Close X
Tuesday, November 19, 2024
ADVT 
National

Disabled Protesters Call B.C. Government 'mean, Shameful' At Legislature Protest

The Canadian Press, 03 Mar, 2016 11:07 AM
    VICTORIA — A Victoria woman receiving monthly disability payments says she will struggle to make ends meet after British Columbia's government introduced a fee for a bus pass that had been free.
     
    Eryn Rolston said Wednesday her finances were already stretched on her monthly payment of $906, and she expects that to continue despite a recently announced $77 monthly increase.
     
    Rolston was one of about 300 disabled people who gathered at B.C's legislature to protest the new bus policy, which now requires disabled people to pay for their own passes. They range in price from $52 to $66 a month, depending on the type of transportation they use.
     
    "They say it's a choice between getting the bus pass or not," she said. "But it's really not a choice when you can't pay for all of your own food, and you can't pay for everything you need."
     
    Rolston, 23, wore a placard that said, "I Got Here On The Bus." Her bus pass was taped to the placard.
     
    Rolston said she suffers from post-traumatic stress disorder and mental health issues. She said her disability payments do not include visits to a therapist.
     
    "They say you only need certain things," she said. "But what about clothes? Clothes wear out. What about just going out and being a person. Honestly, if someone asked me on a date, I have nothing to wear."
     
    Inclusion BC spokeswoman Faith Bodnar drew cheers from the crowd when she called the government mean and shameful for introducing the fee for the bus pass.
     
    "This is wrong," she said. "It's not fair and it's mean. Poverty is not a choice. Clean up this mess. Give everyone the $77."
     
    Opposition New Democrat Leader John Horgan said the Liberal government is balancing its budget by short-changing the poor.
     
    He led the crowd in a chant aimed at the premier: "Christy Clark is out of gas, give us back our bus pass."
     
    Social Development Minister Michelle Stilwell said the government is providing $170 million over three years to increase disability rates, due in September. She said the bus pass change is an attempt to introduce fairness and choice across the system.
     
    Stilwell said the annual budget for the bus-pass program was about $20 million.
     
    In the legislature, Stilwell rejected NDP calls to reinstate the bus passes for the disabled. She called the protest a "photo-op."
     
    Stilwell, an Olympic and world champion wheelchair athlete, became emotional, saying she knows the daily struggles of people with disabilities and the government is "doing the best we can."

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Surge In Fresh Fruit And Vegetable Prices Help Push Annual Inflation Up To 1.6%

    Surge In Fresh Fruit And Vegetable Prices Help Push Annual Inflation Up To 1.6%
    Inflation grew at its fastest pace in December since late 2014. Last month's number also followed a 1.4 per cent year-over-year increase in November, the agency's latest consumer price index found.

    Surge In Fresh Fruit And Vegetable Prices Help Push Annual Inflation Up To 1.6%

    At Least Five Dead, 2 Critically Injured In Saskatchewan School Shooting

    At Least Five Dead, 2 Critically Injured In Saskatchewan School Shooting
    Speaking from Davos, Switzerland, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau said the alleged shooter is in custody and the situation is "no longer active."

    At Least Five Dead, 2 Critically Injured In Saskatchewan School Shooting

    Man Found Not Guilty In Twitter Harassment Trial In Toronto

    Man Found Not Guilty In Twitter Harassment Trial In Toronto
    TORONTO — A man charged with criminal harassment over his dealings with two Toronto women's rights activists on Twitter has been found not guilty.

    Man Found Not Guilty In Twitter Harassment Trial In Toronto

    Moving Metis Toddler From Foster Parents Would Cause Psychological Harm: Lawyer

    Moving Metis Toddler From Foster Parents Would Cause Psychological Harm: Lawyer
    VANCOUVER — A lawyer for Vancouver Island foster parents who hope to keep a Metis toddler they have raised since birth says that moving the girl now would harm her emotionally and mentally.

    Moving Metis Toddler From Foster Parents Would Cause Psychological Harm: Lawyer

    Canadians Offering Help To Flint, Mich., During Its Drinking Water Crisis

    Canadians Offering Help To Flint, Mich., During Its Drinking Water Crisis
    Two Ontario cities are offering to help the citizens of Flint, Mich., a poor, largely minority city where the high level of lead in drinking water has caused a public health crisis.

    Canadians Offering Help To Flint, Mich., During Its Drinking Water Crisis

    N.B. Murder Case: RCMP Ask Public To Inspect Varied Online Photos Of Fugitive

    N.B. Murder Case: RCMP Ask Public To Inspect Varied Online Photos Of Fugitive
    The Mounties say the photos on Twitter and Facebook illustrate the accused's uncanny ability to change her appearance.

    N.B. Murder Case: RCMP Ask Public To Inspect Varied Online Photos Of Fugitive