, paving the way for others.
We tell you this tale of success to outline a few areas of CCRW's commitment. First is to engage private businesses to be champions of diversity issues while understanding that the disability component of diversity is not lost. Next is a collaboration within not-for-profits to benefit both clients that CCRW serves: job seekers with disabilities and employers. Job developers are crucial to ensuring employers obtain a labour force of appropriately skilled workers who have disabilities. Last, the training of employability or soft skills and accommodation for job seekers with disabilities is vital to success.
It is critical that the government continue to engage and empower organizations such as CCRW. To this end, we applaud the federal government in the following areas: continued provincial and federal funding for people with disabilities with an emphasis on employment; the recognition of the talent in this untapped labour force; the general growing recognition of the need to reform financial supports such as EI, ODSP, and CPPD; and the accepted labour market agreement for people with disabilities.
In all CCRW programs and services we have a dual client focus: employers and job seekers with disabilities. We recognize that both stakeholders must be involved to ensure the advancement of this labour force. This service structure allows us to have unique insights into the needs of both groups.
When working with the private sector, we engage employers in understanding how to hire and accommodate people with disabilities, which allows the private sector to step up to the plate and become champions. This is critical in ensuring the landscape changes, and barriers to hiring people with disabilities are removed.
To engage the private sector, it's imperative employers find the process of hiring people with disabilities to be easy, or at least not complicated. The impediments with complex wage subsidies, navigating multiple service providers, and understanding appropriate job accommodations dissuade business from recruiting qualified job seekers with disabilities. Cleaning up the system and appropriate education for employers is the key to this transformation.
Of course, the most important area to ensure continued successful relationships with the private sector is to get the right people into the right job. We have heard from employers that soft skills, or EQ, is the one aspect for which employers are unable to provide training, yet social exclusion often leaves people with disabilities without the understanding of workplace norms.
CCRW's approach to supporting job seekers is to ensure that being job ready includes addressing hygiene, workplace etiquette, disclosure of disability, and providing funding for work appropriate attire, which may include workboots, ties, and general clothing without holes. These small measures increase client confidence, which gets them in the door, at which point the right fit for the job can be appropriately measured and lead to employment.
At CCRW we also recognize that return to work goes beyond wage subsidy. We have internally changed viewing wage subsidy to training and accommodation for employers, but we feel it should be called that because it is not subsidized labour.
With this alteration in thinking, the expectation of on-the-job skills training will shift to be the responsibility of the employer, creating accountability and therefore buy-in from all parties. We strongly suggest a similar shift in thinking at the funding and policy levels of the government.
Time and time again employers have stated that a single point of entry would alleviate confusion created with multiple service providers. Not-for-profits are the best approach for this service delivery as our agencies are client based, not profit driven. CCRW, in fact, has been contacted by a U.S. collaborative of government, private, and not-for-profit to build a U.S.-Canada partnership around a national employment team, which is a national team of business consultants working directly with employers.
We have many ideas on how this can occur, citing progressive systems in both the U.S. and the U.K. We know that at first, employers are confused and apprehensive to hire people with disabilities, but when they experience success in hiring a qualified, motivated staff member, they are sold.
A single point of entry will help to alleviate the fear factor because there will be someone there, a corporate champion, to help work through the process. We recommend a subcommittee be formed to review the feasibility of establishing a single point of entry system based on information from the U.S. and the U.K. and modified to the uniqueness of Canadian needs.
To assist with accommodations, CCRW strongly suggests the establishment of a person with disabilities accommodation fund for small to medium-sized enterprises. Such a fund would allow relatively resource restrained small to medium-sized enterprises to hire new and qualified people with a disability, allowing them the financial flexibility needed to accommodate. The fund can be administered by HRSDC directly, or by contract to a not-for-profit organization working in the disability and employment sector.
To further engage the private sector, CCRW hosts business awards luncheons for businesses engaged in hiring people with disabilities through CCRW. In this model, businesses are recognized at an annual luncheon for best practices. Those in the private sector involved with the awards luncheons tell us that the recognition they receive is motivating, but the opportunity to meet and network with other like-minded employers is extremely valuable. The forum allows individuals to speak to each other on a peer-to-peer level while allowing the recognition of champions. From these luncheons, businesses are asked to sit on business advisory committees, providing a direct line of communication from local employers to the CCRW programs, which allows CCRW to respond quickly and accurately to current issues faced by businesses employing workers with disabilities.
While fundraising, sponsorship, donations, and funding partnerships are vital, many issues arise when funding is fragmented, and not-for-profits are being encouraged to rely on the private sector for funding. This dynamic becomes much more complicated when the private sector is a client.
In order to encourage a circle of support, trust needs to be developed between businesses and agencies serving this sector. Asking for funding in early days of developing this type of partnership does not encourage trust. Therefore, government funding is essential to not-for-profits to ensure the continued engagement of the private sector in the area of employment and disability.
A business case for hiring people with disabilities needs to be created by government and stakeholders, and advertised. As we know from the report, workers with disabilities are known to have a low turnover rate, and the cost of accommodation is far less than the cost of replacing a worker. We need to educate the private sector about this along with other important realities on hiring people with disabilities through large-scale advertising, employer engagement through working groups, peer-to-peer education, and the recognition of champions. The focus of information needs to be on the disability sector, which cannot be lost in the overarching diversity issues.
My closing comment is around collaboration within the not-for-profit sector. The current structure of competition of funding for not-for-profits needs to cease. Although this process works well for the private industry, pitting not-for-profits against each other creates a disservice to both of our clients: job seekers with disabilities and employers. To expect organizations in competition to then partner and work together becomes complicated. There is no base of trust.
Not-for-profits are worried about sharing their best practices in fear of losing contracts and other funding sources, and clients are unable to access all services available due to project funding constraints. A collaborative approach is recommended for government funding contracts with proven support from community agencies.
We all agree that partnerships work and are of the utmost importance to break down barriers to employment of people with disabilities. Therefore, with this vision, partnerships need to be encouraged as early as possible and entwined in the fabric of expectations, from service delivery to funding contracts.
Thank you.