Close X
Wednesday, November 20, 2024
ADVT 
National

Province introduces more flexibility to help people with disabilities earn better

Darpan News Desk Ministry of Social Development and Social Innovation, 04 Dec, 2014 12:38 PM
     
    VICTORIA – The Province is recognizing the unique circumstances of people with disabilities by making it easier for those receiving disability assistance to earn more money with annualized earnings exemptions.
     
    Minister of Social Development and Social Innovation Don McRae made the announcement today while marking the International Day of Persons with Disabilities.
     
    Starting in January 2015, B.C. will become the first province in Canada to ensure people receiving disability assistance will be able to calculate their earnings on an annual basis instead of monthly, reducing barriers to employment.
     
    This supports Accessibility 2024, government’s 10-year plan to make B.C. the most progressive place for people with disabilities in Canada. It also supports government’s goal of having the highest labour force participation rate for people with disabilities in Canada by 2024.
     
    Annualized earnings exemptions are particularly helpful for people with disabilities whose ability to earn fluctuates during the year. For example, if a person earns more than $800 in a month, they can keep all of that money up to $9,600 for the year. There is no monthly maximum.
     
    The new annualized earnings exemption is the result of a successful pilot project, which was introduced to 1,500 people in 2013. About 900 of these people accepted work shifts that they would otherwise have turned down, earned more money and described the change as an incentive to work.
     
    Earnings exemptions are in addition to monthly disability assistance and other supports, such as: discounted bus passes, free MSP, medical supplies, dental and optical care and employment services through the Employment Program of BC.
     
    The Ministry of Social Development and Social Innovation worked with Disability Alliance BC (formerly called the B.C. Coalition for People with Disabilities) to gather public feedback to help shape the new annualized earnings exemptions policy.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Mountie joked about movie not sex act, breach of trust trial hears in B.C.

    Mountie joked about movie not sex act, breach of trust trial hears in B.C.
    KAMLOOPS, B.C. - Jokes about a soon-to-be released Hollywood movie, not images on closed-circuit video of two women having sex in a jail cell, are what caused a Mountie to laugh while surrounded by his colleagues, B.C. Supreme Court was told.

    Mountie joked about movie not sex act, breach of trust trial hears in B.C.

    RCMP: Man charged with second-degree murder in New Westminster knew victim

    RCMP: Man charged with second-degree murder in New Westminster knew victim
    NEW WESTMINSTER, B.C. - A charge of second-degree murder has been laid against a man in connection with a death in New Westminster, B.C.

    RCMP: Man charged with second-degree murder in New Westminster knew victim

    B.C. Teachers Vote in Favour of Agreement End Strike, Pull Down Pickets For School To Start

    B.C. Teachers Vote in Favour of Agreement End Strike, Pull Down Pickets For School To Start
    Results of a provincewide vote were announced late Thursday, with 86 per cent of the 31,741 teachers who cast ballots voting in favour of the agreement.

    B.C. Teachers Vote in Favour of Agreement End Strike, Pull Down Pickets For School To Start

    Scotland Referendum disappoints some Scottish-Canadians

    Scotland Referendum disappoints some Scottish-Canadians
    VANCOUVER - Nay may have won the day, but Caledonian-Canadians who supported Scottish independence in Thursday's historic referendum say their dream isn't dead, and at the very least change to the political system is coming.

    Scotland Referendum disappoints some Scottish-Canadians

    Pickets For Pencils: B.C. Teachers Head Back To Classrooms

    Pickets For Pencils: B.C. Teachers Head Back To Classrooms
    VANCOUVER - B.C. Education Minister Peter Fassbender says he hopes the relationship between teachers and the province can be healed over the next five years of labour peace under the hard-fought new contract.

    Pickets For Pencils: B.C. Teachers Head Back To Classrooms

    Serena Vermeersch, Missing Teen, Found Dead in Surrey. Police Search For A Male Suspect

    Serena Vermeersch, Missing Teen, Found Dead in Surrey. Police Search For A Male Suspect
    SURREY, B.C. - RCMP are asking for the public's help in finding a man who may have been involved in the murder of a 17-year-old girl in Surrey, B.C.

    Serena Vermeersch, Missing Teen, Found Dead in Surrey. Police Search For A Male Suspect