Close X
Sunday, November 17, 2024
ADVT 
National

B.C. raises income and disability rates

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 16 Mar, 2021 11:29 PM
  • B.C. raises income and disability rates

The British Columbia government is raising income and disability assistance rates by $175 a month for more than 300,000 people starting in April.

Nicholas Simons, the minister of social development and poverty reduction, says it's the largest-ever permanent increase for income and disability assistance rates in B.C., and the third increase since July 2017.

Simons says the government will also introduce the first increase in the senior's supplement since its introduction in 1987, raising it by $50 a month to about $99 for a single person.

Under the new rates, a single person on income assistance will receive $935 per month and a single person on disability assistance will receive about $1,358 per month.

In the legislature, the Opposition Liberals accused the government of clawing back portions of a COVID-19 crisis supplement and recovery benefit from disabled and low-income people.

Simons says a temporary $300 COVID-19 crisis supplement was provided from April to December of last year, followed by a recovery supplement of $150 per month from January to March.

MORE National ARTICLES

Terry Fox on shortlist for new $5 bill

Terry Fox on shortlist for new $5 bill
Fox is among the eight names the Bank of Canada has sent to the government as it considers who should be featured on the bank note when it gets a redesign next year.

Terry Fox on shortlist for new $5 bill

PM pledges $1.75B to boost high-speed internet

PM pledges $1.75B to boost high-speed internet
The Universal Broadband Fund that was part of the Liberal budget announcement in early 2019, months before last year's federal election, has taken longer than expected to be officially launched.

PM pledges $1.75B to boost high-speed internet

Canada ready to fight U.S. protectionism: Trudeau

Canada ready to fight U.S. protectionism: Trudeau
Trudeau says in an Ottawa news conference today that U.S. barriers to Canadian imports hurt Canadian businesses and workers but they hurt Americans, too.

Canada ready to fight U.S. protectionism: Trudeau

Police cite crime dip in first months of pandemic

Police cite crime dip in first months of pandemic
Statistics Canada says 17 police services across Canada reported that selected criminal incidents were down by 17 per cent compared with the same period a year earlier.

Police cite crime dip in first months of pandemic

Airline bailout may rely on scorned loan program

Airline bailout may rely on scorned loan program
The program offers loans of $60 million or more to large companies facing cash problems, but comes with an interest rate that jumps to eight per cent from five per cent after the first year — far above typical private-sector lending rates.

Airline bailout may rely on scorned loan program

Brief, bitter storm brings snow to parts of B.C.

Brief, bitter storm brings snow to parts of B.C.
The weather office is calling for as much as 10 centimetres of snow at higher elevations of Vancouver's North Shore, along with parts of Coquitlam and Maple Ridge, while areas closer to sea level could see up to two centimetres.

Brief, bitter storm brings snow to parts of B.C.