I'll start, and then Marianne can add to it.
There have been references to Ontario, Nova Scotia and Manitoba. They don't have employment equity acts, so the accessibility plan kind of makes sense. It doesn't make sense in the federal realm, because we have the Employment Equity Act, which has timelines and requirements that are very concrete about what should be in an employment equity plan.
To be clear, employment equity is about representation, promotions and retention. It is about getting people in, but it's also about removing barriers in the workplace. Sometimes people confuse that. They think it's about numbers, but it's not. It is about a cultural shift.
Our thought is to strengthen and make amendments to the Employment Equity Act. It hasn't been amended since 2002, so we have recommendations on how to make it better around accountability. Enforcement is a really big issue, and I think it is for this new legislation as well.
It just needs to be strengthened in the Employment Equity Act when it comes to employment. I'd point out that under the Employment Equity Act, the federal contractors program is also there. It covers that broader group as well, contracts that are coming in related to services and goods for the federal public service.
With regard to the conflict, the Canadian Human Rights Commission is also required to do audits on employment equity. You have this group already monitoring employment equity plans and things like that, and then you have this.... There is that sort of conflict, even though there's the accessibility commissioner and all these other things.
Treasury Board and the Public Service Commission are central agencies and in an ideal world they would be responsible, as employers, for the federal public service for the employment equity. They do annual reports to Parliament on employment equity. There needs to be more strengthened mechanisms.
I want to point out that the task force on diversity and inclusion, which I sat on, points out that employment equity is still very important. It's still a priority.
Our fear with this legislation is that the thought might be that we don't have to worry about employment equity anymore and we just have to do this. It's going to cause some tensions.
As we suggested in the beginning, the amendment is to take the employment piece, strengthen it into the Employment Equity Act, do the Employment Equity Act review, and strengthen areas around there.