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Corporate Social Responsibility(Industry Canada)>

 

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MOBILA1 is a concept which links social aspects with good business practices
MOBILA1 creates jobs for people with disabilities and adds value for employers
It’s Win-Win situation for everyone

Think about the possibilities, not the disabilities
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Background and Rational for MOBILA1 Project

Over the past few decades Canadians have become increasingly aware of the presence of people with disabilities and have become sensitive to the need to recognize them as an important part of Canadian society. This emerging social responsibility has been especially important in the area of employment, as people with disabilities offer Canada a huge talent potential.

Fortunately, the same technological advances that have restructured the Canadian workplace in general have expanded the array of options open to individuals with disabilities. People with disabilities want meaningful work and the economic independence it brings.

AKAS Virtual Design of Nova Scotia, is pleased to be part of this movement. Through creative ability and with a profit motive, AKAS is opening the doors to new employment for people with disabilities. The MOBILA1, a unique development of AKAS, will produce new jobs across Canada and US for people with disabilities.

Our employment strategy for people with disabilities is self- sustainable and profitable, and will not require ongoing financial contributions from government sources. For this project we have incorporated a new enterprise called AKAS Virtual Design which we hope will become a self-sustaining business. 

We are inviting you to become a partner and sponsor of this nation-wide pilot project. We are sure that media coverage of this exciting project will enhance your positive corporate image as you will be participating in assisting this job creation effort for people with disabilities. Our existing supporters in non-profit agencies are already excited about the possibilities this project can produce not only in our province, but national wide.



Objectives

The overall objective of this project is to increase employment opportunities for job seekers with disabilities.
· To establish and operate a success company for mobile digital signage products.
· To design, manufacture and to successfully launch the MOBILA1 series advertising units.
· To establish a advertising network of Mobila1 Operators.
· To provide MOBILA1 units as a means of employment across Canada for several hundred people with disabilities.

 

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Hiring people with disabilities is not a matter of charity. It is good business practice. In a study released on April 3, 2000 the Royal Bank suggested that hiring more persons with disabilities is good economic sense. The report estimated that Canadians with disabilities have control over twenty to twenty-five billion dollars in disposable income. This level of purchasing power will grow substantially over the next decade. In fact, baby boomers born between 1947 and 1966 will add a further 1.4 million to the population of working age Canadians with disabilities. The report concluded that the reputational risks associated with short selling the needs and interests of this large segment of the Canadian population are real and will only intensify in the years ahead.
The Royal Bank is not the first corporate entity to conclude that hiring people with disabilities and members of other marginalized groups is important to the bottom line. A projected 50% increase in the number of seniors with disabilities by 2005, a high proportion of whom will have one or another type of disability, has persuaded many employers of the need to hire staff who understand and can respond sensitively and effectively to their needs and wants. Indeed, the public is increasingly demanding socially responsible business practices. Even global corporations are being exposed to new public scrutiny. The Seattle protests of December 1999 give ample indication of the potential for damage to corporate reputations and impact on the bottom line.
Market research carried out by Environics International Limited in 1999 revealed in its Millennium Poll on Corporate Social Responsibility that 20% of citizens worldwide have avoided the product of a company or spoken out to others against a company not seen as socially responsible. The 1999 Cone/Roper Cause Related Trends Report similarly concluded that the influence that consumers now have on driving business success shouldn't be underestimated. It found that 54% of consumers consider labour practices, business ethics, social role and environmental impact when formulating their impressions of companies. In addition, when price and quality are equal, 75% of consumers say that they would patronize the company with a socially responsible record, even if this means switching from a previously valued brand. Both reports concluded that a commitment to corporate social responsibility must be communicated effectively to a widening group of stakeholders that includes customers, vendors, employees, government and the community.

Corporations that have succeeded in mounting successful diversity strategies point to a number of tangible benefits potentially important to the bottom line:
- a vastly enhanced public image based on increased responsiveness to the needs and expectations of a broader range of important stakeholder groups such as shareholders or tax payers, customers or clients, employees and communities;
- increased profitability from developing and marketing a broader range of products and services needed by the more diversified customer base the strategy has attracted;
- ability to attract and retain, motivate and use effectively human assets in an era of critical skill shortages;
- reduction of costly worker turnover and absenteeism based on the improved morale that flows from planned and effective diversity management in the workplace; and
- a better and more secure foothold in the increasingly competitive global economy.

Clearly any organization, public or private, needs to be concerned about the bottom line. As conviction about the relationship between workforce diversity and improving the bottom line mounts among corporate opinion-makers throughout Canada, so does the attractiveness of adopting a diversity strategy. Making a place in your workforce for qualified individuals with disabilities is just plain smart business.


Source: The Nova Scotia Disability Employment Toolkit

 

 

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