Did you know?
About 1.85 million people in Ontario have a disability. That's one in seven people. Over the next 20 years as people grow older, the number will rise to one in five Ontarians.
Breaking down barriers to accessibility will benefit everyone.
There are many simple things you can do to make your business more accessible. Our videos can show you how.
We go to work. We go shopping. We take in a movie and grab a bite to eat afterwards. Most of us don't think twice about it.
But that's not always the case for people with disabilities.
People with disabilities often don't do many of the activities that most of us take for granted. It's not because they don't want to. It's because they can't. That's because barriers stop them.
Barriers are obstacles. Barriers make shopping, working, going to a movie or taking public transit difficult, sometimes impossible, for people with disabilities.
There are many kinds of barriers.
Architectural and physical barriers are features of buildings or spaces that cause problems for people with disabilities. Examples are:
Information or communications barriers happen when a person can't easily understand information. Examples are:
Attitudinal barriers are those that discriminate against people with disabilities. Examples are:
Technology barriers occur when a technology can't be modified to support various assistive devices. An example is:
Organizational barriers are an organization's policies, practices or procedures that discriminate against people with disabilities. An example is: