CAN-ASC-4.1 Accessible Procurement
6. Introduction
Information
Table of contents
Technical committee members
- Andrea Zervos (Chairperson), Manager, Public Services and Procurement Canada
- Gilles LeVasseur(Vice Chair), President, Federal Court Challenge Program
- Cheryl Stacey, retired, former public servant
- Harry Lew, Manager of Research and Development, Neil Squire Society
- Martin Chénier, Président, Procurement Alliance of Canada
- Brytani McLeod, NorQuest College - ACT! Consulting, Incluion & Accessibility Consultant, Career Coach
- Katya Pereyaslavska, Associate Librarian, Western University
- Hilton Schwartz, National Board Member, Alliance for Equality for Blind Canadians
- Elizabeth (Liz) Laidlaw, Director, Accessibility Office, Workplace Safety and Insurance Board (WSIB) Ontario
- Sarah Anne Hrycenko, Procurement Advisor, Procurement Assistance Canada: Public Service and Procurement Canada
- Diane Morrell, Accessibility Coordinator, City of Sault Ste. Marie
- Jeffrey Panasuik, Executive Director S5 Dynamic Learning Initiative
- Audrey, Beauchamp, Directrice générale, Services linguistiques CB
- Cynthia Benoit, Présidente, Eversa
- Amy Ross, Accessibility Advocate, City of Waterloo
This Standard provides requirements to create an equitable and accessible procurement process. These requirements provide technical guidance to help organizations facilitate an equitable and accessible procurement process. This includes individuals responsible for procurement, employees who support these processes, and businesses who bid on these processes or sell their products.
This Standard supports the following user groups:
Procurement professionals within organizations by providing guidance on how to integrate accessibility throughout the procurement life cycle, including how to support clients in considering accessibility and ensuring that goods or services are delivered in accordance with the accessibility requirements specified in the contract.
Procurement professionals can include:
- supply specialists;
- the contracting authority;
- contracting officers;
- materiel management specialists; and
- procurement officers.
Clients within organizations by providing guidance on how to consider and integrate accessibility when identifying specifications for their procurement needs, including how to create accessible engagement activities.
A client is responsible for:
- defining the required capabilities, intended business outcomes, and benefits of a project, procurement, or program at its outset; and
- the achievement of business outcomes and benefits following implementation.
A client could also commonly be referred to as:
- the project authority;
- the technical authority; and
- the requisitioner.
- Procurement policy and program service and delivery teams within organizations by ensuring that the user experience and accessibility requirements are incorporated when developing web and non-web content, websites, forms, and digital applications. This also includes, but is not limited to services such as:
- usage tutorials;
- frequently asked questions; and
- help desk support.
- End users by ensuring that individuals who use or interact with the goods or services procured are consulted throughout the procurement process to identify and remove barriers.
- Businesses by ensuring that the procurement process is accessible to those involved in businesses, including those owned by persons with disabilities, or where employees with disabilities support procurement processes. Businesses are also expected to demonstrate how they will meet accessibility requirements and implement them. This will be monitored and evaluated no differently than other contractual obligations.
This Standard aligns with the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms, federal human rights legislation, and applicable provincial and territorial accessibility laws. This Standard promotes equity-based requirements that go above mandatory minimums. This means that the technical requirements in this Standard focus on areas where barriers in procurement need to be addressed to achieve the highest level of accessibility.
Above all and in the spirit of this Standard, people with disabilities are involved in procurement.