Close X
Saturday, October 5, 2024
ADVT 
National

B.C. Extends Financial Help For Youth Aging Out Of Provincial Care

The Canadian Press, 18 Oct, 2016 12:34 PM
    VICTORIA — British Columbia is expanding a program that provides financial help to young people who have turned 19 and aged out of provincial care.
     
    Children and Families Minister Stephanie Cadieux says youth who were formally in care will now be eligible for funding under the Agreements with Young Adults program until they turn 26, up from the previous age of 24.
     
    The expansion will also extend the amount of time young people can receive benefits from two years to four, and will add courses to teach life skills such as cooking and financial planning.
     
    To be eligible, youth must have plans that include life-skills training, post-secondary education or attending a mental health or addictions treatment program.
     
    Cadieux says on average, young people receive about $1,000 per month and the ministry says there were 654 open files as of August.
     
    The minister estimates about 500 additional young people will come forward and the changes will bump the cost of the program from $3.7 million per year to $5 million, but says there will not be a cap on funding.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Former Alberta Premier Jim Prentice Dies In Plane Crash in B.C.

    Prentice was on board the small jet that went down Thursday night after taking off from the Kelowna airport.

    Former Alberta Premier Jim Prentice Dies In Plane Crash in B.C.

    Sister Of Man Killed In Police Manhunt Sues Over Use Of Lethal Force

    Sister Of Man Killed In Police Manhunt Sues Over Use Of Lethal Force
    VANCOUVER — The sister of a man shot and killed by police at the end of a manhunt in Slocan, B.C., is suing the provincial and federal governments over the RCMP's handling of the incident.

    Sister Of Man Killed In Police Manhunt Sues Over Use Of Lethal Force

    2 Toronto Residents Face 18 Forgery Charges In 'Secret Shopper' Fraud Probe

    2 Toronto Residents Face 18 Forgery Charges In 'Secret Shopper' Fraud Probe
    The Royal Canadian Mounted Police and Toronto police say two Toronto residents are facing a total of 18 forgery charges arising from a nine-month investigation into what investigators are calling a "sophisticated mass-market text fraud."

    2 Toronto Residents Face 18 Forgery Charges In 'Secret Shopper' Fraud Probe

    Injured N.S. Hockey Player 'improving' As Police Continue Probe Of Rough Game

    Injured N.S. Hockey Player 'improving' As Police Continue Probe Of Rough Game
    TRENTON, N.S. — A Nova Scotia hockey player badly injured during a rough game has brain bleeds and swelling and won't be able to return to university until the new year, his team says.

    Injured N.S. Hockey Player 'improving' As Police Continue Probe Of Rough Game

    Canadian Writer Natasha Stoynoff Accuses Trump Of Sexual Assault More Than A Decade Ago

    Canadian Writer Natasha Stoynoff Accuses Trump Of Sexual Assault More Than A Decade Ago
      Former People magazine writer Natasha Stoynoff published a vivid account of allegedly being pinned against a wall and forcibly kissed by Trump.

    Canadian Writer Natasha Stoynoff Accuses Trump Of Sexual Assault More Than A Decade Ago

    Toronto Senior Charged With Murder Found To Be A Risk Before Attack At Home, Trial Hears

    Toronto Senior Charged With Murder Found To Be A Risk Before Attack At Home, Trial Hears
    TORONTO — The trial of a Toronto senior charged with the murder of a fellow long-term care home resident is hearing from a psychiatrist who examined the man before a deadly attack at the facility.

    Toronto Senior Charged With Murder Found To Be A Risk Before Attack At Home, Trial Hears