Close X
Sunday, January 12, 2025
ADVT 
National

Number of Albertans receiving income support reaches highest total since 2019

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 06 Jan, 2025 11:10 AM
  • Number of Albertans receiving income support reaches highest total since 2019

Government data shows the number of Albertans receiving provincial income support has reached a five-year high.

As of October, almost 57,500 residents were getting income support.

Comparing the same month in previous years, it's the highest since 2019, when almost 61,000 were receiving income support.

After 2019, the number dropped substantially, with close to 45,000 in 2020 and about 41,400 in 2021.

A government report on the data says the drop was largely attributable to the Canada Emergency Response Benefit, or CERB, which was rolled out by the federal government in response to the COVID-19 pandemic.

After the CERB program was disbanded, Alberta's provincial income support numbers started increasing again.

In October 2023 they reached nearly 48,000, then they grew by 20 per cent in 2024.

The provincial funding helps low-income or unemployed individuals and families cover basic expenses, including food and shelter. Those eligible can also receive financial assistance for child care, school expenses and help leaving family violence.

University of Calgary economics professor Ron Kneebone says the growth in recipients is likely a result of Albertans getting back on the provincial program after receiving CERB.

But he has some questions.

"It is curious to me that it did not jump right back up," said Kneebone, who also serves as scientific director of social policy and health research at the university's School of Public Policy.

He said it's possible CERB provided enough funding for people who were previously receiving provincial support to find stable employment.

Or it may have just taken years for those who were receiving CERB to start getting provincial income support again, Kneebone said.

He said factors like unemployment rates, the cost of living and well paying jobs can't be discounted when discussing the evident demand for social assistance programs like income support and food banks in the province.

"Behind all this, of course, is changing economic conditions," he said.

"Alberta's unemployment rate is remaining pretty … high, and so maybe that's driving more people onto social assistance over time."

Statistics Canada pegged Alberta's unemployment rate last month at 7.5 per cent — the fourth highest in the country, even though the province gained 24,000 new jobs in November.

During November's fiscal update, Finance Minister Nate Horner said his department expects the provincial unemployment rate to stay around the same mark in 2025.

Kneebone said gone are the days when "the best welfare program is a job."

"That may not be true anymore, it seems, or may be less true than what we ever saw before," he said.

"One of the things that might be happening is the cost of living is going up so much that having a job is not cutting it."

Marie Renaud, the Opposition NDP critic for community and social services, said she wasn't surprised the number of income support recipients has increased.

"We've got just a disaster evolving in Alberta," Renaud said.

She said inflation, the housing crisis, Alberta's low minimum wage compared to other provinces and a lack of accessible employment opportunities for disadvantaged Albertans are factors.

"(The United Conservative Party has) been in power for five years (and) it just continues to get worse and worse and worse, and that's what we're seeing," she said.

"They'd rather invest in food banks and shelter mats than actually address the root problem."

Ashley Stevenson, press secretary for Community and Social Services Minister Jason Nixon, said in an email that population growth was another factor behind the increase.

Alberta's population grew by about 3.9 per cent, or 186,704 people, between Oct. 1, 2023 and the same time last year.

Stevenson said the province's 2024-2025 budget for income support was just shy of $800 million.

"Projected caseload growth is included in budget planning work each year," she said, meaning the 2025-2026 provincial budget expected next month could see increased income support funding if the need is there.

MORE National ARTICLES

Man dead after collision with semi-truck

Man dead after collision with semi-truck
Police say a man is dead after his pickup collided with a semi-truck near Quesnel. Mounties say the crash happened on November 29th just before 4:30 p-m on Highway 97 north of the community.

Man dead after collision with semi-truck

Negotiations between Canada Post, union still on hold

Negotiations between Canada Post, union still on hold
Canada Post says it's waiting for a response from the union representing some 55,000 striking workers after it offered a new framework for negotiations over the weekend.  The Canadian Union of Postal Workers has said its negotiators are reviewing the proposal.

Negotiations between Canada Post, union still on hold

Charges dropped for Palestinian activists who protested federal immigration minister

Charges dropped for Palestinian activists who protested federal immigration minister
The charges against three pro-Palestinian activists accused of criminally harassing federal Immigration Minister Marc Miller have been dropped. The activists' lawyer, Barbara Bedont, said today the charges were withdrawn on Nov. 29 after the three accused presented video that countered the allegations against them.

Charges dropped for Palestinian activists who protested federal immigration minister

Pandemic business loan program lacked ‘value for money’: auditor general

Pandemic business loan program lacked ‘value for money’: auditor general
The auditor general says the small business loan program the federal government rolled out during the COVID-19 pandemic wasn’t managed in a cost-effective way. Auditor general Karen Hogan says the Canada Emergency Business Account program wasn’t managed with “due regard for value for money.”

Pandemic business loan program lacked ‘value for money’: auditor general

B.C. Securities Commission imposes $18 M in sanctions over crypto case

B.C. Securities Commission imposes $18 M in sanctions over crypto case
The British Columbia Securities Commission has imposed more than $18 million in sanctions on a cryptocurrency trading platform and its owner who it says diverted customers' assets to gambling and personal accounts. The commission says it has ordered David Smillie and his company, ezBtc, to pay $10.4 million representing the net amount they've gained from their customers "less repayments."

B.C. Securities Commission imposes $18 M in sanctions over crypto case

Searchers begin sifting at landfill for remains of slain First Nations women

Searchers begin sifting at landfill for remains of slain First Nations women
Excavation and sifting started Monday of a section of a landfill believed to hold the remains of two slain First Nations women. Manitoba Premier Wab Kinew said he was at the site when the first truck moved a load of refuse from the area to a Quonset hut, where searchers are manually sifting through it in the hope of finding the remains of Morgan Harris and Marcedes Myran. 

Searchers begin sifting at landfill for remains of slain First Nations women