Press Release
December 03, 2024
New data shows that people with disabilities face financial hardship, unsafe housing, and a lack of supports and services at far higher rates than people without disabilities.
The findings, released by the Canadian Human Rights Commission and the Office of the Federal Housing Advocate, add to a growing body of evidence showing that people with disabilities are being denied their basic human rights. They are overrepresented in all aspects of inadequate housing and homelessness.
The new data shows that people with disabilities are:
This data builds on previously released findings, which showed that people with disabilities are four times more likely to experience homelessness, are more likely to live in unaffordable housing, are almost twice as likely to live in core housing need, and are often living in homes that are not accessible and do not have the physical aids they need.
This work is part of a monitoring project that is tracking the housing outcomes of people with disabilities. It uses publicly available data from Statistics Canada to examine eleven areas, such as homelessness, institutionalization, affordability, and accessibility.
The findings also echo the concerns that people with disabilities have been sharing for many years. Critically, their perspectives and lived experiences helped to shape the development of the monitoring framework.
This project is an important accountability mechanism to help assess whether Canada is meeting its human rights obligations under domestic and international law, including the National Housing Strategy Act and the United Nations Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities (CRPD). Housing for people with disabilities should uphold their fundamental rights – including access to housing that is affordable, safe, and accessible, alongside the supports they need to live independently and feel like part of their communities.
The data and the lived experiences of people with disabilities, however, show that this is not the reality. It is clear that Canada must do more.
In the coming months, the Commission will highlight these findings and make recommendations for Canada to take action in its upcoming report to the United Nations on Canada’s implementation of the CRPD. The UN will be reviewing Canada’s disability rights record in March 2025.
The Federal Housing Advocate is preparing to formally request the National Housing Council form a review panel to examine the issue of inaccessible housing. This pervasive issue affects everyone in Canada, with the greatest impact on vulnerable groups, including people with disabilities and seniors. The review panel will study this issue and send recommendations to the federal minister responsible for housing.
As we mark the International Day of Persons with Disabilities today, the findings from this monitoring project should serve as a call to action to improve housing for people with disabilities.
All people with disabilities in Canada should be able to live with dignity, be treated equally, and have their human right to housing upheld.
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Quick facts
Indigenous people with disabilities also had poorer housing outcomes than Indigenous people without disabilities. In 2017:
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