There are numerous,
needless barriers to the profession beginning with the LSAT, exam methods,
access to textbooks, networking events, the physical set - up of courthouses and classrooms, and the attitudinal prejudices that prevent people with disabilities from getting work.
In April 2015, West Coast LEAF and CLAS intervened jointly in this case at the BC Supreme Court
to argue that the evidence required
to establish discrimination under the law must take into account people's lived realities and not create
needless, additional
barriers to accessing justice.