Public servants with disabilities fear cuts - Action News
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Ottawa

Public servants with disabilities fear cuts

With the federal budget expected to drop on March 29, some federeal bureaucrats with disabilities are worried that the expected cuts will give their employers a chance to lay them off.

Some federal bureaucrats with disabilities worry next weeks budgetand the job cuts expected to followwill give managers an excuse to lay them off.

Dan Mooney, who works for the Department of National Defence, lost his eyesight. Now, he's national co-chair of the Advisory Group for Persons with Disabilities. (Supplied image)

The federal government has clear rules about the treatment of employees with disabilities. The policy says theres a "duty to accommodate" and develop an "inclusive, barrier-free work environment in which everyone has equal access to opportunities."

But some bureaucrats say accommodation is often perceived as costly and that sometimes, workers are pressured to take medical leave or retirement.

Dan Mooney goes to work every day at the naval base at Esquimalt, B.C. Hes had his public service job at the Department of National Defence for decades, but these days, he doesnt have much to do.

Layoffs would be 'short-sighted': advocate

"Im in a bit of limbo," said Mooney.

A condition called wet macular degeneration stole his sight over the past few years. While his managers have given him the tools to accommodate his disability, he hasnt actually been given new responsibilities.

"The system isnt designed for someone who says, 'Oh, OK, I lost my eyesight, what do you want me to do now?' The accepted attitude was, youre disabled, youre going on disability, weve met our obligation to you, were doing the best we can in difficult fiscal times."

So Mooney has taken on tasks as the national co-chair of the Advisory Group for Persons with Disabilities, a voluntary role that helps raise the concerns of people with disabilities to the chain of command.

"When a person with a disability goes back to work and becomes a productive member of society, everybody wins," he said. "The co-workers win because they look at the individual and say, you know, if that ever happens to me, I know my life isnt over."

Mooney said it would be shortsighted for managers to target people with disabilities as they plan layoffs.

"It would certainly be easier if we could give these people a pension and send them home," said Mooney, "if it were a fact that we were mannequins that could be put on a shelf and be stored, but thats not the case."

Sheri Daneliak said shes being pressured to do just thatleave her public service position and take a medical pension. Butshe's only 45 years old.

Daneliak worked as a contractor for several years before becoming a full-time public servant more than a decade ago.But in 2003, just a few years into her position as a contracting officer with Emergency Preparedness, strange things started happening to her.

"I was waking up in the night, grabbing my throat, unable to breathe," said Daneliak. "I would be smelling odd smells that werent there. Id see flashing colours in my brain."

Daneliak said she continued to work long hours at a demanding job. She was eventually diagnosed with epilepsy and went on medication.

"It was the opposite of accommodation, they were pushing me to work longer, the seizures got worse," she said.

In February 2004, Daneliak was too sick to continue working. Shes since been diagnosed with Parkinsons disease and remains on long-term disability leave.

"I think several years ago when this situation happened, there could have been a lot of accommodations made for me," she said."And I could still be working. I could still be in my profession. I could still be climbing. But Ive been shoved aside."

Public Service Commission to file report

According to the Public Service Alliance of Canada, there are currently more than 400 complaints of discrimination and "failure to accommodate" people with disabilities. Thats a statistic for just one of several federal government unions.

Mooney is familiar with the complaints.

"I hear all the cases that arent working and there are a lot of cases that do work," he said. "And when it doesnt work, look at the harm, because its not an administrative exercise, its not an exercise in policy, its genuine human beings facing probably some of the largest challenges theyll ever face in their life."

The Public Service Commission is currently analyzing data on persons with disabilities. It plans to publish a report this fall. One of the commissions priorities is recruiting people with disabilities. Last fall, the former head of thecommission told a senate committee that "for the disabled, we really have a challenge because we are not even getting the applications in at a workforce availability rate. We have more to do in that area."

Mooney and Daneliak both said theres more work to do to help disabled public servants already on staff.