Hello everyone. Welcome to our IDEA Social  Innovation lab webinar series. Uh we have a really exciting talk for today. Uh before that I'll  just introduce. My name is Dan Samosh. I'm with Employment Relation Studies at Queens University.  I'm also a part of the IDEA team. Uh these are our IDEA webinars, and for today and going forward we  have captions available and we also have French interpretation available too. So, if you have any  questions uh or if this isn't working for you, the captions or the interpretation, please let  us know. Uh we have the Q&A function as well as the chat function and we'll do our best  to make everything work. Uh also be aware, if you know maybe you know someone who wanted to  be here but they couldn't be, we will record uh this webinar and future webinars and post them  online on the IDEA website. So check out the webinars there. There are already some online  now too. And we also share the slides for the webinars if those should be helpful for you. For  today's webinar, our format is one hour in total, uh with a talk at the beginning from our speakers  and then lots of time at the end for questions from you. So when you do have questions,  that can happen during the talk or after, please just use the Q&A function, uh and we will  repeat the questions back to the speakers as we go along. We also have feedback mechanisms too. So at  the end of the webinar, um please you know respond to our survey on how we've done, if you have any  feedback on accessibility, content, or otherwise, uh and that's all kind of the housekeeping  stuff from me. From there I'll just welcome Kim Jeffreys and Francis Fung who are going to be  talking about uh creating and fostering workplace culture uh around disability inclusion today which  I'm really excited for, so yeah please go ahead. Thank you for joining us. So, today we're going  to talk about why ad hoc inclusion efforts and policies alone are insufficient in transforming  the workplace experience for people with disabilities, and why it's essential to cultivate  and nurture a culture of disability inclusion. So we're, Francis and I, are going to  highlight key concepts for workplaces to consider in their disability inclusion  journey, and we're also going to discuss strategies and intentional efforts that can  foster a disability inclusive workplace culture. So, in terms of our agenda, Francis will share  why workplace culture change is essential for disability inclusion. Um and then I'm going to  detail why the social model of disability is at the center of disability inclusion,  how accessibility, universal design, and destigmatized accommodation can work in  harmony to drive disability inclusion, and then I'll share some best practice tools to advance  workplace disability inclusion before turning it back to Francis. And Francis will address  sustainability and accountability, measuring, monitoring, uh and evaluating change, and, as Dan,  said we'll have some time at the end for questions and answers. Uh so just before we begin, I  would like to thank Dr Tompa, Dr Gerwurtz, and Logan Wong for the research they provided, and  also Alec Farquhar and Amy Swenson-Tiano uh for their review and feedback on this presentation.  Uh and with that I will turn it over to Francis. Okay great. Thanks Kim. I hope you can hear me.  Um so we're gonna start with just talking a little bit about what disability inclusion is about, and  I believe that um most of us are probably quite familiar with the concept of disability inclusion,  the term. Um but applying the principles of disability inclusion in employment settings is  a bit different. Um what I'd like to point out is um some principles about disability inclusion.  So if you look at the Canada Disability Inclusion Action Plan um there are three uh guiding  principles: "nothing without us," a human rights based approach, and intersectionality. Regarding  "nothing without us," in my experience employers, do think about respect and treating people fairly,  but they may not think as much about creating and fostering a workplace that is welcoming and  empowering so people would want to be involved and contribute. Ideally, employers and leaders  need to find ways to proactively involve people with disabilities in developing/implementing  policies, programs, and services, and this would also help the workplace to be accessible  so people with disabilities can participate. We're going to hear from Kim a little bit more  about accessibility later on. Um we also need to keep in mind that some people may prefer to be  uh actively participating, um while some may just want to be kept informed and offer choices.  In terms of human rights, in my experience many employers think about this from more  of a legal perspective. If the human rights based approach is not well understood, it can  become employers obligations versus employees employment rights and the focus can shift away  from inclusion. Sometimes legal compliance can be seen as what is the least that I need to do  to fulfill my legal obligations, and that can really create some significant barriers to a  truly inclusive workplace. In fact, there are some really interesting research out there that  looks at employment support systems in countries that rely heavily on that legal obligation. Um in  some places where the quota model is kind of the center, um the states mandate companies that they  need to hire a certain percentage of people with disabilities when their total number of employees  exceed a certain threshold for example. Um and in those model there are fines for non-compliance and  the fines are reinvested in social programs which are good, and there are data being collected  um so that people can understand a little bit about where the struck was made to hire people  with disabilities. But these research shows that the model, it's a quota model, may lead to  success in increasing entry to employment but there's very little interest in what happens  after. With respects to intersectionality, well intersectionality and diversity are not the  same thing. Intersectional- um intersectionality describe how different elements of a person's  identity can be discriminated against. Examples of this in employment settings are not limited to  just the lower rates of hiring, but also include wage inequality, lack of professional development  and career advancement opportunities, and in some cases even harassment and abuse. Also, having a  diverse workforce doesn't mean intersectionality is well addressed. Diversity and inclusion are  also not the same. There are businesses out there that appreciate diversity and have benefited from  foreign workers and the diverse talents that they bring, but the employees don't feel included.  In fact, researchers indicate that disability inclusion can be absent in diversity plans.  In the United States, only 40% of corporate diversity plans include disability, and only  42% of Fortune 100 companies include disability in their diversity statement. Increasing numbers  of people disabilities being hired is not enough for disability inclusion. People needs to feel  supported, uh included, and engaged at work. Job security and retention, as well as career  development and promotion opportunities are very crucial. There are lots of research out there  that indicate that these factors lead to employee engagement, and there are actually powerful  indicators of how long someone can stay in a job, regardless of job performance, which often is  what employers and leaders are fixed stated on. Okay. So, now we know about these principles but  how do we get employees thinking about them and then shift the workplace culture if needed. Well  we need to talk about the benefits. Employers are running businesses and they are naturally  profit driven and we know that when working with employers the charity model doesn't really work.  Um can you still hear me? I think my headphone just went off. Yes we do. Good yeah. Okay sorry,  I just heard a beep. Um yeah so employer are running businesses and they're naturally profit  driven and we know that when're working with them the charity model doesn't really work, because it  compromises the rights of people with disabilities and portrays people with disabilities as being  reliant on others and not able to do things for themselves. And this causes employers doubt in  whether people with disabilities can do things uh for themselves and can they, can they do the  jobs in the competitive work settings. So we know we have to build a business case, and obviously  there's research that support this. We need to demonstrate that there are benefits not only for  hiring people with disabilities, but also benefits for creating a disability-inclusive workplace  where workers with or without disabilities can strive and be successful. There are some company  recognized benefits that are talked about quite a bit. You know um access to a bigger pool of  applicants, improved reputation, lower turnover, and higher attendance, and there's an enhanced  sense of corporate and social responsibility as well. But to me, some of the lesser known  benefits can really help change the conversation and help maybe move the needle a bit. For example,  disability inclusion has elements similar to those of a healthy and safe workplace which is linked  to higher employee engagement and productivity and there's a lot of recent research on the topics  of employee wellness and psychological safety. Persons with disabilities have a positive effect  on work, on co-workers as well and inclusion contributes to loyalty because showing empathy  and appreciation helps. And there's research on loyalty being more challenging to find  in the younger generations of workers now. Okay, so we know about the benefits but we still  need to be able to articulate to employers and leaders what an organization culture is and how  to facilitate change if need be. If you look at the research, most scholars would agree that  organizational culture is multi-dimensional and multi-level construct. It's not just one  thing that you can work on it is values, beliefs, assumptions, and sometimes an informal  system of control within an organization as well. Paying attention to what the culture is like in an  organization can help understand the behaviors of the people within, and people who believe in what  they do are generally more engaged. Unspoken norms can become routine over time as well. One of the  challenges about uh talking about work workplace culture is that sometimes there's an expressed  commitment to hire people with disability um for an organization. It might even be a part  of the mission statement and the philosophy of that organization, but sometimes this goal  is not consistent with the actual norms of the organization where the physical environment for  example remained intolerant and inaccessible um to people with disabilities. So in other  words, there can be really a disconnect between what the culture of the organization  is supposed to be and how it actually is. So, so why now, why are we talking about  culture change and and why is that shift so important for disability inclusion? Well to  me it's all because of the existing systems and habits. We talked a little bit about  human rights earlier and when human rights are thought about in relation to disability  people tend to think about non-discrimination, entitlement, and duty to accommodate. These are  all very important, but they're more about legal compliance and disability inclusion goes beyond  these. A system is designed in ways that people with disabilities typically need to make a request  for accommodation, and the process is burdensome. It relies on the individual knowing what they  want and then they have to prove why they need it. Sometimes they have to go through quite  a bit of paperwork um and approvals as well, and that creates a big barrier because when it's  too much work, employees with disabilities would just choose to make do. And in some of the  more serious cases, people with disability are left to um to make a complaint on their own,  and then they have to prove their rights have been denied. In the recruitment context historically,  it is about fitting people in. Employers generally ask questions like "can this person with  disability meet the job demands?", "can this person keep up with the rest of the employees  in a similar position?", and the focus is on the person's inability, sometimes ability, to do  something and often is in comparison to others. But the questions that I would encourage to ask  are: "what role can we assign this individual to get the best out of them?" and "how can we support  this individual to excel at work?" and "how can we collaborate to meet our common goals?" And there  shouldn't be any different between people with or without disabilities. Aside from fitting people  in, there's also emphasis on matching skill sets to the job requirements and this is especially  the case in a return to work context following a personal injury or illness when there's concern  about regarding um about residual earning capacity and alternative suitable occupations. The reality  is that injured workers are often stigmatized, even if they have the transferable skills and  have gone through retraining. So it is important to recognize that uh matching individuals to  workplace culture, including the potential source of support and conflict, is just as important as  matching talents to job demands. Another reason why why we have to look at cultural shift is the  fact that Canada is diverse, and our society um our societal culture evolves as well. Immigrants  and their children is projected to make up 50% of the population by 2041, and the society's view  regarding disabilities and identities can be impacted by the language, religion, social class,  and the tradition and custom of different people, and all these would affect how we interact with  each other. So, when creating and fostering a workplace culture, we need to understand  diversity and intersectionality, and it is a journey. The bottom line is that changing  policies and procedures alone in recruitment practices won't really accomplish disability  inclusion because disability inclusion needs to consider dignity, autonomy, opportunities  for full participation, and recognizing disabilities as part of human diversity and  humanity. It involves changing mindsets, perspectives, attitudes, which is why disability  inclusion need to start with a cultural shift. Now I do realize that people are busy  in businesses and there's not a lot of time for people to sit around and talk about  culture change. But the good news is not every organization needs a culture overhaul. It's more  about identifying the goals and working towards them. And there's lots of research about this, and  I'm not going to go over all of these in details that you'll see um on this slide, but I do want  to point out integration. Integration is important because it's about celebrating differences and  incorporating different perspectives into the work task completion that may be required at work. It  is more effective than a culture where individual performance and entrepreneurships valued,  which are quite typical in Western countries. We certainly want to change that them versus  us type of mentality, but we also need to be very thoughtful about this. There's research that  shows that organization that strive to unite um their diverse members under a common identity of  belonging, like a collectivist type of approach that values togetherness, can actually reduce  creativity and innovation. More importantly, no people with disabilities are alike. There  are cases where employers may be guilty of generalizing disability, and expecting people  with disabilities for uh for example maybe more organized because they have so much that they  need to navigate through uh with a disability already. This may be true to some extent  but the reality is that disability exists across a very vast sp- uh spectrum of possible  physical, sensory, and intellectual impairments, and one person with disability just doesn't  speak for all people with disabilities either. Okay. Um um Kim is going to talk a little  bit more about ableism and normalizing and the de- uh destigmatization and as was tokenism  later on as well. So I'm going to just jump to preparedness. Um this is about the perception of  feeling prepared. Um I've came across research where um there was a study that was done on  quite a number of HR and hiring professionals um in 2021, and the research indicates  that the perception of feeling prepared, um it's more important than some of the  other important factors such as actually having disability policies and procedures and  uh health and illness management programs. And and the other things that is interesting  from the study is that leaders may feel that preparing people with disabilities and promoting  disability inclusion is important, but they may not actually value strongly about taking real  actions um to hire people with disabilities. Okay so I'm going to pass it on to Kim now to  talk more about the strategies in creating and fostering a disability inclusive workplace  culture and share with you some insights. So building on the disability inclusion insights  shared by Francis, I'm going to talk a little bit about how employers can effectively advance  workplace disability inclusion by transforming its benefits and goals into actionable and practical  strategies. So this approach not only fosters an inclusive culture, but also ensures that the  workplace is accessible and supportive for all employees. There are approximately six or seven  theoretical models that offer frameworks for understanding disability, so very quickly they  have intuitive names for the models. There's the Medical Model uh there's the- which focuses on  impairment, the Human Rights model which focuses on rights, uh the Economic Model focuses on costs  and often frames disability as a financial burden, uh Functional Solution Model focuses on  um subject matter expert accommodations, there's the Charity Model people with disabilities  need our help, the Cultural Affiliation Model that takes pride and identity, the Social Model that  focuses on addressing barriers, and a model that combines several approaches called Biopsychosocial  Model. Each model has its strengths and weaknesses and elements from various models are sometimes  combined which are typically reflected in an organization's accommodation approach. Adopting  a specific model can directly influence how disability inclusion is understood and advanced  in the workplace. So at March of Dimes Canada, we've embraced the Social Model of disability  because it aligns with what we're hearing from our communities, and we believe that it most  effectively advances disability inclusion. The model emphasizes the role of societal barriers,  so physical, attitudinal, technological, systems, communications, etc. in disabling people and I'm  going to briefly share some of its main features. So unlike the Medical Model which centers on  diagnosing or treating an individual, the Social Model affirms that people with disabilities  are not inherently disadvantaged, but are made so by society's failure to address diverse  abilities and advocates for systemic change. It normalizes disability as part  of human diversity, shifting how disability is viewed in our culture. With its  proactive approach to eliminating barriers, it can reduce discrimination claims. And programs  and services that are designed based on the social model will prioritize accessibility which can  lead to innovations that benefit everyone, not just those with disabilities. And with respect  to to employment practices, barrier elimination is addressed through a range of policies, practices,  and benefits such as flexible work, adap- adaptive technologies, accessible workplaces- workspaces,  uh benefits that address a range of abilities, and a revolutionary accommodation process.  So while the model's been vital in shifting perspectives away from seeing disability as  a personal or medical condition, um it should be noted that it can downplay disabilities that  fluctuate in severity uh or the physical realities of living with conditions such as uh cerebral  palsy, which can entail bodily limitations even in fully accessible environments, um and the model  doesn't eliminate individual accommodations. But regardless of its limitations, it does offer  a transformative framework that can empower organizations to redefine their approach to  disability inclusion. Next slide please Francis. So, universal design, accessibility, and  accommodation are embedded in Canadian disability equity legislation, are practical  manifestations of the Social Model of disability, and they collectively operate to create  environments that are inclusive and supportive. Accessibility lays the groundwork by  addressing barriers. Universal design enhances this by embedding inclusive principles into the  design process, and accommodation strives to enable access tailored to individual needs  where universal design or accessibility measures fall short. So while accommodation  complement accessibility and universal design, it is associated with considerable stigma. Uh and  Francis did touch upon this in his presentation. The accommodation process typically places  responsibility on the individual to ask for help, uh which I believe is contrary to our culture  of independence and self-reliance. Uh and when aligned with the Human Rights uh or Medical  Model of disability, it can require an onerous process that can lack consistent understanding  and expertise, and application to remedy and bury. But considering that failure to accommodate  is the most often cited ground, to the tune of approximately 50%, uh in federal and provincial  human rights claims, prioritizing accommodation is essential for fostering disability  inclusion. Without minimizing or dismissing the legal obligations uh the stigma around  accommodation, in my experience, is related to how it's administered, especially as noted earlier  when it's aligned to the Medical, Human Rights, or Charity Models of disability. But what if uh  our workplace cultures normalized accommodation, embedding and offering it versus making employees  ask for it, by committed knowledgeable leaders at every stage of the employee life cycle as a  standard practice rather than an exception. Although far from ideal, the destigmatization of  workplace mental health offers valuable insights that can be directly applied to the broader effort  of normalizing workplace disability accommodation. Both mental health and disability inclusion  share similar barriers such as stigma, lack of awareness, and resistance to both requesting  and providing support. Next slide please Francis. It's worth reviewing efforts that have generally  proven successful at destigmatizing mental health at work, and consider their application to  disability accommodation. So I'm going to go over these nine components um and just compare the  mental health and accommodation destigmatization. So with respect to uh dialogue and normalizing  the conversation, the growing awareness of mental health challenges and the integration of mental  health days, therapy benefits, and well-being check-ins help to normalize mental health is  everyday work life. Discussions are encouraged to promote the idea that it's okay to seek  help and support. So, similarly by normalizing conversations around disability inclusion,  organizations can shift the perspective from viewing accommodations as special treatment to  recognizing them as routine and an essential part of making workplaces equitable. Robust dialogue  about accessibility, universal design, and proactive accommodations contribute to a culture  where support is expected rather than exceptional. In terms of training, um training leaders to  recognize signs of me- mental illness and respond empathetically helps create a supportive culture.  Managers are taught how to confidently engage in discussions and deescalate fear, and make mental  health part of routine conversations. And I'm not suggesting that lead leaders diagnose or treat  but they can certainly be trained to offer support and facilitate confidential referrals to subject  matter experts. Uh leaders can also be trained to recognize diverse needs related to disabilities,  both visible and invisible, equipping them with the tools to initiate proactive conversations  about accommodations can reduce fears and foster belonging. So just as trained managers now  inquire about well-being, they can with training confidently canvas accommodation needs. Related to  training, mental health destigmatization efforts focus on dismantling stereotypes such as the  assumption that people with mental health illnesses cannot be productive or successful. Now  the emphasis on abilities and contributions rather than limitations, so dismantling stereotypes about  disabilities is critical. Often the assumption is that employ employees with disabilities  require costly or burdensome accommodations or that they're less capable. So by reframing  disability through the lens of skill, value, and inclusion and alignment to the Social  Model, workplaces can foster a culture that focuses on capabilities rather than deficits.  Uh with respect to confidentiality and trust, employers are more- employees are are more  likely to disclose mental health issues if they have trust that their concerns will be  handled confidentially and without judgment. Mental health destigmatization emphasizes creating  safe spaces for disclosure. The same approach can be applied to disability accommodation,  ensuring that accommodation requests are treated with confidentiality and respect can  make employees feel safe to disclose needs without fear of negative consequences, and trust  is a key factor as employees may need assurance that when asking for accommod- that asking for  accommodation won't impact their job security or career growth. Uh destigmatizing mental health has  led to more flexible policies, and flexibility is equally critical for disability accommodations.  Uh promoting personalized solutions signals that accommodation are not one size fits all, which can  help normalize their integration into workplace practices. Um the stigmatizing- destigmatization  campaigns provide information on mental health, reducing myth- myths, and offering resources um  promoting messages such as accommodations are a fundamental right that supports everyone's success  in the workplace can be applied to disability accommodation campaigns and regular campaigns that  explain what accommodations are, why they matter, and how employees can address them help demystify  the process. Including success stories of employees who have benefited from accommodations  can reduce stigma and empower employees to request the support they need without feeling embarrassed.  Uh disability focused- can serve as advocates for disability inclusion. So employees who are  part of these groups can share their experiences with accommodation, increasing understanding,  and these groups can also lead awareness campaigns. Uh in terms of preventive approaches,  organizations can take a proactive approach with adjustable workstations, accessible technology  platforms, and flexible work options being standard rather than reactive accommodations.  And finally mental health accommodations such as flexible hours or wellness days have  become a routine part of workplace culture, no longer viewed as exceptional. So by promoting,  integrating, and canvasing accommodation related to every direct and indirect workplace activity,  uh disability accommodations can also become routine. So I just want to wrap up by noting that  organizations can borrow from ongoing strategies used to destigmatize workplace mental health, to  normalize disability accommodation. Both efforts require a cultural shift towards inclusivity  and the recognition that all employees de- deserve support, respect, and equitable access to  opportunities. Okay, next slide please Francis. So um given given the expertise in this group,  I'm not going to detail all of the usual best practices, um but I do want to focus on uh a  couple. So in terms of um disability inclusive purpose, vision, and mission, research has  shown that organizations uh with a purpose, vision, and mission that includes disability  inclusion tend to be more successful in implementing inclusive practices. Um and then  the other piece I would like to focus on is uh disability awareness training. So uh while  education alone cannot drive systemic change, education provides a foundation for understanding  the complexities of disabilities, ableism, bias, stereotypes, the model of disability, and best  practices for inclusion. And in addition to equipping employees and leaders with the tools  and knowledge to create accessible environments, it can support expectations to advance a culture  where disability inclusion is seen as everyone's responsibility, not just managements and not just  uh human resources' responsibility. Um I think education is essential uh to ensure that everyone  understands and consistently apply disability inclusion principles without stigma or judgment.  Um and I've spoken ad nauseam about the ability to prevent, recognize, and eliminate barriers, uh and  in my experience barrier recognition is a skill that requires ongoing learning and dialogue  as barriers can be nuanced, are continuously evolving, and can surface where they are least  expected. For- in for instance, accommodations typically focus on work tasks but the workplace  is so much broader than the duties. Um you know we need to start thinking about um building in  accessibility into staff events and trainings and conferences. So Francis I think I'm interested  time, I'm going to move to the final slide. Um so we talked about the you know the very common  best practices, and March of Dimes Canada has a number of complimentary initiatives to advance  disability inclusion. Uh we have uh mental health program, champions, destigmatization efforts, um  a variety of complimentary inclusion policies, resources, and trainings. Uh we have  a central accommodation fund to reduce barriers on individual departments. Uh we have  an accessibility-driven approach to recruitment, onboarding, performance management, events. Um  we have numerous disability awareness campaigns and a disability people accessibility working  group to ensure that we can embed disability inclusion across all disciplines, uh to name  a few. But I do want to share um details with you about a tool that we're currently piloting  um that can be applied to every employment or service activity to advance disability inclusion.  Uh and it's called the Accessibility Lens Tool. So it's the tool is borrowed, uh for anyone who's  familiar with um something called an Equity Lens which is which has a broader application, but the  Accessibility Lens is a simple tool aligned to the Social Model of disability and universal design  to help identify and address barriers experienced by people with a disability. So the purpose of  the tool is to intentionally focus attention on accessibility barriers and impacts on people  with disabilities when undertaking employment related decision-making activities. It can also  be applied to services. So the tool introduces um a set of approximately five to seven questions  to help decision makers focus on accessibility in both their process and outcomes, drawing  attention to how their decisions can positively or negatively impact people with disabilities.  The tool won't tell you what action to take, rather it helps decision makers reflect on  accessibility in the early or design phase of a process well before executing programs or services  or benefits. Uh the tool asks the decision maker to consider a range of accessibility dimensions  related to stakeholder involvement process, values, assumptions, and outcomes from a  perspective that highlights how processes hold potential to enhance inclusion. Um so our  tool currently has approximately six questions and we are piloting it across departments with  some large and small projects and I just want to share with you some of the- like a sample of some  of the questions. Um so we so there's questions and then there's several um bullets to sort of  trigger um engagement, so some of the questions include: What particip- participatory structures  will be engaged to hear from diverse voices and perspectives representing all abilities (so,  not just your DEI subject matter expert)? Um what barriers may limit or exclude people with  a disability from participating engaging once the decision is implemented? And it asks folks to  think about values, biases, assumptions, consider and identify a range of barrier forms including  physical, attitudinal, cultural, systemic, technological, communication, geographical, and  economic barriers. Um what assistive devices including service animal or support person  may be necessary to address a broad range of disabilities? What is the impact of the decision  upon people with a disability? Does the decision, policy, program, etc. improve, worsen, or make  no change to people with disability? What actions or revisions will be undertaken to mitigate  negative impacts and/or enhance accessibility? So the- that's a sample of the questions, and  ideally you would apply this tool to all all activities requiring both leadership awareness  and endorsement. Um and when taking your program project to leadership you would include uh  what I've termed an accessibility impact statement based on the tool questions, noting  activities undertaken in response to this tool to address barriers. So that is a tool we're  piloting. Uh once it's endorsed I'm sure it will be available to this group, and with that  I'm going to hand it back over to Francis. Great thanks uh Kim. So we've talked a little bit  about the importance of creating and fostering the disability inclusive culture and some of  the strategies to intentionally work towards disability inclusion within an organization, some  specific tools, consideration, some different process in terms of asking questions and making  sure that um thinking about accessibility from all stages of uh creating a process or implementing a  program. Disability inclusion won't be sustained if employers or leaders don't um ensure  accountability though. And I'm not talking about the commitment from one or two leaders  within within an organization I want to talk about um a more systematic and strategic way of  measuring culture change and monitoring and then evaluating as well. So, Kim have spoken uh about  you know several ways of um helping influence the cultural change to a more dis- disability  in- inclusive one. Um she's mentioned about education and training, and we need to understand  that education and training generally aim for correcting misinformation, right, and it deals  with inaccurate stereotypes and myths and things like that. So when you try to measure change, you  need to have indicators that are specifically that deals with those things. And other interventions  that could be in place within an organization could be like, for example, bringing people with  this lived disabilities um experience to interact with the rest of the organization or with the  public, describing the challenges and stories of success. Um and and that could help overcome some  interpersonal divide, um you know, help reduce that public stigma on a person-to-person uh basis  as well. And of course, you you you need to have complaint mechanism as well because that help  mitigate power disadvantages um of people with disabilities and and other um marginalized group.  So, when you think about these efforts that are are being uh put in uh within organization um my  suggestion is to also develop some indicators that are specific to them so that you can really  systematically evaluate how um the culture is changing, evolving, and and how successful  you may be as an organization. So, I'm going to borrow some uh wisdom from a report that I read  um that was uh done by The Institute of Work and Health um for the ESDC, and they suggested two  types of indicators: uh the process indicators and the results indicators. And the process  indicators help you kind of monitor the number and the types of activities that are being carried  out, and that could be very useful for actually analyzing cost and time that you invested in a  particular initiative. Um and compared to other programs and campaigns that may have already been  taken place or is happening simultaneously. The results indicators are more about the uh intended  objectives and whether you're able to achieve it through a particular initiative or or intervention  or activity, and and that could be at different levels, you can look at the outputs. So for  example, counting how how many people completed the training, and that could be useful to compare  to perhaps maybe the employees demographics um and participation in other initiatives. And then you  can also have outcome indicators, which would be more focusing on sort of the longer term effect.  So how much knowledge and attitude and perception have changed um within organization, and may you  may need to do some survey or some focus group you know to look at those things. And then you need  to have bigger impact indicators as well. So, it's the prevalence of discrimination towards  people with disabilities that actually been reduced. So that may be something that you would  look at if there's complaints, um is there any uh challenges in return to work directly related to  disabilities. So the monitoring and the evaluation is quite crucial um for an organization to make  sure things are happening. Um monitoring to me is more like internal, ongoing during the initiative,  and that helps um supports accountability, and it also gives you opportunity to tweak things,  right? So, if you a leading initiative for um disability inclusion and there's not enough  participation then you might need to change in terms of your communication strategies and  so forth. Evaluation is kind of um taking place periodically or at the end of an initiative, and  that could be done internal or external depending on kind of uh how objectives or uh that you wanted  to do this. And this focuses more on the final, like that um uh overall goal you know, and and  that provides accountability. And important things I want to point out here though is when  you're track when you're tracking, monitoring things and you evaluating things it is important  to not just focus on showcasing the achievement, but also focus on the um the the changes in any  magnitudes, whether it's positive or uh negative. Okay, so in the interest of time I'm summarize  um what we talked about today. Uh we went through a lot of ideas, um but essentially  all organizations need to uh create and and foster a disability inclusive culture. The culture  change needs to start sooner, rather than later, because disability inclusion is a journey.  Organizations need to understand the Social Model of disability that Kim has mentioned,  and the principles of disability inclusion such as "nothing without us." There needs to be  intentional effort to normalize and destigmatize disability, embrace diversity, recognize  differences, and accommodate needs. Needs go beyond legal compliance and pursue accessibility  excellence. Organization needs to be accountable, establish indicators in order to monitor  progress and evaluate outputs and outcomes specific to disability inclusivity.  Leadership needs to be authentic and needs to avoid window dressing. Disability  inclusion is more than just hiring more people disabilities, it's about participation,  opportunities, dignity, and autonomy as well. With that, I'm going to show you a page  of references, um happy to share that with anyone who wants to look at that a little bit  more in detail. Um and of course we want to invite you to stay in touch with us, and there's  different ways to do that. Um of course joining the IDEA distribution list um and you can also  join um March of Dimes- sorry March of Dimes Disability Advocacy Network. And uh we  have our emails um here, as well. Sorry, just going back and forth, that you can, I  don't know why it's doing, that um that you can email us as well. Okay um, I'm going to  turn it back to Dan for questions and answer. Yeah thank you so much Kim and Francis, and  that is an extremely cute dog for anyone, uh just in case the slide right now has a very  adorable dog on it, uh for our Q&A slide. Um so yeah now we are in the Q&A portion. Just in  case, if you do have a question please use the Q&A function in Zoom, uh that's where I'll take  your questions and then share them with Kim and Francis. I just want to note too the talk  today um it's a really meaningful one and a very important one. I really appreciate how you  started with these conceptual ideas, principles, and moved into actions. Uh on the previous slide,  there is information on emails and this sort of thing. In case you don't get that information  please email us at IDEA and we'll make sure you can get in touch with Kim and Francis if you'd  like, uh if you're interested in things like the Accessibility Lens Tool and otherwise. So,  our first question for you is: do you have any stories of cultural change? Um you know like  cultural change is a very a big thing, do you have any kind of um examples of you know perhaps  a manager or an organization that was perhaps not as inclusive or not as aware and shifted  towards the direction that you're discussing? I don't know if Kim wants to grab this,  but I I'll try to take a stab that is um, I don't have any specific um story as that comes  to mind. Um but um what I would say is that um the the the conversation about culture change, it's  not um rare um when when we are um working with employers or working with um other organizations  that may be work in um in in this space. Um the what I find that is uh sometimes challenging is  that people knows that the culture needs to shift, but being able to intentionally and systematically  work on things to drive that change is where is um sometimes it's a little bit more troublesome.  So, you know, people would tend to focus on a particular uh resource that they can share  with the employees, and um you know uh uh, maybe a particular um disability awareness  campaign that they do as a one off, and maybe they'll do it periodically when they feel that,  you know, folks are a little bit stale about those things. Um but but what I found in some  of the conversations that we have um about the culture is that there hasn't been a consistent,  intentional ways of doing that, um even though there's that real recognition that yeah something  needs to shift here and and there's sometimes there's a bit of a blame on the leadership um and  the employers of of not fostering that culture but but the culture isn't just something that the  leader um is responsible for right it's it's the entire organization as well. If you if you're  going around and you're not um you know talking about uh disability in the right ways yourself,  um it it rubs on other people as well. It's not just what leadership and employers you  know the top, that tells you what to do. I can, I can add to that. I did work with  an organization um several years ago who uh spearheaded a cultural change through their  commitment to mental health. Uh they had a really progressive mental health approach,  um and I would say that they they led their culture change through that approach, and so  I actually borrowed um some of the components from their program when I was thinking about  advancing disability inclusion. So, it wasn't, I mean, uh disability inclusion was advanced  through that commitment to mental health, but the it was led through  the lens of mental health. Thank you, and so our next question  is about intersectionality. Um the the question asker uh mentions that, you know,  disability is often viewed as this monolith, um but that there can be multiple uh experiences  of disadvantage and mistreatment. So the idea that you know someone with a disability  may not be believed when they are trying to access uh supports. But we can also have uh  disadvantages like anti-black racism and the impacts of colonialism for Indigenous folks. Uh so  to understand, you know, do you have any feedback on incorporating uh intersectional perspectives  into this kind of work around culture. Yeah, I can I can jump in and then Francis maybe  you can add. Um I think the simple response, although it's not a simple activity is to  always approach this work with an intersectional lens um because we don't know what folks  bring to the workplace. Um so if you go back to applying the mental health lens right, and  building trust and normalizing conversations, um you can you can learn about folks and you  can learn about their individual needs, right, through those conversations and trust.  Um but I I really think it's crucial that you come to this work um recognizing  that intersectionality disadvantages um folks disproportionately. So is there anything  you want to add Francis, about that? Yeah, what I would just quickly add is that um uh  intersectionality and disability inclusion are not two different things to be addressed separately,  you know they always have to be together I think. Um and when I think about it from a workplace  culture perspective, um what it boils down to me is that you need to understand the people,  you know, and and you need to be prepared that you are welcoming for all walks of lives right.  And and it's not just like intersectionality um talks about the different um inter- intersections  between identity. Um and identity is not the same for uh even within one person with disability  and another person with the same disability, the the way that they identify themselves could  be quite different as well. So really need to look at the the person um um um individually  and and not um separate things out. Um the other thing that I would also mention, um is that  is that normalization, you know. The um I have to be careful because disability uh people with  disability sometimes they they employ concealment strategies, and and and when it comes to this um  intersectionality in relation to you know gender identity and and and sexual orientation, things  like that, um those kind of concealment strategies will also um happen. So so for me it's more about  normalizing the conversation, um and uh yeah. Thank you, and I think we probably have time  for about one, maybe two more questions. So, sorry to anyone who asked a question that we  won't get to. If we don't get to your question, please send us an email or send our speakers  an email. We want to make sure, you know, this is one hour but the conversation  needs to go much more than an hour for sure. Um our next question is when you're  making the case for cultural change, uh what is your experience been with the  business case? Uh in relation especially to engaging with employers and the kind of  financial elements that are often focused on. Sure. Um I can start with that. Um so uh yes,  the business case important. The financial aspect of things depends on the interest of  the employer, um I think. Um in in our world, because March of Dimes is primarily a charitable  um nonprofit organization providing services, um we have funding that from government and other  sources and so forth. So sometimes the focus is more about um the placement of the person with  disability and providing that supports to um um help that employers uh on board of that  individual. Um so so, the the business case is most of the time is built around helping that  uh employers with with the recruitment effort, so that they don't have to do their own um,  you know, uh candidate screening for example, and and give them some confidence on on that they  were going to get the right candidate that can do the job, help them ensure that they can onboard  them and train them properly, because some of them are a little bit hesitant about hiring people  disability just because they're not familiar with what their needs may be. So so the business case  from my experience uh with this kind of context, so generally build around what we can help the  employers to kind of save time, um and um and and making sure that they have a person that  they they they can um work with for much longer term and that does happen in in situations where  employers um had experience with with people um with high turn turnover. Um so the the the more  high level of financial aspect on things, how disability um how hiring people with disabilities  can kind of change your your organization's um uh financial resources, and and uh help improves  your productivity and and your your your GDP and those kind of things is a bit high level. We  would um talk about that um when we are orienting employers to the concept of disability inclusion,  uh but more so focus on that recruitment um needs. Yeah, there's I also think there's a reputational  element to it too. Um there's quite an appetite, I think, among many employers to want to  hire people with disabilities. I mean at the federal level, there's um you know there's  obligations to do so. Um I've only worked for employers that are not federally regulated  and yet every single one of them has had an equity policy that includes people with  disabilities. So, I think it also comes back to education um and and who the you know who-  who the employer wants to identify as. So I agree with Francis in terms of the financial  component to the business case, but I also think it it is reputation and it is culture.  So those things play into the business case. Thank you both so much. And so we're just about at  our time so I'll wrap up now. Uh but I just really want to show appreciation for you sharing both  in your your expertise on this subject matter. Uh we do this month have two webinars, rather  than just the usual one. Uh so I want to flag that the next one is October 25th from noon to  1. Uh it's a really really exciting webinar we're gonna have Dr _______ uh from Bangalore speak  with us. Um we're really lucky to be having her join us. Um it's a big time difference,  but she'll still join us from noon to 1, so appreciative of that. Uh and she is  one of the foremost researchers on, kind of applied disability inclusion and management  and organizational issues in the world, uh and when I started working in this space some time  ago, she was almost one of the only or perhaps the only one in an academic space talking about  career success, talking about career advancement, uh rather than this former focus on entry-level  jobs and this sort of thing. So someone who has a wealth of knowledge, and also a wealth of  knowledge from a different context than uh who we often hear from. So, I hope you can make it  and learn from Dr _______. Uh you'll get a note on that if you are on our mailing list and again,  as always, email us. Um so thank you everyone for being a part of this, uh participants, attendees,  and our speakers, and also just a big thank you to our team: _______, Therese Salenieks, Sabrina  Chaudhry, Emile Tompa, and Rebecca Gewurtz, and a special thank you to our French  language interpreter Michelle ______. Uh we hope to see you at the next webinar, and  yeah have a nice Friday afternoon. Goodbye.