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Disability Organizations Oppose Changes to Canada s Medical Aid in Dying Legislation
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Bill C-7 Is a Matter of Life and Death for Persons With Disabilities
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CALGARY Five Alberta educators and four institutions were singled out recently for creating classroom environments where no one felt left out. They ve gone above and beyond to make sure children with developmental disabilities are welcomed and supported in regular classrooms. The teachers have been nominated by peers and parents for how they advocate for quality inclusive education. When students are well included they just go onto brighter futures, they make friends, said Trish Bowman, CEO of Alberta Inclusion. They do better academically as well. The 2021 National Inclusive Education Award is an initiative organized by Inclusion Canada and its Provincial and Territorial member associations.
Ensemble, aidons l Inde à reprendre son souffle
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Canadian evangelicals are decrying a new law that expands access to physician-assisted suicide to people who are sick or disabled but aren’t dying.
“Many of us are quite heartbroken over this,” said Derek Ross, the executive director of Christian Legal Fellowship. “We’re now dealing with a legal system that is making more and more exceptions to the once exception-less principle that you cannot consent to the harm of having your life ended by another person and that all lives are inherently and equally full of worth and value of dignity.”
Physician-assisted suicide known popularly as “Medical Assistance in Dying” or MAID has been legal in Canada since 2016. The law was limited to people who were experiencing what the Criminal Code called a “grievous and irremediable medical condition”: an illness, disease, or disability that causes enduring physical or psychological pain that cannot be relieved in any way the patient accepts. To be eligible, the patient also had