DABC's Presentation to the Special Committee on Passenger Directed Vehicles

On November 16th, 2023, DABC made a presentation to the Special Committee to Review Passenger Directed Vehicles.

DABC’s Cynthia Minh identified a number of issues that people with disabilities often face when accessing passenger directed vehicles:

  1. Passenger directed vehicle firms and services may not have enough training or understanding about disability or how to work with people with disabilities.  
  2. There is a lack of Wheelchair Accessible Vehicles (WAV), and not every firm offers these WAV options to people with disabilities.
  3. Passenger directed vehicle services can better communicate with people with disabilities regarding access needs.  
  4. Accessible vehicles may present feelings of concern around safety.
  5. People with disabilities can face additional costs when using passenger directed vehicles.  
  6. Ride Hailing vehicles may not be available for people without digital access.  
  7. Drivers with disabilities may also have access needs. 

DABC made a number of recommendations that could help address the issues identified above:

  1. Regulations around accessibility should be requisite for passenger directed vehicle companies and these regulations should be held to existing provincial and federal accessibility standards. 
  2. Workers should be well trained on accessibility issues and must take a trauma informed approach when interacting with passengers. Trainings should be supported by strong evaluation methods that ensures that knowledge gained does not end with training but is reflected in practice.  
  3. Workers should be protected under standards set by existing working and employment standards, with a disability lens in mind (E.g. better wage protection, work injury protection laws) 
  4. The extra costs around disability should not add financial burden to passengers. Costs should be made lower not higher for people with disabilities on lower incomes 
  5. There should be formal complaints procedures set in place to report any discrimination faced in passenger directed vehicle services 
  6. People with disabilities and disability organizations should be hired and included in the planning stages instead of just as external consultants  
  7. Plans need to implement universal design. Many times, policies are enacted and need to be modified after they are legislated to include accessibility. Ensuring universal design would allow accessibility considerations to be embedded within the beginning stages of service delivery.  

Read the full presentation here: Presentation to Special Committee to Review Passenger Directed Vehicles

We've updated our DTC online tool!

DABC has updated our Disability Tax Credit (DTC) online tool! The tool now more closely reflects the eligibility criteria and format of the updated application.

Check it out here: https://disabilityalliancebc.org/dtc-app/

This tool is designed to give your healthcare provider the information they need to fill out the DTC application.

We are also going to update the tool more substantially next year, after seeking feedback through a survey and possibly other methods.

National Day of Remembrance and Action on Violence Against Women

Thirty-four years ago today, on 6 December, 1989, 14 women were shot and killed while studying mechanical engineering at Montreal’s Ecole Polytechnique. An act of violence and misogyny took the lives, dreams and goals of Geneviève Bergeron, Hélène Colgan, Nathalie Croteau, Barbara Daigneault, Anne-Marie Edward, Maud Haviernick, Barbara Klucznik-Widajewicz, Maryse Laganière, Maryse Leclair, Anne-Marie Lemay, Sonia Pelletier, Michèle Richard, Anne St-Arneault and Annie Turcotte. Ten other women and 4 men were injured. DABC remembers these women and their surviving classmates. We will not forget them, and we and condemn all acts and expressions of gender-based violence.

Communities across Canada and BC are holding vigils in honor of these women, and Salal Sexual Violence Support Centre is hosting an online vigil today at 3:30 pm. Register here for the online vigil: https://tinyurl.com/3ss25n2v.