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  1. Appendix B: Organizations that provided input

    From: The opportunity to succeed: Achieving barrier-free education for students with disabilities

    ARCH (A Legal Resource Centre for Persons with Disabilities)
    Association for Bright Children of Ontario
    Association of Education and Rehabilitation Services for the Blind and Visually Impaired
    Autism Society Ontario
    Bloorview MacMillan Children’s Centre
    B’nai Brith Canada
    Brampton Caledon Community Living
    Cameron Bay Children’s Centre
    Canadian Council of the Blind (Ontario Division)
    Canadian Council on Rehabilitation and Work
    Canadian Foundation for Children, Youth and the Law
    Canadian Hearing Society (North Bay)

  2. Section III: The balancing tools

    From: Balancing conflicting rights: Towards an analytical framework

    This section of the paper surveys the balancing tools found in the Code and relevant case law. Documents such as Commission briefing notes and Policy Papers provide invaluable commentary on these tools and their insights are woven into the following discussion. The goal of this section is to identify the resources for balancing conflicting rights that will be utilized in the scenarios discussed in Section IV.

  3. Housing

    From: Human rights and the family in Ontario

    The ground of family status was added to the Code in 1982. Until 1986, the Code contained an exception permitting residential buildings or parts of residential buildings to be designated as adult only. Unlike in the areas of employment and services, there has been significant litigation regarding family status issues in the area of housing, particularly in the Ontario context.

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