Andrea has spent her life navigating the complex landscape of disability support—not just as a professional, but as someone who has lived through its challenges firsthand. Growing up, she and her siblings took turns caring for their father, who lived with a disability, while pursuing their education. This meant Andrea stayed in her hometown to share caregiving responsibilities while completing her post-secondary studies online. Yet even this arrangement created another barrier: she could not receive funding for her education if she continued living in the family home, as it would reduce her father’s ODSP benefits. To continue her studies, she had to move out and live separately while navigating online courses in a community where reliable internet access was still scarce. At every turn, Andrea and her family encountered barriers in a system that seemed designed to exclude those who needed it most.
“Growing up, I saw how hard it was for families like mine to get the support they needed,” Andrea shares. “Having lived experience in the system inspires everything I do.”
Thankfully, things have changed since then, but that formative experience would drive her into a lifelong career of advocacy. Andrea has worked as an Educational Assistant for over 15 years, then as a Resource Coordinator, helping individuals with disabilities connect to available government supports. Now, as an FASD (Fetal Alcohol Spectrum Disorder) Worker with ABLE2, Andrea has found a role where her professional expertise, passion for advocacy, and lived experience converge to make a tangible difference in people’s lives.
FASD remains one of the widely misunderstood and underdiagnosed disabilities. This lifelong condition affects brain development, impacting critical areas including learning, memory, language, social skills, motor coordination, and decision-making abilities. However, because FASD is largely invisible and carries significant stigma due to prenatal alcohol exposure, it frequently goes unrecognized—leaving individuals without access to the specialized support and resources they need to reach their full potential.
Through ABLE2’s Fetal Alcohol Resource Program (FARP), Andrea provides essential education, training, advocacy, and service navigation for families of individuals with FASD in the Ottawa region. For parents raising a child with FASD, confusion and exhaustion are all too common. “When I first contact families to tell them they are off the waitlist, they feel instantly relieved, like a weight has been lifted off their shoulders,” Andrea explains. “Parents often don’t understand why their child behaves the way they do, and many don’t even know where to start or what resources are available to them.”
She recalls a foster mother who was at her wit’s end, overwhelmed by the lack of guidance and resources available for raising a child with FASD. “She told me, ‘You’re the first person to come into a meeting with solutions rather than asking me what I need.’ That moment stuck with me. It’s my job to meet them where they are and help them take that next step.”
Andrea’s role extends far beyond family support—she is actively working to transform societal understanding of FASD. Through her FASD 101 Training sessions, she collaborates with school boards and social service agencies to equip frontline workers and caregivers with the knowledge to identify FASD-related challenges and make informed decisions when supporting affected individuals. “I’ve had teachers and foster parents come up to me after my sessions and say, ‘I had no idea this was what FASD looked like,'” Andrea reflects. “That’s exactly why I do this work, because awareness is the first step toward meaningful action.”
Because FASD research and resources are relatively new, not many people are familiar with it. Andrea is determined to change that. “This is one of the disabilities that is preventable yet has a higher rate than Autism, Cerebral Palsy, and Down Syndrome combined. I’m passionate about bringing more education about FASD in the community so we can prevent the risk, but at the same time remove the stigma around it,” says Andrea.
The need for ABLE2’s FARP is staggering, with over 60 families still waiting to be supported. With only three FARP workers serving the entire Ottawa region, the program operates under a weighty caseload. “We’re trying to address a massive need with very limited resources,” she says. “But we continue to push forward because I know the struggles; these families can no longer afford to wait.”
Almost a year into her role, Andrea takes pride in working with ABLE2 to empower people with disabilities and help build an inclusive community for all. Her dedication drives the impactful and essential work that ABLE2 does every day. Through her role, Andrea empowers families and children to thrive, advocates for systemic change, and fosters genuine inclusion. For ABLE2, having a professional like Andrea—someone who intimately understands the systemic barriers she now helps others navigate—is invaluable. As a FARP Worker, her interventions serve as a lifeline for families working to overcome these challenges.
Why Your Support Matters
Through her work, Andrea is changing lives, one family at a time. But the need is far greater and there is more work to be done. With more funding, more resources, and more community support, FARP could impact thousands more families struggling in silence.
No family should have to navigate FASD alone. No child should be left without the tools they need to succeed.
With your continued support, programs like FARP can ensure that more families don’t just survive but thrive and build lives of meaning and joy.