One of the learnings the Alberta government had when they did their cutbacks in the nineties was that it was a false economy to cut back disability benefits. Over time they enhanced them greatly, and I think that is one very important thing.
People with disabilities, inasmuch as we consume resources, are also economic drivers. One hundred per cent of our income gets turned back into the economy. Employment is provided when people are hired to assist us. Whether it's as an employment aid or as a personal care aid in the providing of disability supports, it all creates jobs. That drives the economy, so it's an important thing.
You've said so many exciting things, and I'm hoping I capture them all.
With respect to Emploi-Québec, I have to say that DAWN Canada has utilized that resource. It is a model for Canada. Everyone should be doing it across the country. What happens in Emploi-Québec is that a person comes in with a disability, and it's determined, perhaps, that the person who's working with a disability is 60% disabled. They will fund the salary to 60% of what we would be paying. This allows us as an employer an opportunity to hire somebody with a disability whose effectiveness might be reduced, but there's a saving on the salary end. It's an excellent program, one that would be lovely to have across the country. You are right that even with that program it is very difficult for people to accrue enough benefits.
The other thing you talked about was physical housing, which is also a huge issue. I know there are other government programs addressing housing; we just need more of them.
One of the things that are terribly important is the amendment of the building code, which includes features for disabilities, encouraging, at the minimum, visitable housing—that is, certain structures that allow a house to be modified over time. But really, it's accessible housing by percentage: every development would have to have a certain percentage of accessible housing. This is really very important.
I was lucky enough—I always say I'm a princess with a disability—to have a home, a husband, and a vehicle. We were told, with our home, that if we modified the height of the cupboards it would devalue our home and we might have to come up with more down payment. I didn't have the ability to come up with more down payment. So basically, now I have beautiful, accessible cupboards at 39 inches high. That is one of the impacts that sometimes happen from this.
We were misquoted on the elevator that needs to go into the house. Now I can't get to my basement. Funding for accessibility is as much of a personal issue as it is for any other public building where accessibility is an issue.