Thank you very much, Mr. Chair.
This amendment seeks to enshrine in legislation the requirement for the citizenship process to adequately accommodate individuals with disabilities.
We've heard from a number of organizations on this issue, including the Canadian Council for Refugees, the ARCH Disability Law Centre, and the Ontario Council of Agencies Serving Immigrants. The goal here is to clarify the requirement of duty to accommodate those with disabilities as they navigate the citizenship system.
Currently, vague wording of required proof and discretion around accommodation can lead to individuals who would otherwise be able to become Canadian citizens being denied due to a lack of accommodation of their disability. Throughout Canada, in most aspects of society, there is a duty to accommodate up to the point that it causes undue hardship on the accommodating entity, and this should be extended to the citizenship process, Mr. Chair.
To quote the Canadian Council for Refugees:
The current Act, Regulations and practice are quite limiting with respect to applicants with disabilities. The language and knowledge requirements for citizenship prioritize those eligibility criteria over and above other meaningful indicia of civic participation and result in a discriminatory effect. They impose an extra burden on applicants who cannot demonstrate those two criteria because of a disability.
Accommodations for applicants with disabilities are addressed through waivers by the Minister on compassionate grounds, provided for at section 5(3) of the Citizenship Act. Given that exemptions are by law a matter of discretion, rather than of right, there are no clear rules. Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship Canada...provides some guidance for deaf or visually impaired applicants to be exempted from these requirements, but the process and additional cost is burdensome. Apart from hearing loss, the instructions do not give precise information about what evidence of a disability should be submitted.
I think these are important considerations. They are sound reasons. We don't want to create barriers for people with disabilities to access citizenship. This is along the lines of what Ms. May was trying to address.
My amendment states clearly:
For the purposes of this section, if an applicant for citizenship is a disabled person, the Minister shall take the measures that are necessary to accommodate the needs of that person.
To that end, Mr. Chair, I move this motion, NDP-6, reference number 8214636.