Close X
Monday, December 2, 2024
ADVT 
National

B.C. Introduces Poverty Reduction Plan To Cut Child Poverty By 50 Per Cent

The Canadian Press, 02 Oct, 2018 07:54 PM
    VICTORIA — British Columbia's government has introduced legislation aimed at reducing the provincial poverty rate by 25 per cent and chopping the child poverty rate in half over the next five years. 
     
     
    Poverty Reduction Minister Shane Simpson says B.C. currently has the highest overall poverty rate in Canada but this strategy would move the province to the third-lowest rate overall.
     
     
    The New Democrats promised to introduce B.C.'s first poverty reduction plan during the 2017 election campaign.
     
     
    Simpson says the proposed legislation reflects the findings of a public consultation process where more than 8,500 people attended information meetings and told their stories about the challenges of living in poverty.
     
     
    Last fall, Simpson said an estimated 678,000 people are living in poverty in B.C., including 118,000 children.
     
     
    He said those numbers were based on the federal government's Market Basket Measure indicator which includes the costs of food, clothing, footwear, transportation, housing and other expenses for a family with two children.
     
     
    The legislation introduced Tuesday requires the government to release its strategy by March 31, 2019.
     
     
    Simpson says a major reason B.C. has a high poverty rate is because the former Liberal government did not make fighting poverty a priority.
     
     
    "The government was steadfast in saying we don't need a poverty plan," said Simpson after introducing the legislation. "We had a government that said we are going to meet our minimal statutory obligations to those who are vulnerable."
     
     
    The Liberal government said repeatedly that its poverty reduction agenda involved helping people find jobs to improve their standard of living rather than introduce a poverty plan in name only.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Residents Of Lower Post, B.C., Return Home After 17-Day Wildfire Evacuation

    Residents Of Lower Post, B.C., Return Home After 17-Day Wildfire Evacuation
      LOWER POST, B.C. — Residents of the northern British Columbia community of Lower Post are returning home, more than two weeks after being forced out by a wildfire.

    Residents Of Lower Post, B.C., Return Home After 17-Day Wildfire Evacuation

    60 Kg Of Heroin Seized In Jammu, Punjab In Biggest Drug Haul This Year

    The case was triggered on September 2 when the anti-narcotics agency officials intercepted a car near Jammu, based on certain leads, and seized over 22.14 kgs of heroin and arrested three persons, a senior official said.

    60 Kg Of Heroin Seized In Jammu, Punjab In Biggest Drug Haul This Year

    Provincial Surplus Rises As Growth Remains Stable In B.C.: Finance Minister Carole James

    Provincial Surplus Rises As Growth Remains Stable In B.C.: Finance Minister Carole James
    Finance Minister Carole James is projecting a growing budget surplus and stable, but slower economic growth in her latest quarterly financial update.

    Provincial Surplus Rises As Growth Remains Stable In B.C.: Finance Minister Carole James

    Local Governments Should Get 40 Per Cent Of B.C.'s Pot Revenue: Advocacy Group

    Local Governments Should Get 40 Per Cent Of B.C.'s Pot Revenue: Advocacy Group
    The advocacy group for local governments in British Columbia wants the provincial government to fork over a 40 per cent share of its marijuana tax revenue when the drug becomes legal.

    Local Governments Should Get 40 Per Cent Of B.C.'s Pot Revenue: Advocacy Group

    Cooler Weather Allows B.C. Government To Cancel State Of Emergency

    Cooler Weather Allows B.C. Government To Cancel State Of Emergency
    The British Columbia government has cancelled the state of emergency it declared in August when hundreds of wildfires covered the province.

    Cooler Weather Allows B.C. Government To Cancel State Of Emergency

    Police Still Searching For Suspects In St. Catharines, Ont., Shooting

    Police Still Searching For Suspects In St. Catharines, Ont., Shooting
    The search for two young men believed to be behind a shooting that wounded three people in a small southern Ontario city stretched into a second day on Friday as investigators worked to identify the suspects.

    Police Still Searching For Suspects In St. Catharines, Ont., Shooting