In this thought-provoking episode of Remarkable World Commentary, Donna J. Jodhan reflects on “the cost of vision loss” and how it can abruptly and profoundly reshape a person’s life, especially when a child loses their sight. She describes how vision loss forces children and their parents to find “workarounds” for navigating a fast-moving world, while also confronting social attitudes and the real-life barriers that can suddenly appear in everyday situations.
Leave a CommentAuthor: Donna J. Jodhan World-Renowned Blind Advocate
Donna J. Jodhan, LLB, ACSP, MBA is a world-renowned blind advocate, accessibility consultant, published author and internationally respected changemaker whose strategic litigation and policy work have shifted the accessibility landscape in Canada. Her signature achievements include winning the 2010 Charter of Rights case that compelled the federal government to make all public-facing websites accessible, co-leading the coalition that secured passage of the Accessible Canada Act in 2019, and receiving the 2022 Queen Elizabeth II Platinum Jubilee Award in recognition of her sustained, results-driven campaign to dismantle systemic barriers for people with disabilities.
In this wide-ranging episode of Remarkable World Commentary, Donna J. Jodhan sits down with her longtime friend, mentor, and fellow “barrier buster” Robin East for a candid conversation about advocacy, law, and the lived reality of navigating inaccessible systems. East traces his path back to Saskatchewan, describing how he became legally blind in 1982 at age 22 and how the struggle to access basic information, like textbooks and timely research, sparked his lifelong push for equal access. From there, he reflects on his 2007 tenure as national president of the Alliance for Equality of Blind Canadians and explains why he insisted on a “rights-holder” approach (not “stakeholders”), including coalition-building across blindness organizations and backing Jodhan’s landmark Charter challenge on inaccessible federal websites, an outcome he says proved that systemic change can be forced when communities organize and persist.
Leave a CommentOn this Episode of Dining with Donna, Donna Jodhan sits down with Renée Rentmeester, the creator and executive producer of The Cooking Without Looking TV Show, for a lively conversation about food, accessibility, and changing how the world understands blindness. Renée shares her path from an early start in television to a long media career and entrepreneurial work, then explains what moved her to create a show that highlights blind and visually impaired cooks as capable, creative, and completely “everyday,” without pity or stereotypes. Together, Donna and Renée talk about building a welcoming space where guests can be honest about vision loss while keeping the tone upbeat, practical, and empowering.
Leave a CommentIn this empowering episode of Remarkable World Commentary, Donna J. Jodhan introduces a new monthly “Ask Advocate Donna” segment, folding in the spirit of her earlier Ask Donna Advocacy in Action podcast, designed to help listeners become stronger, more confident, and more independent advocates. She opens with a quote about speaking so others love to listen, and listening so others love to speak, then kicks off a quick “word game” that challenges listeners to reflect on an advocate’s mindset: “act now” vs. “put off,” and “accessibility” vs. “expediency.”
Leave a CommentIn this sobering episode of Remarkable World Commentary, Donna J. Jodhan kicks off 2026 with a hard question, who needs to take responsibility when an exam is promised to be accessible, but turns out not to be. She recounts her experience after months of intense preparation for a CompTIA Network+ / cybersecurity exam, funded through a scholarship, only to arrive on exam day and face a system that was poorly structured for accessibility, paired with a proctor/reader who couldn’t properly interpret key parts of the test, leaving her no real choice but to forfeit the exam.
Leave a CommentIn this insightful episode of Remarkable World Commentary, Donna J. Jodhan welcomes longtime colleague and mentor John Melville for a candid conversation about how a career in radio, television, and sports broadcasting unexpectedly led him into accessibility leadership. John reflects on his early path, from studies at Carleton and Humber to behind-the-scenes roles in major Canadian media, and explains how “theater of the mind” in radio helped shape his understanding of what inclusive broadcasting really requires. Together, they revisit AMI’s evolution from a niche service into a network striving to be “television that includes everyone,” and how Donna’s own advocacy and on-air work intersected with that mission.
Leave a CommentIn this uplifting episode of Remarkable World Commentary, Donna J. Jodhan sits down with Carol Trapani to explore the “why” behind ConnectAlt, a community-driven, fully accessible hub designed to help blind and low-vision people quickly find events, programs, and resources in one place. Carol shares how the idea grew out of her family’s lived experience as the mother of Lucy (born blind and determined to do everything), and the frustration of having to hunt across countless separate calendars and websites, an insight validated through extensive conversations with the community. She also describes the platform’s early momentum, including its launch at the National Federation of the Blind convention in New Orleans, where strong sign-ups and real stories of connection underscored just how needed this kind of central resource is.
Leave a CommentHere, Donna J. Jodhan continues her account of trying to earn the CompTIA Network+ certification as a blind woman in Canada through the Apex Program and Pearson VUE. She recaps that a $7,500 USD “scholarship” from Apex turned out to be roughly 21 outdated Word documents, no LMS, and no meaningful human support, which she and her sighted business partner were forced to work around on their own. After a year of study and approved accommodations from Pearson, she still could not take the exam on October 1, 2025 because key questions relied on diagrams with no validated alt text for the reader to convey, prompting her to leave and publish Part 1 of her story. In this follow-up, she describes how Apex’s response focused on brand damage and asking her to “pause” her article rather than solving the underlying access problem, how she refused to alter a truthful published account, and how she experienced their behavior as bullying, gaslighting, and psychological pressure.
Leave a CommentIn this richly reflective episode of Remarkable World Commentary, Donna J. Jodhan welcomes her longtime friend, mentor, and travel companion, Jilla Bond, for a conversation about a life lived as a “mosaic” of careers and caring. Jilla describes leaving school with little confidence and no clear path, then gradually building a portfolio of roles across politics, business, and design, from opening Margaret Thatcher’s mail to directing a major international design conference in Montreal that transformed her understanding of design as something that can radically improve people’s lives, like a child’s wheelchair built to feel like a sports car. She explains how these experiences, along with later work in high-end Italian lighting and growing a company with very low staff turnover, shaped her people-first philosophy and her approach as a life coach: listening deeply, asking careful questions, and helping others find their own answers rather than imposing solutions.
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Remarkable World Commentary Episode #77: Ask Advocate Donna
In this practical episode of Remarkable World Commentary, Donna J. Jodhan introduces her monthly “Ask Advocate Donna” feature, an advocacy-focused segment designed to help listeners think on their feet, build confidence, and approach everyday barriers with courage and strategy. She opens with a favorite quote about speaking and listening with care, then leads a quick “word game” that contrasts respect vs. disrespect and courteous vs. condescending, urging advocates to keep respect front and center, ignore disrespect when it arises, and aim for genuine courtesy rather than talking down to others.