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Budget 2026: $965M budgeted, 67,509 children still waiting. Read our analysis →

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end|thewaitontario

Parent-led advocacy for Ontario families waiting for autism services.

Getting Started

  • Browse All Pages
  • Search
  • Diagnosis Guide
  • While You Wait
  • Facts (Citation Ready)

Common Questions

  • All Questions
  • How Long Is the Wait?
  • What Is the OAP?
  • How Many Are Waiting?
  • Options While Waiting
  • Funding Amounts

Tools

  • Next Steps Tool
  • Wait Estimator
  • Funding Estimator
  • Therapy Budget
  • Waitlist Tracker

Providers

  • Provider Directory
  • Choosing a Provider
  • Submit a Provider

Funding & Support

  • OAP Overview
  • Funding Guide
  • Eligibility
  • How to Register
  • DTC & RDSP

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Evidence & Data

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  • Where Does the Money Go?

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About

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end|thewaitontario

Parent-led advocacy for Ontario families waiting for autism services.

Getting Started

  • Browse All Pages
  • Search
  • Diagnosis Guide
  • While You Wait
  • Facts (Citation Ready)

Common Questions

  • All Questions
  • How Long Is the Wait?
  • What Is the OAP?
  • How Many Are Waiting?
  • Options While Waiting
  • Funding Amounts

Tools

  • Next Steps Tool
  • Wait Estimator
  • Funding Estimator
  • Therapy Budget
  • Waitlist Tracker

Providers

  • Provider Directory
  • Choosing a Provider
  • Submit a Provider

Funding & Support

  • OAP Overview
  • Funding Guide
  • Eligibility
  • How to Register
  • DTC & RDSP

Your Region

  • Toronto
  • Ottawa
  • Hamilton
  • London
  • Mississauga
  • All Regions

Evidence & Data

  • Evidence Library
  • Data Hub
  • Waitlist Data
  • Cost Calculator
  • Data Stories
  • Where Does the Money Go?

Take Action

  • Action Hub
  • Write Your MPP
  • File Complaint
  • Advocacy Toolkit

About

  • Our Story
  • Transparency
  • Media References
  • Founder
  • Press
  • Contact
end|thewaitontario

Parent-led advocacy for Ontario families waiting for autism services.

  • Browse All Pages
  • Search
  • Diagnosis Guide
  • While You Wait
  • Facts (Citation Ready)
  • All Questions
  • How Long Is the Wait?
  • What Is the OAP?
  • How Many Are Waiting?
  • Options While Waiting
  • Funding Amounts
  • Next Steps Tool
  • Wait Estimator
  • Funding Estimator
  • Therapy Budget
  • Waitlist Tracker
  • Provider Directory
  • Choosing a Provider
  • Submit a Provider
  • OAP Overview
  • Funding Guide
  • Eligibility
  • How to Register
  • DTC & RDSP
  • Toronto
  • Ottawa
  • Hamilton
  • London
  • Mississauga
  • All Regions
  • Evidence Library
  • Data Hub
  • Waitlist Data
  • Cost Calculator
  • Data Stories
  • Where Does the Money Go?
  • Action Hub
  • Write Your MPP
  • File Complaint
  • Advocacy Toolkit
  • Our Story
  • Transparency
  • Media References
  • Founder
  • Press
  • Contact

Legal Disclaimer: This website presents advocacy arguments based on publicly available data and legal frameworks. While we strive for accuracy, this content is for informational purposes only and does not constitute legal or medical advice. Nothing on this website should be construed as a guarantee of any specific legal outcome.

Independence: End The Wait Ontario is a parent-led advocacy group. We are not affiliated with the Ontario government, the Ontario Autism Coalition, Autism Ontario, or the World Health Organization. We cite FOI data obtained by the Ontario Autism Coalition as a matter of public record. This does not constitute affiliation. References to these organizations are for informational purposes; no endorsement is implied.

Non-partisan policy advocacy: We advocate on policy outcomes for children and families and do not endorse any political party or candidate.

Statistics are current as of the dates cited and may change. For specific legal guidance, consult a licensed attorney. For medical advice, consult qualified healthcare professionals. Last updated: 2026.

Legal|Privacy|Terms|Cookies|Accessibility|Corrections|Authority

Advocacy, not anger. Data, not speculation.

Carroll v. Ontario · HRTO 2025-62264-I

© 2026 End The Wait Ontario. All rights reserved. · Parent-led advocacy · Not a government agency

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  1. Home
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  3. ›Write to Your MPP

How many children are on the Ontario autism waitlist in 2026?

As of January 2026, **88,175 children are registered with the Ontario Autism Program**. [FOI] However, only **20,666 (23.4%)** have an active Core Funding Agreement. This represents approximately 285% growth in the waitlist since 2019, with over 67,000 children still waiting for essential funding.

Source: CBC FOI Jan 2026, FAO Report 2024

How long do families wait for Ontario autism services?

Ontario autism wait times for core clinical services now exceed **5+ years** (2026). Most families currently receiving invitations registered in 2020 or earlier. This delay far exceeds the sensitive early intervention window recommended by developmental specialists. [FAO]

Source: CBC FOI Jan 2026, FAO Report 2024

Can autistic students get an educational assistant (EA)?

Schools may assign EAs based on IEP needs, but **47% of families** report insufficient supports. [OAC] EA availability varies by board and often fails to match clinical needs, leaving many autistic students without necessary classroom support.

Source: Ontario Education Act & OAC

How much does Ontario fund for autism treatment?

Core Clinical Services funding ranges $6,600-$65,000 per year based on age/needs (with a total OAP budget of $965M for 2026-27, up from $779M in 2025-26, per the Ontario Budget tabled March 26, 2026). This is direct funding—families choose public or private providers. However, intensive ABA therapy can cost up to $95,000 USD/year (2020 US cost estimate cited in FAO 2020 report; Canadian costs vary), leaving significant out-of-pocket gaps.

Source: 2026 Ontario Budget, FAO Report 2023-24

Do autism waitlists violate the Canadian Charter of Rights?

The Supreme Court (Auton, 2004) ruled there is no automatic right to specific funding. However, the Ontario Human Rights Code prohibits discrimination in service delivery based on disability. Multi-year delays for approved OAP services may constitute systemic discrimination. The OHRC has issued policy statements on the rights of people with disabilities to equitable service access.

Source: Ontario Human Rights Code, OHRC Policy Statements

Does contacting my MPP help with autism wait times?

Yes. MPP contact creates documented political pressure. MPPs can escalate individual cases directly to MCCSS and raise systemic issues in Question Period. Email campaigns from multiple families in one riding have historically triggered policy reviews and funding announcements.

Source: Ontario Legislative Assembly Records

Advocacy Tool

Email Your Representatives

Email Your Representatives

Pre-written, sourced, ready to personalize. Review recipients, add your details, and open a draft in your email app.

end|thewaitontario

Find Your MPP

Email Your Representatives

Draft & Send to 11 Officials

Choose which officials to email

1. Your Identity

2. Your Situation

3. Select Template

To: 11 Ontario & Federal Officials

Dear Prime Minister, Premier Ford, and Ministers, I'm writing from . I never expected to be writing a letter like this. When my child was diagnosed with autism, we were told that early intervention—therapy during the first years of life—was critical. The pediatrician, the specialists, everyone said the same thing: start now, while the brain is still developing. So we applied. And then we waited. We're still waiting. FOI data (Dec 2025) shows 88,175 children registered with the Ontario Autism Program (OAP), and core clinical services require waiting to be invited based on date of registration. Each of us was told the same thing: early intervention matters. And each of us is watching that window close while our children wait for a phone call that doesn't come. The World Health Organization and every major pediatric authority agree: early intervention during the first years of life produces the best outcomes. Canada signed international agreements promising timely healthcare for children with disabilities. Ontario isn't keeping that promise. I'm asking you to do something about this: 1. Set real timelines. Children should begin therapy within months of diagnosis, not years. 2. Fund what therapy actually costs. The current amounts don't cover the care children need. 3. Make the data public. Families deserve to know where they stand and whether the system is improving. I know you receive many letters. But somewhere in Ontario right now, a child is having their third birthday on a waitlist. Another is having their fourth. Their fifth. By the time they reach the front of the line, the critical window will have closed. These are the children we're talking about. I hope you'll act before it's too late for more of them. Sincerely, An Ontario Parent Sent via EndTheWaitOntario.com
11 Officials Will Receive This

Nothing sends automatically — you review and edit the draft first

What Improves Impact

A short personal note beats a generic blast

  • 1Mention your child, wait time, or why the issue matters in your riding.
  • 2Keep the stakes clear and the ask specific.
  • We prefill facts, but you control the final wording.
  • Reply-to stays yours so an MPP office can answer directly.
  • Nothing about this flow is built like a generic government portal.

Over 2,400+ letters have already been sent to representatives using this tool.

1
Your Identity
2
Your Situation
3
Choose Template & Send

Step 1: Your Identity · Step 2: Your Situation · Step 3: Choose Template & Send

TL;DR Summary (AI-Ready)
  • Pre-written letter templates with FOI-sourced statistics ready to send to your MPP
  • Over 2,400+ letters already sent to Ontario representatives using this tool
Show all 4 factsShow fewer facts
  • Includes post-budget template addressing the 2026 Ontario Budget allocations
  • 88,175 children registered — only 23.4% have active core funding
Verified: 2026-05-12
Scope: Ontario, Canada

Why your voice matters

67,509 children are still waiting — your letter gives that number a face and helps drive the policy change needed.

Registered

88,17588,175

Children registered

Total in the Ontario Autism Program queue

CBC FOI Jan 2026

Funded

20,66620,666

Have active funding

Just 23.4% of registered children

CBC FOI Jan 2026

Waiting

67,50967,509

Still waiting

Registered. Diagnosed. Un-funded.

CBC FOI Jan 2026

Verified April 29, 2026 — CBC FOI Jan 2026

Share these numbers
Ontario Autism Program key statistics (CBC FOI Jan 2026, verified 2026-04-29)
MetricValue
Children registered88,175
Have active funding20,666
Still waiting67,509
These template letters are provided for general advocacy purposes only and do not constitute legal advice. Consult a licensed lawyer for legal guidance specific to your situation. All statistics are sourced from CBC FOI Jan 2026 and the Financial Accountability Office of Ontario.

Template Letter

Post-Budget Template — updated with 2026 budget context
Dear [MPP Name], I am writing to you as a constituent and the parent of a [child's age]-year-old autistic child who has been waiting [number] months/years for Ontario Autism Program services. Your government just tabled the 2026 Ontario Budget. I need to share what this means for my family. [PERSONAL STORY - 2-3 sentences about your situation] My child was diagnosed with Autism Spectrum Disorder in [month/year]. We registered with the OAP immediately and have been waiting [time period] for services. During this wait, I have watched my child [specific impacts: regress/fall behind/struggle]. [THE BUDGET REALITY] The 2026 budget allocated $965 million to the Ontario Autism Program. Here is what that means: - 88,175 children are registered with the OAP — 67,509 still without funded services - The Financial Accountability Office estimated $1.35B is needed to serve all waitlisted children - AccessOAP operations alone cost $57.9M/year — money that does not reach families - At current enrollment rates, my child may wait [estimated years] more before receiving services The budget [did / did not] meaningfully address the gap between what is needed and what is funded. [If applicable: The announced "new investment" of $[X] represents [a real increase / a reannouncement of existing commitments / an inflation-adjusted decrease].] [MY ASK] The budget is set, but your voice still matters. I am asking you to: 1. Advocate within your caucus for supplementary autism funding before the next fiscal year 2. Support direct funding to families so we do not have to wait years for bureaucratic processing 3. Push for enforceable service timelines — not just budget lines, but accountability for delivery 4. Demand transparency on how OAP funds are spent, including by AccessOAP [NEXT STEPS] I would appreciate a meeting to discuss your plan for the 67,509 children still waiting. - A written response within two weeks - Your commitment to raise this in the Legislature - Your position on direct funding models like BC has implemented Sincerely, [Your Name] [Your Address] [Your postal code] [Your phone number] [Your email] [Date] CC: Minister of Children, Community and Social Services CC: Premier of Ontario CC: Opposition Critics
Replace bracketed text with your information

Budget Response Inserts

Copy the paragraph that matches the actual 2026 budget outcome.

Funding Increase

The government allocated additional funding for the Ontario Autism Program, which is a step forward. However, 67,509 children remain without funded services. Even with this increase, enrollment rates must more than double to clear the backlog within five years. A single budget line does not close the funding gap the FAO has documented — families need a multi-year commitment with enforceable service timelines.

Flat Funding

The government kept autism funding flat at $965M while the waitlist grew to 88,175. Flat funding does not keep pace with inflation or demand — the waitlist grows by approximately 526 children per month. At current rates, my child and 67,509 others will age out of the critical early intervention window before ever receiving services. The FAO has documented this trajectory.

Funding Cut

Despite 88,175 children waiting for autism services, the government reduced autism funding. The Financial Accountability Office identified a $1.35B funding gap, and this reduction widens it. Every dollar cut translates directly into children who will not receive the evidence-based therapy they need during the critical developmental window of ages 0-6. I urge you to reconsider this allocation.

Printable Data Card

One-page summary of verified statistics. Print it or attach it to your letter.

Advocacy Tool

Your Personal Advocacy Data Card

A one-page data card you can print or share — with the facts MPPs can't ignore. Includes live waitlist numbers sourced from Ontario Autism Coalition FOI data.

88,175
Registered
67,509
Waiting
76.6%
Unfunded

Adds “For families in [your riding]” to the card. Find your riding

https://www.endthewaitontario.com/api/og/mpp-card

Opens as a 1200×630 PNG image • Right-click to save • Print-ready

  • Use Multiple Channels: Send letter by mail (more impact), email, and follow up with phone call to constituency office.
  • Be Respectful but Firm: Professional tone is more effective. Attack the problem, not the person. But be clear about urgency.
  • Include Your Address: MPPs only respond to constituents. Include full address to prove you live in their riding.
  • Keep Records: Save copies of all correspondence. Note response times (or lack of response). Track commitments made.
  • Follow Up: If no response in 2 weeks, call constituency office. If unsatisfactory response, consider escalation.
  • 1.
    Constituency Office: First point of contact. MPPs prioritize constituents from their riding.
  • 2.
    Minister of MCCSS: The Minister responsible for the OAP. Copy Minister on all correspondence.
  • 3.
    Premier of Ontario: Premier sets overall government priorities. Escalate if Minister does not respond adequately.
  • 4.
    Party Critics: Each party has an autism services critic. Contact opposition critics for additional support.
  • 5.
    All-Party Committee: Request that the issue be referred to the Standing Committee on Social Policy for study.
Common Questions

Frequently Asked Questions

Find your MPP by visiting ontario.ca/find-your-representative and entering your postal code. This will show your MPP, their contact information, and constituency office address. Ontario has 124 elected MPPs, each representing one riding. You can only advocate to your own MPP (they are not required to respond to non-constituents). Your MPP's website will have specific contact methods and sometimes issue-specific response forms.
Effective advocacy letters include: (1) Your full address to prove you're a constituent, (2) Personal story - your child's wait time, impact on family, specific challenges, (3) Facts - 88,175 children waiting, 23.4% receiving services, 5+ year waits, (4) Specific ask - what action you want them to take, (5) Proposed solution - evidence-based reforms that work, (6) Call to action - meeting request, commitment to reform, response timeline. Keep it to 1-2 pages maximum.
Yes, individual advocacy works when done collectively: (1) MPPs track constituent issues - repeated contacts on autism signal priority, (2) 2016 OAP policy was reversed after parent advocacy, (3) MPPs need stories to raise in Question Period and caucus meetings, (4) Media coverage of individual stories creates pressure for change. Your letter alone may not change policy, but 100 letters from constituents gets attention. 1,000 letters forces action.
Escalation pathway: Week 2 - Follow up call to constituency office. Week 4 - Contact Minister of Children, Community and Social Services (copy your MPP). Week 6 - Contact Premier's office (copy MPP and Minister). Week 8 - Contact opposition critics and request all-party review. Month 3 - Consider media outreach and coordinated advocacy with other families. Document each step and lack of response.
In-person meetings are powerful advocacy tools: (1) Put a human face on the statistics, (2) MPPs remember personal stories better than letters, (3) Opportunity to bring photos and documents, (4) Build ongoing relationship for follow-up. Request a meeting in your initial letter. If granted, prepare: 2-minute story, 1-page briefing document, specific ask, photos/videos of your child (optional). Bring another parent if possible for support.
Specific, actionable asks work best: (1) Support direct funding to families (BC model) - specific policy change, (2) Require interim services for all waitlist families within 90 days - immediate action, (3) Establish enforceable service standards - legislative solution, (4) Increase workforce training funding - capacity solution, (5) Support OHRC implementation - human rights obligation. Avoid vague asks like "fix autism services." Be specific about what you want them to do.
Strategic frequency matters: Initial contact - send letter and request meeting. Week 2 - follow up call if no response. Monthly updates - share developments in your family's wait, new information, media stories. Before budget season - increase contact (January-March) when funding decisions are made. Before election - all parties make promises - get commitments in writing. Don't spam - but don't let them forget either. Quality over quantity.
You can contact any MPP, but they are only required to respond to constituents. Strategic multi-party contact: (1) Your MPP (all parties) - primary focus, (2) Minister - regardless of party, they're responsible for the file, (3) Critics from all parties - they advocate on issues, (4) Committee members - if issue goes to committee. All-party support is ideal - autism should not be partisan. But your own MPP should always be copied and remains your primary contact.

Complete Advocacy Guide

Comprehensive guide to autism advocacy in Ontario.

HRTO Complaint Process

Information about the human rights complaint process.

Multiple ways to help

Three actions. Real pressure.

  • Email your MPPPre-filled letter. Opens in your email app.
  • Share your storyFamilies reporting moves policy.
  • Spread the wordEvery share reaches more families.

Letter Sent?

Amplify Your Impact — Share the Data

Your letter is more powerful when others send theirs too. Share this page with other Ontario families so they can write their MPP in minutes.

Share This ToolLearn About the HRTO Process
  • Ministry of Children, Community and Social Services: Spending Plan Review (2024). Financial Accountability Office of Ontario (2024)
  • Ontario Autism Coalition FOI update on Ontario Autism Program registrations and funding. Ontario Autism Coalition (December 2025)

Related Resources

  • Advocacy Toolkit
  • File an HRTO Complaint
  • Proposed Reforms
About This Article
Written by:Spencer Carroll - Founder & Autism AdvocateParent of autistic child navigating OAP system
Featured in CBC News Investigation
FOI Data Verified
Clip in WHO Social Media Reel
Active HRTO Advocacy
FAO & Legislative Assembly Cited

Verified Facts

Facts cited on this page

88,175 — children are registered in the Ontario Autism Program

SecondaryCBC FOI Jan 2026Verified: 2026-04-29

23.4% — Only 20,666 children have active funding agreements () — less than one in four

SecondaryCBC FOI Jan 2026Verified: 2026-04-29

According to the FAO (2020 report), OAP funding covers less than one-third of estimated need at 2018-19 service levels

Gov / Peer-ReviewedFinancial Accountability Office of Ontario (2020)Verified: 2020-07-21

$965M — Ontario allocated to the Ontario Autism Program in 2026-27

Gov / Peer-ReviewedGovernment of Ontario, Ministry of Finance (2026)Verified: 2026-03-26

WHO recommends accessible, community-based early interventions for children with autism — timely evidence-based psychosocial interventions improve communication and social engagement

Gov / Peer-ReviewedWorld Health Organization (2023)Verified: 2023-11-15
View our methodologyView all sourcesNext data update: 2026-05-15