There's some money involved in this. The problem, at least in our experience in the United States, is the way the agencies are organized.
First of all, the disability community competes. We've broken it up. You have people who work with autism, people who work with deaf people, and so on. They all view themselves as competitors because they believe it's a world of scarcity.
We were fortunate to start off with. We came across an agency and we said, “We're going to hire 200 people.” They had never placed more than 13 in a year. That was kind of a surprise to us. We said, “You have to form a coalition with all the other groups out there, because we're not going to deal with 14 different groups. You have to be the one to do all these things because we don't understand all this stuff.”
If you look out there and you throw this pile of money into the community, how is it going to be used? Can somebody do it like that?
We were fortunate in South Carolina. We were fortunate in Connecticut, but in a lot of other states we were not. Surprisingly, once you get an employer to even consider this...and to get them to consider it you need to say that it's not going to cost them more money and that they're not going to have to become disability experts. Why would they change if it were going to cost them?
Take that mindset, and ask how you are organized to be able to address an employer that way. I don't think it's happening anywhere. It's a problem we have in the U.S., and I suspect you have it in Canada too.