Helping employers create more inclusive workplaces.

This Canada-wide awareness campaign aims to increase employer awareness about how people with disabilities are a talented part of the workforce, and provides resources to help employers tap into this talent pool during their search for skilled workers.

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Free Employer Toolkit

The toolkit offers a variety of informative tools. Learn about the skills people with disabilities bring to the workplace and use our ‘how-to’ resources, that provide practical tips and strategies on successful recruitment, hiring, inclusion and retention of people with disabilities.
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Tool #4: Recruitment

Improve your skills in recruiting top talent by exploring how to create your own inclusive job descriptions and job postings. This tool also outlines how service providers can provide support to employers in recruiting, selecting, hiring, and retaining people with disabilities.

Benefits of Inclusive Job Descriptions

Writing an inclusive job description is not mandatory when it comes to hiring people with disabilities. However, inclusive job descriptions are beneficial for any hiring, and when used as a regular HR practice, they can increase business efficiency by allowing managers to accurately assess an employee’s work performance.

Determining essential/non-essential and critical/non-critical functions also creates opportunities to increase employees' performance and job satisfaction. Inclusive job descriptions help to select the right person for each job. They can also increase your recruitment reach.

Employer’s legal responsibility: It is important to define all essential job functions and to prepare job descriptions before advertising any vacancies or interviewing any applicants. Employment should be defined by a person’s ability to perform the essential and critical job functions. In other words, employers may not disqualify a person from employment if they are unable to perform non-essential job functions.

Steps for Writing an Inclusive Job Description

To write an inclusive job description, refer to the following questions and to the accompanying sample Receptionist job description.

  1. What is the formal job title?
  2. What is the supervisor's job title?
  3. What is the purpose of the job?
    This should usually take no more than 3 or 4 sentences. It is meant to indicate the main objectives, outcomes, intended results and/or outputs.
  4. What are the duties and responsibilities?
    List 3 to 8 job duties and/or responsibilities. For each one, list examples or related tasks and indicate if they are critical or non-critical. Critical tasks may be routine or occasional.

    Providing these details ensures flexibility and encourages employees to think in terms of job enhancement instead of viewing certain tasks from the perspective of “That is not my job”. Tasks may also be listed as routine or occasional.

    Begin each statement with an action verb (present tense).
    Use gender-neutral and non-discriminatory language.
    Use clear, simple and precise language. Use qualifiers only when necessary.
    Be as specific as possible. Write details regarding where, when, why and how.
    Examples:
    Instead of: “Greet visitors.” Write: “Greet visitors at the office and on the telephone in a professional and friendly manner.”

    Instead of: “Handle incoming mail.” Write: “Sort and distribute incoming mail.”
  5. What are the job requirements and qualifications?
    The requirements and qualifications should match the duties and responsibilities. This generally includes minimum education levels and certifications. This section does not focus on prior experience.
  6. What are the working conditions?
    Describe the physical work environment and the hours of work. This section usually includes special conditions such as: weekend work, shift work, working outdoors, working with challenging clients, or working in noisy environments.
  7. What are the physical requirements?
    Describe the critical range of motion needed by the person doing that job, along with the frequency and any strength requirements if lifting objects is necessary. Also describe any special equipment that must be operated in the workplace.

    Employers may not indicate non-essential physical requirements.

    Example:
    In a receptionist job description, employers may not state the requirement to “lift and carry up to 20 lbs. or 10 kg”. Statements such as these are arguably discriminatory since they are not focused on a specific result or essential aspect of the job.
  8. Disclaimers 
    Employers should consider adding disclaimers to remind employees and applicants that the job description is subject to change.

    This document is provided for information purposes only. The content provided is not legal advice and should not be used or relied upon as such. Applicable law may differ from jurisdiction to jurisdiction; if you are seeking legal advice, you are advised to consult a lawyer in your province or territory.

BFOR's → What are bona fide occupational requirements?

Bona fide occupational requirements are considered essential to the job. An employer must differentiate between the essential and absolute job requirements and the optional or flexible job tasks.

For example, in most situations refusing employment on the grounds of religious belief would be considered discriminatory, but a religious school may lawfully require that its teachers be members of that denomination and may lawfully bar from employment anyone who is not a member.

In other situations, posting job requirements that are not essential prevent otherwise qualified candidates from applying to a job that they would be capable of doing. For example, if having a "valid driver's license" isn't absolutely necessary for the job, it is not a bona fide occupational requirement and should not be posted.

Note: bona fide means authentic, genuine, real, valid, without intention to deceive.
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Hire for Talent is committed to providing a website that is accessible to the widest possible audience. This website was designed to conform to Web Content Accessibility Guidelines (WCAG) 2.1 level AA requirements. The website was last updated in June 2023. If you encounter any accessibility issues, we welcome your feedback. Please contact us at: info@hirefortalent.ca.
Land Acknowledgement
The Community Business Development Corporation (CBDC) Restigouche respectfully acknowledges that the Hire for Talent project was developed in Mi'gma'gi, the ancestral and unceded territory of the Mi’gmaq. We also recognize the Wolastoqiyik and Peskotomuhkati peoples as the past, present and future caretakers of this land. This territory is encompassed by the Treaties of Peace and Friendship, which remain in effect today. Although developed on this land, the Hire for Talent project extends across the territories of various Indigenous peoples throughout Turtle Island.