A Place at the Table: Our National Policy Goals

Following is a summary of our national policy goals.

Our full report will be online October 8 as a pdf. We will be sharing it with all party leaders and major policymakers.

Our National Mandate: End the systematic segregation of autistic people in Canada. Inclusion and dignity for all.

By 2022, we want:

  • Community inclusion for autistic toddlers and preschoolers. Ban segregated IBI “behaviour mills.” Include autistic preschoolers in everyday life and the world of play with their peers.
  •  Inclusion in schools for autistic children. Meaningfully engage universal design experts to share best practices and models. Incentivize their use across Canada, with the goal of phasing out segregated classrooms.
  • Independent supported living (ISL) for autistic and/or IDD adults, with priority government funding to existing ISL projects and new ideas. A government commitment not to fund new segregated housing projects.
  • Employment access for autistic adults. Train employers on making their interview processes and workplaces accessible, based on models (such as Microsoft). Close all sheltered workshops. Focus on training or employing autistic people in all career fields and not just jobs that stereotypically employ autistic people (e.g., IT and banking).
  • A Communication Charter of Rights for non-verbal and semi-verbal individuals, for fair access and accommodations in Canadian life.
  • Education and outreach about autistic communication/AAC and accessibility, developed with autistic self-advocates as project leaders. Launch programs for: First Responders; medical professionals; teachers; transit workers; and others.
  • Consultation with autistic self-advocacy groups and individuals whenever national disability policy is being made (this includes all appropriations for autism services and projects).
  • An autistic census, either creating a category in the existing census or through community consultations to determine our needs. Government gathers its own data (not relying on provider/charity “data”) to make informed funding decisions.
  • Independent financial audit and service evaluation of all autism-related services, charities, and programs that receive government funding. Root out the bad players and create better, sustainable systems.
  • Transparency and accountability for all federal practices related to autism policy, including project tendering, contracting and sub-contracting of charities and agencies.