Thank you very much.
Speaking to my main motion, on Ms. Rempel's question, what are some of the examples where a person with a disability would require some form of accommodation? It was pointed out by Jennifer Stone, one of the witnesses from CCR, that those with cognitive or learning disabilities can currently ask for a waiver from the language or knowledge eligibility criteria on compassionate grounds, and they feel this is a framework at odds with well-established human rights principles as it pertains to citizenship.
Often in the case of disability some of it is visible and other aspects not so much, and those individuals whose disabilities are not visible often run into all sorts of barriers. This is meant to accommodate those individuals.
The examples that were outlined by the officials clearly speak to the disabilities that we can all see and identify with, but it does not address others who may have hidden disabilities.