
The Canadian Human Rights Tribunal issued a landmark ruling for accessibility rights in Timothy Lidkea v. Correctional Service Canada (2026 CHRT 19), finding CSC reckless for failing to provide meaningful communication accommodations to a Deaf, Indigenous inmate and ordering system‑wide reforms.
The Tribunal affirmed that Deaf prisoners are entitled to meaningful access to communication in ASL and LSQ, a telephone system reasonably comparable to that of hearing inmates, and opportunities for at least two hours per day of effective interpersonal communication.
The decision highlights systemic harms—profound isolation, exclusion, and limited parole and reintegration opportunities—experienced by Deaf people in federal custody, with amplified discrimination against Deaf Indigenous people due to their overrepresentation in prisons.
Mr. Lidkea and involved organizations call on CSC to remedy past wrongs, support Deaf incarcerated people in accessing parole and accommodations, and implement the mandated accessibility reforms across the federal prison system.
Read more about the landmark ruling on Yahoo Finance
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