ASEQ-EHAQ
Projects / ECRoB
Empowering Community and Removal of Barriers
A federally funded, multi-year national initiative to advance the recognition, accommodation, and inclusion of people living with Multiple Chemical Sensitivity (MCS) across Canada. ECRoB connects legal, medical, environmental, and disability sectors to dismantle barriers and build accessible communities for all.
ECRoB is funded in part by the Government of Canada's Social Development Partnerships Program – Disability Component. ASEQ-EHAQ leads the project with national partner organizations committed to MCS inclusion.
About the Project
ECRoB stands for Empowering Community and Removal of Barriers. It is a multi-year national initiative designed to advance the recognition and accommodation of Multiple Chemical Sensitivity (MCS) as a disability across Canada.
The project takes a multi-sectoral approach, connecting legal, medical, environmental, and disability communities to create systemic change. ECRoB produced national survey data, practical accommodation tools, a national network of educators, and freely available published resources for all Canadians.
By sharing knowledge across sectors, ECRoB works to ensure people living with MCS can access the accommodations, care, and inclusive spaces they have a right to — in workplaces, healthcare, schools, and public life.
The Name
Building the awareness, capacity, and practical tools that enable people with MCS to exercise their rights, request accommodation, and participate fully in society.
Connecting organizations, educators, healthcare providers, legal advocates, and people with MCS across Canada in a shared network committed to inclusion.
Systematically identifying and dismantling the chemical, social, legal, and environmental barriers that prevent people with MCS from accessing spaces and services.
The real, everyday obstacles faced by people with MCS: fragranced products in shared spaces, inaccessible healthcare and workplaces, lack of legal knowledge, and systemic discrimination.
Why ECRoB Is Needed
These figures from Statistics Canada establish the scope of MCS as a public health and disability rights issue — and the urgency of ECRoB’s work.
People in Québec reported a diagnosis of MCS, representing 3.4% of the provincial population
Canadians nationally reported MCS, representing 3.5% of the population
Of people with MCS are not working — compared to 24% of the general Canadian population
More likely to report poor or fair health and face significant barriers to healthcare access
Of time Canadians spend indoors — where VOC exposures from products are concentrated
AMA adopted policy recognizing fragrance sensitivity as substantially limiting major life activities
Project Objectives
ECRoB was designed around three interconnected goals that together advance access, awareness, and inclusion for people living with MCS across Canada.
Educate people with MCS and other disabilities about their legal rights to accommodation in workplaces, healthcare settings, and public spaces — so they can exercise those rights with confidence.
Create trained educators who can deliver workshops across Canada, teaching organizations, employers, and service providers about MCS as a disability and the accommodations required for full inclusion.
Build bridges between legal, medical, environmental, and disability communities to collectively address accessibility barriers — including fragranced and toxic products that prevent people with MCS from accessing spaces.
The Four Pillars
ECRoB’s work is organized across four interconnected pillars. Each contains original research, practical tools, Q&A resources, and video content on that dimension of MCS. Click each pillar to expand.
The Biological pillar covers the medical and scientific understanding of Multiple Chemical Sensitivity — how the body is affected by chemical exposures, neurological and immunological mechanisms, and the current research evidence.
The Social pillar addresses how MCS affects employment, housing, family life, relationships, and participation in public life. It provides practical tools for workplaces and service providers.
The Legal pillar covers the rights of people with MCS under Canadian law, how to request accommodation, province-specific rights, and the jurisprudence that supports recognition of MCS as a disability.
The Fragrance-Free Research Hub contains 10 published resources on scent-free policy design, the health impacts of fragranced products, and practical guides for creating accessible environments.
How ECRoB Does Its Work
National surveys and questionnaires distributed to measure existing awareness of MCS among the general public, healthcare providers, and employers — establishing a baseline and identifying critical education gaps across Canada.
A plain-language, accessible guide developed for employers, service providers, educators, and individuals — providing step-by-step guidance on accommodating people with MCS in workplaces, institutions, and public settings.
Research findings, resources, and accommodation tools disseminated through workshops, newsletters, social media, partner networks, and the ECRoB website — reaching Canadians in every province and territory.
Fragrance-Free Research Hub
Fragranced products contain volatile organic compounds (VOCs) that can trigger debilitating symptoms in people with MCS. These 10 freely downloadable resources are for organizations, individuals, and policymakers on creating scent-free, accessible environments.
Why fragrance-free matters for inclusion and accessibility — the case for scent-free practices in every shared environment.
Read / Download →Fact sheet demonstrating how fragrance-free environments benefit people with MCS, asthma, COPD, autism, migraines, and other conditions.
Read / Download →Practical tip sheet for individuals and organizations on making healthy product choices and educating others about fragrance-free practices.
Read / Download →Step-by-step guide for workplaces on creating and enforcing fragrance-free policies to accommodate people with MCS.
Read / Download →Downloadable thank-you notice for establishments implementing fragrance-free policies — signals an inclusive, accessible environment.
Read / Download →Educational notice for shared laundry facility users requesting fragrance-free, least-toxic products to protect people with MCS.
Read / Download →A national database of establishments — workplaces, healthcare settings, schools — that have implemented scent-free policies.
Read / Download →Common questions and answers covering what fragrance-free means, why it matters, and how individuals and organizations can make the transition.
Read / Download →Factsheet on the serious health impacts of air fresheners, including chemicals linked to asthma, hormonal disruption, and cancer.
Read / Download →Educational factsheet separating myths from facts on the health and environmental impacts of fragranced laundry products.
Read / Download →Video Resources
ECRoB produced videos covering each pillar area — available in English and French, captioned, and free to share for training and awareness.
Published Research
All ECRoB project reports are publicly available. These documents capture national survey findings, research methodology, outreach outcomes, and evidence gathered across Canada.
Full Report
Complete overview of ECRoB initiative outcomes, partnership engagement, and project findings submitted under the Accessible Canada framework (December 2023).
Annex 0–3
Structural outline including research questions, methodology, and the findings framework used across the ECRoB project.
Annex 4–7
National survey data measuring awareness and knowledge of MCS among the general public, healthcare professionals, and employers across Canada.
Annex 8–11
Findings from ECRoB newsletter outreach: readership data, engagement metrics, and the impact of awareness communications distributed nationally.
Downloads
Every ECRoB resource is freely available to download, share, and use for non-commercial education and advocacy purposes.
Overview of ECRoB initiative for outreach, distribution, and awareness events
↓ Download PDFVisual one-page overview of MCS — ideal for sharing with employers, colleagues, and healthcare providers
↓ Download PDFComprehensive reference document on MCS supports, research, and resources across Canada
↓ Download PDFTemplate letter for requesting reasonable accommodation at work, healthcare, school, or public services
↓ Download PDFPlain-language guide to accommodation rights for people with MCS under Canadian law
↓ Download PDFTracking tool for documenting chemical exposures and symptom patterns — essential for accommodation requests
↓ Download PDFLegal cases supporting MCS accommodation under Québec workplace safety law through 2012
↓ Download PDFLegal cases supporting MCS accommodation under Québec workplace safety law, 2013–2017
↓ Download PDFRecognition
ECRoB's work takes place in the context of expanding international and national recognition of MCS as a serious disability.
The American Medical Association adopted policy recognizing fragrance sensitivity as a condition that can substantially limit major life activities, supporting fragrance-free environments and accommodation.
The UN Committee on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities explicitly referenced MCS in its Concluding Observations to Canada, affirming equal access, accommodation, and non-discrimination.
Canadian human rights frameworks affirm the right to reasonable accommodation for people with MCS as a recognized disability in workplaces and public services.
ECRoB is funded through the Government of Canada's Social Development Partnerships Program — Disability Component, affirming federal recognition of MCS accessibility barriers.
Peer-reviewed research in the International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health documents MCS prevalence, mechanisms, and impacts on daily life in Canada.
National data confirm 1.13 million Canadians (3.5%) report MCS, with 41% unemployment rates and 3× higher rates of poor self-rated health compared to the general population.
National Network
ECRoB brought together a national coalition of partner organizations committed to advancing inclusion for people living with MCS. Partners contributed to survey distribution, workshop delivery, resource dissemination, and policy advocacy across Canada.
Partners included disability rights organizations, accessibility specialists, community groups, and housing advocates — each bringing expertise and networks that extended ECRoB’s reach into new communities and sectors.
Whether you are a person with MCS, an employer, a healthcare provider, a researcher, or an advocate — ECRoB resources are for you. Download, share, and use them freely.
“Everyone deserves the right to breathe.”