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16 www.canadianlawyermag.com OPINION UPFRONT The billable hour perpetuates ableism Firms risk losing top legal talent by clinging to outdated productivity metrics that undervalue diverse working styles and abilities centralized accommodation fund model removes the burden from individual depart- ments and signals institutional commitment. Firms must stop outsourcing discrimination through recruiters who screen out candidates based on outdated assumptions about what lawyers "should" be able to do. Most impor- tantly, senior lawyers and firm leaders must model inclusive behaviour, demonstrating that success comes in many forms. The urgency of this issue extends beyond current practitioners. Canada's legal profes- sion is aging rapidly, and disability increases with age. The barriers we maintain today will affect tomorrow's partners and senior counsel. In treating disability inclusion as optional, we're not just excluding current talent – we're creating a profession that will eventually exclude ourselves. Moreover, as DEI initiatives face back- lash and "claw back" across various sectors, disability inclusion offers a path forward that transcends political divisions. This isn't about political correctness but professional sustain- ability and excellence. When we exclude lawyers with disabilities, we impoverish our profession's intellectual diversity and problem-solving capacity. The legal profession prides itself on advocacy and fighting for justice and equality. Ironically, we've created internal systems that perpetuate exclusion. We measure dedication by hours logged rather than problems solved, availability by phys- ical presence rather than intellectual contri- bution, and success by conformity rather than innovation. The time has come to bend our profession to accommodate human diversity instead of forcing human diversity to conform to arbi- trary professional norms. Law firms that embrace this shift will not only be more inclu- sive but also more successful, innovative, and better positioned to serve clients in an increasingly complex world. The question isn't whether we can afford to make these changes – it's whether we can afford not to. Lorin MacDonald is a Toronto-based human rights lawyer. Recognized as one of Canadian Lawyer's Top 25 Most Influential Lawyers in 2021, she serves on the editorial board that selects this year's Top 25. OUR PROFESSION systematically excludes some of its most talented practitioners through an outdated, ableist conception of productivity. The legal profession's structure – particularly its reliance on billable hours – creates rigid productivity metrics that prioritize time spent over results achieved. These embedded institutional systems, combined with cultural norms that treat non-disabled experiences as the standard, create conditions where talented lawyers with disabilities cannot perform their best work. While 27 percent of Canadians identify as having a disability, only 5 percent of Ontario lawyers and fewer than 1 percent of Quebec lawyers self-disclose their disabilities. This dramatic gap suggests that the legal profes- sion remains unwelcoming to lawyers with disabilities, making disclosure feel risky. Consider the contrast between legally blind lawyer Mohamed Elshafie's experience at Conway Baxter Wilson LLP, the Ottawa litigation firm where success is measured by outcomes and human dignity is respected, and the horror stories shared by other lawyers facing driver's license requirements for desk jobs and inflexible in-person mandates. At Conway, accommodations aren't grudgingly provided – they're integrated into a culture that recognizes diverse working styles as strengths, not obstacles to overcome. The legal profession's resistance to disability accommodation often stems from a false economy of exclusion. Firms worry about costs and complications, yet lawyers with disabili- ties are frequently among the most dedicated and innovative practitioners. One striking example from a webinar involved a clerkship requiring part-time work; the person accom- modated consistently outperformed full-time colleagues. In addition, statistics show that 18–20 percent of Justice Canada lawyers identify as having disabilities, demonstrating that barrier removal causes representation to approach population norms. This isn't just about fairness – it's about professional excellence. Lawyers with disabili- ties often bring unique problem-solving skills, resilience, and perspectives that enhance legal teams. They've navigated complex systems their entire lives, skills that translate directly to legal practice. Yet our profession continues to use productivity metrics that assume everyone works the same way, at the same pace, in the same environment. The solution requires a genuine culture change. True inclusion means abandoning the billable hour as the sole value metric and recognizing that lawyers are individuals who may not benefit from cookie-cutter moulds. Some produce their best work in concen- trated bursts, while others produce it through steady, consistent effort. Some thrive in collab- orative environments; others in quiet, focused settings. A mature profession harnesses these differences; it doesn't force conformity. Practical steps are available for firms ready to embrace this shift. Justice Canada's