Close X
Tuesday, November 19, 2024
ADVT 
National

B.C. introduces legislation to reduce poverty rate by 60 per cent over next decade

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 05 Mar, 2024 12:24 PM
  • B.C. introduces legislation to reduce poverty rate by 60 per cent over next decade

British Columbia's government says it is setting 10-year targets to substantially reduce poverty in the province, with a focus on lifting children and seniors above the poverty line.

Sheila Malcolmson, social development and poverty reduction minister, says legislation introduced today changes three laws to set higher targets to cut poverty, ease employment requirements for people on income and disability assistance and provide more supports.

She says the legislation commits B.C. to cut overall poverty by 60 per cent over the next decade, including reducing child poverty by 75 per cent, and for the first time committing to cutting seniors' poverty by 50 per cent.

Malcolmson says the province has exceeded its original poverty reduction goals set in 2018 to reduce the overall poverty rate in B.C. by 25 per cent and child poverty by 50 per cent.

The government's most recent report on poverty reduction says that since 2021 B.C.'s total poverty rate dropped by 45 per cent from 2016 levels and child poverty is down by 54.6 per cent.

But the report says in 2021 there were still 447,000 people in poverty, including 70,000 children.

MORE National ARTICLES

Overnight fire at Surrey strip mall

Overnight fire at Surrey strip mall
Surrey police are investigating a suspicious fire overnight that engulfed several businesses at a strip mall. RCMP say it happened at around midnight at the mall at the intersection of 148th Street and 108th Avenue.

Overnight fire at Surrey strip mall

Punjab man guilty of fatal car crash in Canada deported to India

Punjab man guilty of fatal car crash in Canada deported to India
A 26-year-old man hailing from Punjab has been deported to India less than a year after he was found guilty of a car crash that killed a woman and her elderly mother in the Canadian province of Alberta. Bipinjot Gill, who arrived in Canada in 2016 on a student visa, sped through a red light in Calgary on May 18, 2019, killing Uzma Afzal, 31, and her mother, Bilquees Begum, 65, on the spot.

Punjab man guilty of fatal car crash in Canada deported to India

Indo-Canadian arrested in connection with fatal shooting of teen

Indo-Canadian arrested in connection with fatal shooting of teen
An 18-year-old Indo-Canadian has been taken into custody and an arrest warrant has been issued for a 16-year-old in connection with the shooting death of a fellow Indian-origin teen last month. On December 19, 2023, a local hospital notified Peel Police about 18-year-old Nishan Thind who was admitted with a gunshot wound just before 6 pm.

Indo-Canadian arrested in connection with fatal shooting of teen

CBC head Catherine Tait set to face off with MPs over job cuts, executive bonuses

CBC head Catherine Tait set to face off with MPs over job cuts, executive bonuses
The president of CBC and Radio-Canada is set to testify on Parliament Hill today following the public broadcaster's recent announcement that it would cut 10 per cent of its workforce. Catherine Tait is scheduled to appear before a House of Commons committee this afternoon, where MPs are expected to grill her on the cuts — and whether executives are still receiving bonuses.

CBC head Catherine Tait set to face off with MPs over job cuts, executive bonuses

If Trudeau's Jamaican vacation was unacceptable, public would know: ethics watchdog

If Trudeau's Jamaican vacation was unacceptable, public would know: ethics watchdog
The federal ethics watchdog is asking parliamentarians and the public to read between the lines about advice he gave to Prime Minister Justin Trudeau before his recent holiday trip. Konrad von Finckenstein told a House of Commons ethics committee Tuesday that under the Conflict of Interest Act, he can't publicly disclose conversations he's had with politicians. 

If Trudeau's Jamaican vacation was unacceptable, public would know: ethics watchdog

18 C in Metro Vancouver as atmospheric river smashes heat records, brings heavy rain

18 C in Metro Vancouver as atmospheric river smashes heat records, brings heavy rain
Unseasonable warmth brought by an atmospheric river has shattered records — some almost a century old — at more than 30 B.C. locations, with the mercury passing 18 C in parts of Metro Vancouver. Environment Canada says the daily high temperature at Vancouver's airport hit 14.3 C on Monday, breaking the previous record of 13.3 C in 1940.

18 C in Metro Vancouver as atmospheric river smashes heat records, brings heavy rain