Canada’s Disability Inclusion Action Plan

The 2022 to 2023 Disability Inclusion Action Plan update is available on the Disability Inclusion Action Plan: what we've accomplished - 2022 to 2023 annual update webpage.

Canada’s Disability Inclusion Action Plan is a comprehensive, whole-of-government approach to disability inclusion. It embeds disability considerations across our programs while identifying targeted investments in key areas to drive change. It builds on existing programs and measures that have sought to improve the inclusion of persons with disabilities, and establishes new and meaningful actions.

Guiding principles

Canada’s Disability Inclusion Action Plan is guided by the principles laid out in the Accessible Canada Act, including:

“Nothing Without Us”

Persons with disabilities need to be involved in the development and implementation of all government systems, policies, programs and services.

Human rights-based approach

Human rights principles need to guide the development and implementation of our systems, programs and processes, including the principles of equality, anti-discrimination, participation, and inclusion.

Intersectionality

Government systems, policies, programs and services must take into account:

Objectives

The Disability Inclusion Action Plan has 5 key objectives:

  1. improve the social and economic inclusion of persons with disabilities
  2. reduce poverty among persons with disabilities
  3. achieve the Accessible Canada Act goal of a barrier-free Canada by 2040
  4. develop a consistent approach to disability inclusion across the Government of Canada and make it easier for persons with disabilities to access federal programs and services, and
  5. foster a culture of disability inclusion

Read or download and print the full federal action plan

Alternate formats HTML

Actions

In concrete terms, the actions are organised under 4 mutually reinforcing pillars of action:

Pillar 1 – Financial security

Pillar 1 – Financial security will improve the immediate and long-term financial security of persons with disabilities and address long-standing financial exclusion and systemic inequities.

Pillar 2 – Employment

Pillar 2 – Employment will help:

  • more persons with disabilities find and keep good quality jobs, advance in their careers, or become entrepreneurs
  • employers make workplaces more inclusive and accessible, and
  • increase the capacity of individuals and organizations that work to support disability inclusion and accessibility

Pillar 3 – Accessible and inclusive communities

Pillar 3 – Accessible and inclusive communities will address physical, communication, and attitudinal barriers that prevent persons with disabilities from fully participating in our communities and the economy, including barriers in community buildings, public spaces and workplaces.

Pillar 4 – A modern approach to disability

Pillar 4 – A modern approach to disability will address:

  • the challenges that persons with disabilities face in accessing federal programs and benefits, and
  • will ensure that the needs and perspectives of persons with disabilities are reflected in the Government’s policies and programs

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