Deaf-blind Ontario woman suing governments over student loan debt inequality
TORONTO — A disabled woman is in an Ontario court this week seeking changes to Canada’s student loan program that she argues would level the playing field for people with disabilities.
Jasmin Simpson, who is deaf and legally blind, says the program’s current rules force students who take longer to complete their studies because of their disabilities to graduate with considerably more student debt than their able-bodied peers.
The program currently grants loans for every year a student is enrolled in their academic program, rather than the number of courses required to complete it.
While the program refuses to fund undergraduate studies for non-disabled students beyond five years, no such cap exists for disabled students.