Ottawa·Ontario Votes 2022

What Ontario's major parties are offering for autism funding

More than 50,000 children with autism are on the wait-list to access core services in the province. Here’s how each party plans to tackle that.

Ontario Autism Program wait-list has doubled under PCs

Sophie Barrette estimates she's spent $150,000 to pay for therapy sessions for her son Dax. (Rachelle Elsiufi/CBC)

Sophie Barrette had to remortgage her house to come up with the $150,000 she says she's spent on therapy sessions for her four-year-old son Dax. 

"My son needs speech therapy, occupational therapy, physiotherapy, and he's been in ABA [applied behaviour analysis] therapy," she said.

Dax has autism and has been on the Ontario Autism Program wait-list for three years to access provincially funded services.

Sonja Elliott has been draining her savings to pay out-of-pocket for autism-specific therapies for her 10-year-old son Travis, who was diagnosed four years ago. He is also on a wait-list. 

Sonja Elliott says her son Travis has been on the Ontario Autism Program wait-list for four years. (Rachelle Elsiufi/CBC)

Elliott worries that she will be forced to scale back some of her son's therapies when her funds run dry, which could mean the difference between independent living and assisted living in his future. 

"[If] I can't fund what he needs, he'll be reliant on me or someone for the rest of his life, which ... as a parent [is] petrifying," said Elliott.

Wait-list has doubled 

Dax and Travis are just two of more than 50,000 children with autism in Ontario on this wait-list, which has doubled under Doug Ford's Progressive Conservative government

The PCs faced fierce criticism over their changes to the Ontario Autism Program, which aimed to eliminate the wait-list for treatment by sending funding directly to families rather than to regional service providers.

Families are eligible for interim one-time funding, but critics say the money doesn't go far enough as therapies cost around $2,000 per month.

Lisa MacLeod is running for re-election in Nepean. (Tijana Martin/The Canadian Press)

PCs pledged to clear wait-lists by 2020 

On Sunday, a small crowd gathered to protest in front of PC candidate Lisa MacLeod's constituency office in Nepean. MacLeod, who is running for re-election, was in charge of the file when the government changed the program. 

"She made cuts all over the place," said Kate Logue, director of the Ontario Autism Coalition, an organization calling for government-funded therapy, treatment and services for individuals with autism and their families. 

"When she started as minister in charge of the file [it] was 23,000 kids [wait-listed]. She blew up the program. They still haven't fixed it," Logue added. 

There is no specific mention of autism supports in the 2022 Ontario budget. 

CBC News reached out repeatedly to MacLeod and Merrilee Fullerton, minister of children, community and social services, and to the PC Party, but did not receive any response.

A small crowd gathered in front of MacLeod's office on Sunday to protest changes to the Ontario Autism Program. (Rachelle Elsiufi/CBC)

New Democrats promise to 'fix the broken program' 

An Ontario NDP government would make the province's autism program needs-based with no caps and ensure everyone across the spectrum receives the support and therapies they need to thrive. 

"Kids are not getting the programming and the treatment that they need," said Teresa Armstrong, NDP candidate for London-Fanshawe and the party's children and youth services critic. 

"I've heard those stories where families have to remortgage their home, take out a line of credit and use their credit card to go into debt just to get help for their children. And that's not something that we want." 

The NDP say they are committing $75 million to autism services for 2022-23, an additional $100 million the following year, and $125 million more in 2024-25. 

"The goal is to make sure every child who needs treatment for autism will receive that help under the NDP with our plan," Armstrong added. 

Liberals promise no new money, would spend remaining $300M

An Ontario Liberal government would implement a needs-based autism program for every child, hire a new special education worker for every school, conduct a comprehensive reform of special education and better transition people into adult services. 

The Liberal platform promises the mistakes of the past will not be repeated.

Liberal candidate John Fraser wants to spend the $300 million he says remains in the provincial budget for autism services. (Rachelle Elsiufi/CBC)

"Our next commitment is to do an independent review of autism services so we can learn from the mistakes of the past, as well as reviewing special education across Ontario to make sure it's meeting the needs of students," said Ottawa South Liberal candidate John Fraser. 

The Liberals' costed platform does not specifically mention a pledge for autism because they are not promising any "new money," Fraser explained. Instead, the party plans to spend the roughly $300 million that is left in Ontario's budget. 

"The government has spent half of the money that it committed to," he said. "There's money there to get the job done." 

Green Party to increase funding for autism services

Ontario needs to see change in the province's autism program immediately, said Steven Warren, Green Party candidate for Ottawa–West Nepean.  

The Greens are promising annual increases of $120 million for autism services until 2026.

Warren, who is autistic, said better representation at Queen's Park is needed. 

WATCH | Ottawa candidate with autism disappointed in province: 

Green Party candidate says Queen’s Park needs autistic representation

3 years ago
Duration 0:41
Steve Warren, who’s running for the Green Party in Ottawa West-Nepean and who is autistic, says he’s disappointed with the way the Ford government has handled changes to the province’s autism program.

"That's how you fix these complex issues, [as] someone who has experience and knows the issues that are facing the autism community," he said. 

The 18-year-old said his parents paid out of pocket for his therapy. 

"It's like $2,000 monthly. No one can afford that," he added. "It's simply unfair."