My company usually puts out a report and makes a big deal about DEI and especially equitable treatment/opportunities. Yet they leave out people with disabilities. It would seem the people with disabilities would have just as much if not greater need for equitable treatment given their disabilities may impact job performance or how others perceive them.
If anything, we should be doing less of this information gathering not more. It's very creepy, for example, that corporations have made it normal for employers to ask their employees questions about their sexual preferences and store that information in databases.
There's also a safety issue at play. If you're part of an historically mistreated group, do you really want your employer cataloging that? What happens when the zeitgest changes and things get bad for that group again? There are plenty of Jewish people in America who are shocked at the amount of AntiSemitism being thrown their way - A lot of folks thought that was behind us. Likewise, Iran was a fairly liberal country back in the 70's and the tide turned very quickly the other way. And of course there's the issue of women's rights in the post Roe era.
There are also plenty of people with disabilities who do not declare that status. I've got one. It has zero impact on my work, so I don't report it to HR. So they might not publish even aggregate numbers because they are probably incorrect.