Last week the Harper government decided to pull the plug on
a long-standing contract with an Ottawa based program for adults with intellectual disabilities. The folks
did mainly shredding work and were paid an average annual stipend of $2000,
just enough to keep them under the limit of an allowable income without
jeopardizing their Ontario Disability Support Program payments. I heard about the closure via Facebook
and Twitter, both on the feeds of L’Arche friends and those of the Canadian
Association for Community Living.
The following two samples of what was posted represent the two key
reactions that I witnessed:
This is an absolutely
horrible decision by our Canadian government. Please contact your MP and inform
her/him and ask that this decision be reversed.
Good to see a
sheltered workshop closed. We need
employment - real jobs for real pay.
Then yesterday, Andre Picard wrote an opinion piece for the Globe and Mail entitled You Don’t Help Disabled Workers by Hiding Them. Picard argues that workplaces like the one
operated by the Ottawa-Carleton Association for Persons with Developmental
Disabilities (OCAPD) are “outdated and counterproductive, a concept that the
federal government should be working to eliminate, not perpetuate.” He points to the injustice of people
with disabilities being forced to work for less than 10% of the minimum wage,
and the fact that there are almost 800,000 people with disabilities in Canada who
are able to work but cannot find employment.
Picard also says that “instead of sheltered workshops that
isolate people from mainstream society, workers with disabilities should be
provided with supports for employment that help them integrate”.
I share Picard’s outrage at the systemic discrimination
against people with intellectual disabilities, and the devaluing of their contributions
to society. But I felt similar
outrage upon hearing of the government’s cancelling of the contract with the
OCAPD and the injustice foisted upon the employees at that Centre as a
result. It strikes me that, when
it comes to work for people with intellectual disabilities, a more nuanced
argument is called for.
First of all, I bristle at the use of the term “sheltered
workshop” to describe all the group settings where people with intellectual
disabilities spend their work days.
In my experience at L’Arche, workplaces are anything but sheltered. They are vibrant, challenging, creative
places where a diverse group of people come and go and offer their skills. These programs are integrated into
their neighbourhoods, and provide meaningful places of connection not only for
people with intellectual disabilities but for local artists, seniors, young
people, and friends. These
workplaces mitigate the very real isolation that people often live in their
homes, which tend to be the more dangerous “sheltered” locations. Folks without access to public
transportation, living in rural areas, who need enhanced medical or behavioural
supports, or who thrive in and choose communal settings should not be condemned
for working in group settings. The
workplaces that are sheltered – closed to society, treating people with
intellectual disabilities as children, limiting choice and control, and failing
to be creative in drawing out people’s passions and skills – these are indeed
“outdated and counterproductive” and should go the way of the dinosaur.
I am also uncomfortable with the implication that any program
involving a group of people with disabilities is by definition a problem. Is there a reason why we encourage
young people to gather in youth groups or centres, artists or musicians to
gather in creative spaces, seniors to have clubs or tours, but we are so
uncomfortable with people with disabilities choosing to work together? Disability is nothing to be ashamed of
– it a naturally occurring part of human diversity, and many people with
intellectual disabilities share common interests and experiences and therefore
want to be together. The fact that
we are so threatened by this says more about our own prejudices, I think, than
about the rights of people with disabilities.
In my experience, many people with intellectual disabilities
have a heart and a passion for art in all its forms. For evidence, look to the L’Arche International online art exhibit launched in 2014, or Hearts and Hands at L’Arche Antigonish, the work of Joan
MacDonald or Gordon Mills or Lisa Leuschner or Heather Pinneo or other folks
too numerous to mention. If making
minimum wage is the only way to judge the value of someone’s work, artists are
in trouble. How many artists earn
minimum wage? And how many of them
would jump at the chance to have their basic needs met by the social safety net
in order to make their art possible?
How many of them would be thrilled to have the opportunity to work in an
art collective with a diverse group of artists and a community that welcomed
what they create?
People with intellectual disabilities should have a diverse
range of employment options to choose from. And whatever those options are, they should be well-funded,
fulfilling, and integrated into society.
Supported employment only works when it is supported; workshops don’t
help people at all when they are sheltered. I join Andre Picard and others in calling for fair compensation
for the contributions of people with intellectual disabilities, as long as that
funding honours the diversity and the choices of the people it is meant to
support.
2 comments:
I loved this threat, I think it would also benefit some people to buy Facebook likes if they want more exposure
I am using your line "I am also uncomfortable with the implication that any program involving a group of people with disabilities is by definition a problem." in my next paper. Thanks Jenn. This article was great. I found it when looking up the term "sheltered workshops". I was confused because that's not what we live.
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