Close X
Monday, December 2, 2024
ADVT 
National

Alberta Families Who Make Less Than $41,000 To Get Child Benefit, Tax Credit

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 12 Nov, 2015 12:51 PM
    CALGARY — Alberta is bringing in two benefits to give more money to low-income families.
     
    The new Alberta Child Benefit and enhanced Alberta Family Employment Tax Credit will impact families earning less than $41,220 per year, including those receiving Assured Income for the Severely Handicapped and social assistance.
     
    The maximum annual benefit is $1,100 for families with one child, and up to $2,750 for families with four or more children.
     
    The maximum annual tax credit is $754 for families with one child, and up to $1,987 for families with four children or more.
     
    "No child should grow up in poverty. Every child in Alberta deserves the chance to take part in their communities and reach their full potential," said Human Services Minister Irfan Sabir.
     
    "It is simply unacceptable that in a province as prosperous as ours that many hardworking Albertans struggle to make ends meet."
     
    Both benefits will be sent out to parents starting in July 2016 and the child benefit will be sent out in four payments, while the tax credit will be sent out twice a year.
     
    To be eligible, families must be residents of Alberta, file a tax return and have one or more children under 18.
     
    Finance Minister Joe Ceci said it made sense to implement the benefit next summer instead of right away.
     
    "There was the view that we could do it best if we took some time," Ceci said.
     
    "We wanted to ensure that it came out when it was needed. It's needed right across this province but we could get it organized and deliver it best."

    MORE National ARTICLES

    B.C. man busted in national child-porn ring gets 90-day sentence

    B.C. man busted in national child-porn ring gets 90-day sentence
    VERNON, B.C. — An Enderby, B.C., man caught in a Canada-wide child-pornography ring has been sentenced to 90 days in jail.

    B.C. man busted in national child-porn ring gets 90-day sentence

    Six months in jail for B.C. man who beat dog named Bryn with baseball bat

    Six months in jail for B.C. man who beat dog named Bryn with baseball bat
    VICTORIA — A Victoria-area man who beat a dog with a baseball bat until it could barely walk has been sentenced to six months in jail and banned from owning animals for 10 years.

    Six months in jail for B.C. man who beat dog named Bryn with baseball bat

    B.C. court tosses mother's concerns over review into visits given to abusive dad

    B.C. court tosses mother's concerns over review into visits given to abusive dad
    VANCOUVER — A government-led review of the actions of British Columbia social workers who granted visits to a father who had sexually abused his four children will take place against the wishes of their mother.

    B.C. court tosses mother's concerns over review into visits given to abusive dad

    Police, helicopter, dog unit follow suspects through southern B.C.

    Police, helicopter, dog unit follow suspects through southern B.C.
    RICHMOND, B.C. — It was an escape attempt worthy of an action movie, complete with the ramming of a police vehicle and a 200-kilometre pursuit through southwestern B.C.

    Police, helicopter, dog unit follow suspects through southern B.C.

    Suspect in multiple Alberta stabbings that left one man dead arrested in B.C.

    Suspect in multiple Alberta stabbings that left one man dead arrested in B.C.
    CHILLIWACK, B.C. — Mounties in Chilliwack, B.C., have arrested a suspect accused of stabbing four men in Sexsmith, Alta.

    Suspect in multiple Alberta stabbings that left one man dead arrested in B.C.

    B.C. First Nation writes its own declaration of title rights and strategy

    B.C. First Nation writes its own declaration of title rights and strategy
    BELLA BELLA, B.C. — A First Nation on British Columbia's central coast is not waiting for the provincial and federal governments to draft a reconciliation agreement.

    B.C. First Nation writes its own declaration of title rights and strategy