Accessible Widget

September 23, 2025

Four ways to recognize 'International Week of Deaf People'

This week marks the United Nations International Week of Deaf People.  A week to celebrate Deaf identity, culture and rights.  This year’s theme is “No Human Rights Without Sign Language Rights.” It carries a powerful message: true inclusion is not possible unless Deaf people can fully access and use their own languages – sign languages.



1. Sign up for a class! American Sign Language (ASL), Deaf and Hearing, offers Signing Naturally classes here. It is essential to attend classes led by a person who is officially trained in ASL; better yet, when your instructor identifies as part of the Deaf Community, you also get to learn more about Deaf Culture. 

2. Did you know that over 150,000 Albertans struggle with hearing loss? According to Deaf and Hear Alberta's blogger Rosemary, in a September 2, 2025, blog post , a University of Calgary study suggests that hearing loss may be related to one's overall health. Link to the study 

3. Want to test your hearing at home? Try a smartphone app, such as ShoeBox Online, which can help test your hearing. Try it at home using your phone. QR code below. 

QR code for testing your hearing at home

4. Celebrate! Deaf and Hear weekly September 23rd post says The World Federation of the Deaf is launching 3 activities to celebrate:

And want to be more welcoming to people who are Deaf and hard of hearing? 

Learn more by visiting https://deafandhearalberta.ca/


Many thanks to Deaf and Hear for the excellent information and resources!  

The 2025 Connections fundraising gala is coming up on Saturday, November 1st, 2025

September 12, 2025

"ADAP vs AISH: A smarter, more efficient path"

After five months of dialogue and review, the Disability Action Hall finds the proposed ADAP design principles risk causing more harm, higher costs, and added red tape. We recommend first passing the Alberta Accessibility Act and strengthening AISH.

We thank the Alberta government for the opportunity to participate in this consultation and look forward to the "What We Heard" report. Please find our submission titled "ADAP vs AISH: A smarter, more efficient path" Plain text version below.
ADAP vs AISH: a smarter more efficient path brief by Disability Action Hall  



ADAP means more bureaucracy, more costs, and more instability.

Fixing AISH is the common-sense, fiscally responsible solution.


ADAP vs. AISH: 
A Smarter, More Efficient Path

1. Strengthen AISH, 
Don’t Replace It with ADAP

  • ADAP risks creating harm and instability.
  • AISH is already established. 
  • — fix what doesn’t work instead of reinventing the wheel.
  • Income exemptions reward work and reduce dependence, rather than punishing people for earning more. (On average, it costs $3294* a month to maintain a modest standard of living, where 29% of AISH recipients reside in Calgary. (May 2024)

2. Cut Red Tape, Simplify Access

  • Endless costly reapplications waste government resources, medical professionals’ time, and frustrate Albertans.
  • Creating another program creates more red tape and delays essential support.
  • Maintaining AISH’s stable social assistance rates costs taxpayers less, as evidence shows food bank use strongly predicts future homelessness.**
  • Improving AISH means less paperwork, fewer delays, better accountability and tax dollar savings and less strain on an overwhelmed system.

3. Invest Upfront to Save 
on Health & Emergency Costs

  • When people fall into poverty, taxpayers foot the bill for ER visits, homelessness programs, and crisis services.
  • A stable, livable income prevents higher downstream costs. 
  • Strengthening AISH is the fiscally responsible way to protect both vulnerable Albertans and taxpayers, as AISH falls $576 short**** of Calgary’s poverty market basket measure for 2024.

4. Smarter Job Supports,
Not One-Size-Fits-All Programs

In summary...
ADAP creates more harm, increased costs, and red tape.
Fix the system first; pass the Alberta Accessibility Act and strengthen AISH.

www.actionhall.ca 


References for Policy Brief feedback for the ADAP Consultation, September 12th, 2025

** Losing the Canada Disability Benefit means losing hope for many Albertans, (Survey results and policy recommendations brief), July 2025.

** Food Bank Use and Homelessness, School of Social Public Policy, June 2025.

*** The new Alberta assistance program will it fulfill its promises? G. Petite, August 15, 2025 

**** Statistics Canada, Market Basket Measure for Calgary, May 2025.