 The continuous discrimination against persons with disabilities is daily making it difficult for some to live meaningful lives. Despite this, many persons with disabilities in Canada's state are breaking all barriers by utilizing their abilities to thrive as the 20-22 persons with disabilities day is commemorated. Steven Enoch has more on the supports. This workshop has been in existence since 1980 and is a centre where tricycles for the crippled are made. Interestingly, a tricycle can be produced in not more than six hours and the people who work and are trained here are only persons with disabilities. The chief engineer in this workshop is taking young people with disabilities off the streets by training and employing them in the craft of tricycle production as well as the construction of playground equipment for schools among others. Before you buy a tricycle in Cano, you must go to Chadi, Chadi or Cameroon. Before you finish your tricycle, you will take six months before but we sit down now. Now, in six hours, we are making for you, we are making a tricycle for you. One hour, the one is cotton iron. Two hours, the one is like welding. Three, one hour again, phanta to come and do the one is put where wheels and then the one is combating the tricycle. That is six hours. That is the reason why we sit down and make by ourselves. The noise generated from this workshop can be unbearable for people but not for those working here. Their hearing is impaired. Forty-year-old Levi Hanesou has been working in this workshop for the past five years and through this craft has built a house of his own, has a car and adequately provides for his wife and seven children. And also I can make something that is a machine that can process rice. Also I can be able to make these hinges. This is hinges. I don't like begging. Yes, I need to work for myself. I have been doing it for many years. I have been doing so many things so that I can feed my family. So this is it. So this is my business. This is the only thing that I have been doing for many years and I have people that are working under me so I don't want to beg. So I need to work for myself and if I want to beg, I will wait for somebody if he gets it, he will give me. But I'm just being for my work and many people are partnerizing my business. Halima Ahmad has difficulties seeing objects from afar but she's determined to pursue her goal of being a chef despite her disability. I have passion of cooking, baking. That is what draw my interest in this business. At first I never go to any catering classes because of the passion and zeal I have. I use through YouTube any channel of cake, something, anything concerning baking or any program that I see they bake or they cook anything. So my own outcome, I say to them, let me practice it. So far I do in that, some people say, Halima bazaik yaba because you have to go through, carry the thing closer to your eyes. So but all those things does not discourage me because I do love baking and cooking. The first birthday cake I made at first it was not that good. So people started discouraging me. Halima bazaik yaba, bazaik yaba, you cannot make it. So with that, I say to her, but you don't want to carry the company that she's carrying it. So why won't I use it? I say no matter how very slow I am, I know more definitely I will do it. The Kano State's government recently signed the 2021 PWD bill in Sonoma and the implication of this is that PWDs in the state will have their rights upheld and protected by law, thereby ensuring that they have equal rights and opportunities as anyone else. Government considered it important to keep PWD in the state where they are interested. So that's what happens. That's what brings this an ongoing will that was passed by Kano State House of Assembly and also assaulted by His Excellency the Edict of Goro recently. Once the disability commission coming into being, the many PWDs are hopeful that a future plan will be provided for them in Kano State's Steven Enoch plus the news.