Building Accessible, Inclusive Workplaces for Multiple Chemical Sensitivity (MCS)

Practical, evidence-informed guidance to help employers, HR professionals, and institutional leaders create safer environments and meet accommodation obligations

Everyone deserves a safe place to work.

Accessible Canada Act · 2019

Are You 2040 Ready?

The Accessible Canada Act requires a barrier-free Canada by 2040 — and that includes indoor air accessibility in your workplace.

Barrier-Free Deadline Accessible Canada Act
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Canadians with MCS Statistics Canada, CCHS 2020
0 M
More Likely to report poor health
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Not Working vs. 24% general population
0 %

Under the Accessible Canada Act (2019), federally regulated employers must identify, remove, and prevent accessibility barriers — including environmental barriers affecting people with MCS.

WHO THIS PAGE IS FOR

Designed for Professional and Instituional Settings

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Employers & Business Leaders

Human Resources & Occupational Health

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Legal & Compliance Advisors

Facilities & Operations Manager

Eduators & Administrators

Union Reps & Labour Relations

mcs-seeking-accommodation-aseq-ehaq

Indiviudals with MCS Seeking Accommodation

UNDERSTANDING MCS IN PROFESSIONAL ENVIRONMENTS

MCS in Work and Institutional Settings

Multiple Chemical Sensitivity (MCS) is a chronic condition in which exposure to certain chemicals or volatile organic compounds (VOCs) may trigger significant health reactions. In professional environments, common exposure sources may include:

Fragrances and Personal Care

Perfumes, lotions, laundry products, deodrants

cleaning-agents-aseq-ehaq

Cleaning agents and disinfectants

Sprays, hand sanitzer, floor cleaners

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Building materials & furnishings

Paints, carpets, furnishings, renovation off-gassing

Outdoor Sources

Landscaping chemicals, pesticides, vehicle emissions, poor indoor air quality

In Canada, over 1.13 million individuals report a diagnosis of MCS. Many experience employment-related challenges linked to environmental triggers. Structured accommodation reduces environmental barriers and supports continued participation in professional environments.

ASEQ-EHAQ | Professionals & Employers

Why Scent-Free Policies Work

ASEQ-EHAQ's research with Accessibility Standards Canada tested indoor air quality across 34 Canadian offices — 17 with scent-free policies and 17 without. The results are clear.

VOC Concentration Comparison (avg µg/m³)

Non-Scent-Free
Scent-Free

Source: ASEQ-EHAQ / Accessibility Standards Canada IAQ Study · N = 48 spaces per group

70%
Lower mean TVOC levels in scent-free offices compared to non-scent-free offices
2–7×
More hazardous compounds (acetone, toluene, xylenes) in spaces without policies
€13.5K
Estimated energy savings over 10 years from source control vs. ventilation alone
"If the person who makes the decisions in your building doesn't understand the situation, then they're not on board and nothing's going to change."
— Focus Group Participant, ASEQ-EHAQ / Accessibility Standards Canada Study

A Collaborative Approach to Accommodation

Accommodation for MCS is a shared and structured process. Effective implementation requires coordinated participation from employers, professionals, and individuals living with MCS.

Employers are responsible for maintaining accessible professional environments and ensuring compliance with human rights obligations.

  • Establish and enforce environmental policies (e.g., scent-free standards)
  • Engage in good-faith dialogue with employees requesting accommodation
  • Assess environmental triggers within the workplace
  • Implement reasonable and proportionate adjustments
  • Monitor accommodations and review effectiveness
  • Ensure policy awareness and enforcement across the organization

Leadership commitment supports operational stability and inclusive workplace culture.

HR and occupational health teams coordinate accommodation processes and maintain procedural consistency.

  • Receive and document accommodation requests
  • Facilitate collaborative discussions between parties
  • Review documentation where required
  • Coordinate with facilities management
  • Ensure confidentiality and fairness throughout the process
  • Monitor timelines and follow-up

Legal advisors provide guidance on duty-to-accommodate obligations and procedural fairness.

  • Interpret applicable human rights legislation
  • Assess undue hardship considerations
  • Review policy language for compliance
  • Provide risk management guidance
  • Support dispute resolution where necessary

Facilities and operations teams implement environmental measures that directly affect exposure risk.

  • Maintain ventilation and filtration systems
  • Oversee material selection and renovation planning
  • Monitor indoor air quality practices
  • Manage cleaning and maintenance standards using fragrance-free, lowest-emission products
  • Implement outdoor environmental controls (smoke-free premises, idling reduction)

In educational and institutional settings, administrators ensure accessible learning and professional environments.

  • Implement fragrance-free policies across campuses
  • Coordinate environmental standards across departments
  • Communicate expectations to staff, students, and visitors
  • Facilitate accommodation pathways for affected individuals

Individuals requesting accommodation actively participate in the process.

  • Communicate known triggers and sensitivities clearly
  • Participate in collaborative discussions in good faith
  • Provide relevant documentation where required
  • Notify employers of changes in needs

A transparent and respectful process supports both operational stability and individual well-being.

Duty to Accommodate

Under Canadian human rights legislation, employers have a duty to accommodate individuals with disabilities, including Multiple Chemical Sensitivity, to the point of undue hardship. Accommodation must be:

Individualized

Tailored to the specific needs and circumstances of the individual

Evidence-Informed

Based on medical documentation and environmental assessment

Reasonable & Proportionate

Balancing individual needs with operational capacity

Implemented in Good Faith

With active engagement from all parties

The Canadian Human Rights Commission affirms that chemical exposures are recognized accessibility barriers. In 2025, the American Medical Association adopted policy recognizing fragrance sensitivity as a condition that can substantially limit major life activities.

Seven Domains of Effective Accommodation

01

Scent-Free Policies

Workplace-wide fragrance restrictions with fragrance-free, least-toxic product selection

02

Indoor Air Quality

Ventilation maintenance, filtration, humidity control, and environmental monitoring

03

Building Materials

Low-VOC selection, off-gassing mitigation, advance renovation notice

04

Cleaning & Maintenance

Fragrance-free products, scheduled cleaning well in advance of occupancy

05

Outdoor Controls

Smoke-free premises, vehicle idling reduction, responsible landscaping

06

Flexible Work

Remote work, adjusted schedules, temporary relocation, flexible leave

07

Training & Awareness

Employee education, confidential reporting, structured procedures

Making Scent-Free Policies Work

Research shows that many scent-free policies fail not because of the policy itself, but because of gaps in education, monitoring, and enforcement.

50%
Of scent-free buildings lack an education and awareness plan
44%
Of building occupants in scent-free spaces were unaware a policy was in place
0%
Of surveyed policies had an adaptability mechanism for evolving needs
  • Scientific background: Definition of VOCs, emission sources, how exposure affects health
  • Clear definition of "scent-free": Not just perfume — includes all fragranced products (laundry, personal care, cleaning)
  • How to choose scent-free products: Read labels, avoid "fragrance/parfum/aroma," watch for greenwashing
  • Scent-free vs. unscented: "Unscented" may still contain masking agents with undisclosed chemicals
  • Addressing misconceptions: Scent ≠ clean, no odour ≠ no chemical exposure, nose-blindness is real

Monitoring must be:

  • Ongoing — not a one-time event
  • Institutionalized within organizational processes
  • Multi-modal: Environmental (IAQ spot-checks, sensors) and behavioural (reporting systems)

Reporting systems must be anonymous, accessible, simple (e.g., one-click reporting), and safe — with no retaliation for reporting.

  • Clear policy communicated at time of hiring — signed agreement as part of employment contract
  • Comparable to no-smoking policy enforcement — same expectations, same consequences
  • Advance notice in booking confirmations, phone messages, and email reminders listing specific products to avoid
Source control — choosing fragrance-free, lowest-emission products — is the most effective, sustainable, and cost-efficient strategy for accessible indoor air.
ASEQ-EHAQ Research Finding

Accommodation Process: Step by Step

A consistent procedural framework supports fair and effective implementation.

1

Request Initiated

Individual communicates accommodation needs. Documentation may be requested.

2

Assessment

Workplace environment assessed for triggers: products, ventilation, materials.

3

Adjustments Identified

Collaborative discussion to identify proportionate, practical measures.

4

Implementation

Approved measures implemented. Staff informed. Facilities execute changes.

5

Monitor & Review

Regular evaluation ensures accommodations remain effective and responsive.

Know Your Jurisdiction

The duty to accommodate is a national principle, but the specific legislation and complaint process varies by province and territory. Use the table below to find the human rights commission or tribunal website for your jurisdiction.

Jurisdiction Legislation Human Rights Body
🇨🇦 Federal Canadian Human Rights Act · Accessible Canada Act (2019)
British Columbia BC Human Rights Code
Alberta Alberta Human Rights Act
Saskatchewan Saskatchewan Human Rights Code
Manitoba The Human Rights Code (Manitoba)
Ontario Ontario Human Rights Code · AODA
Québec Charte des droits et libertés · CNESST
New Brunswick New Brunswick Human Rights Act
Nova Scotia Nova Scotia Human Rights Act
Prince Edward Island PEI Human Rights Act
Newfoundland & Labrador Human Rights Act 2010
Nunavut Nunavut Human Rights Act
Northwest Territories NWT Human Rights Act
Yukon Yukon Human Rights Act
All jurisdictions require employers to accommodate disability — including MCS — to the point of undue hardship. If you need help understanding your rights or obligations, contact the human rights commission in your jurisdiction or reach out to ASEQ-EHAQ for guidance.
Ready to take the next step? Everything you need to build a safer, more inclusive workplace is below.

Tools & Resources for Implementation

Download the complete set of tools to support accommodation planning, policy development, and employee communication.

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Workplace Accommodation Guide for MCS (comprehensive)
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Scent-Free Policy Template
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Accommodation Request Form Template
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Duty to Accommodate Quick Reference
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Environmental Trigger Checklist (workplace assessment)
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BREESI — Brief Environmental Exposure and Sensitivity Inventory
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QEESI — Quick Environmental Exposure and Sensitivity Inventory
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Sample Letters to Request Accommodation
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Staff Education Handout: Understanding MCS
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Advance Notice Templates (reminders, email signatures)
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Scent-Free vs. Unscented: Quick Guide
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Examples of MCS-Appropriate Accommodations
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Product Selection Guide: Fragrance-Free Alternatives
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Cleaning Schedule Best Practices
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Canadian Human Rights Commission Guidance on MCS
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Provincial/Territorial Human Rights Legislation Summary
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Accessible Canada Act Overview
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ASEQ-EHAQ IAQ Study Summary
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VOC Reference Table (common workplace contaminants)
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Webinar Series: Accessible Indoor Air in the Built Environment

Creating Safer Professional Environments

Even simple steps — choosing fragrance-free products, enforcing a scent-free policy, training staff — can significantly reduce barriers and improve workplace health for everyone.

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