SURREY, B.C. — The British Columbia government has released guidelines it says will lead it toward the goal of reducing the province's overall poverty rate by 25 per cent and child poverty by 50 per cent within the next five years.
Shane Simpson, the minister of social development and poverty reduction, says the province's first-ever poverty reduction strategy called TogetherBC takes an approach that involves all of the government to assist the 557,000 people who are living in poverty.
He says TogetherBC's programs, policies and initiatives tie together investments launched in the fall of 2017 and are being implemented over three budgets.
He says they include a focus on safe and affordable housing, cutting child-care costs for low-income families, and raising income and disability assistance rates.
Simpson says his ministry alone will offer more than $800 million in support to people by 2022 and while those programs and other plans won't end poverty, the NDP government is confident the strategy will help some of B.C.'s poorest.
Simpson made the comments today flanked by several anti-poverty and social service experts at a child care resource centre in Surrey.