Close X
Sunday, September 29, 2024
ADVT 
National

Saskatchewan Unveils Plan To Reduce Poverty, Including More Housing, Health Care

The Canadian Press, 25 Feb, 2016 11:21 AM
    REGINA — The Saskatchewan government has unveiled a plan that it hopes will reduce the number of people in poverty by 50 per cent by the end of 2025.
     
    Social Services Minister Donna Harpauer says Saskatchewan's poverty rate is at 10.6 per cent, or 107,000 people, down from about 14 per cent in 2006.
     
    "We now have the second-lowest level in all of Canada. However, we know there's more work that needs to be done and that is why our government is launching a new poverty reduction strategy," Harpauer said Wednesday at the legislature in Regina.
     
    "The poverty reduction strategy is extremely challenging because there are so many roots causes. It's very broad reaching."
     
    Some of those causes include a low level of education and health issues.
     
    The report notes that single-parent families, First Nations and Metis people, northern residents, recent immigrants and people with disabilities "tend to experience higher rates of poverty."
     
    The 35-page strategy recaps many of the programs that the Saskatchewan Party has introduced since taking power in 2007.
     
    It then lays out short-term actions, including a redesign of provincial income assistance programs to better match benefits and services with what people need.
     
    Other plans include expanding housing, making it easier for parents to find child care so they can go back to work and improving access to health care in vulnerable neighbourhoods.
     
    However, some initiatives in the report are listed under "future direction for when the province's fiscal capacity allows."
     
    That includes enhancing before and after school programs, as well as employment readiness and literacy programming in correctional facilities.
     
    Premier Brad Wall has already said the government will run a deficit this fiscal year and next.
     
    Harpauer said poverty levels go down when the economy is strong. And she is concerned that a struggling Canadian economy could impact poverty rates.
     
    "Working with the youth as your first priority ... I think is what will help keep the curve from just shifting unexpectedly," she said.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Province And City Pick Up Tab For 60 Temporary Shelter Beds In Vancouver

    Province And City Pick Up Tab For 60 Temporary Shelter Beds In Vancouver
    A release from the Ministry Responsible for Housing says the two levels of government will each provide $125,000 to fund the temporary winter shelter spaces.

    Province And City Pick Up Tab For 60 Temporary Shelter Beds In Vancouver

    Teen In Philadelphia Questioned Over Threats Aimed At Vancouver Airport

    Teen In Philadelphia Questioned Over Threats Aimed At Vancouver Airport
    RCMP said on Monday they had received a threat via the social media platform Twitter, although the incident didn't impact operations at the airport.

    Teen In Philadelphia Questioned Over Threats Aimed At Vancouver Airport

    Osoyoos, B.C. Woman Acquitted Of Assaulting RCMP Officer

    Osoyoos, B.C. Woman Acquitted Of Assaulting RCMP Officer
    The trial heard that Fiona Galt Munro, 34, was pulled over after driving away from a pub in Osoyoos, B.C., around 2 a.m. on Sept. 28, 2013.

    Osoyoos, B.C. Woman Acquitted Of Assaulting RCMP Officer

    2015 The Year Streaming 'Went Mainstream,' Viewers Hope For More Options In '16

    2015 The Year Streaming 'Went Mainstream,' Viewers Hope For More Options In '16
    TORONTO — Whenever Anushie Mahavitane gets a chance to watch TV, the busy working mom has a choice to make: Will it be live, on-demand or streamed?

    2015 The Year Streaming 'Went Mainstream,' Viewers Hope For More Options In '16

    Pressure-Cooker Emergency Crises Get High-Tech Solution From Vancouver Startup

    Pressure-Cooker Emergency Crises Get High-Tech Solution From Vancouver Startup
    The CommandWear Systems' platform has been piloted and used by several police and paramedics agencies across Canada since the company was launched in June 2013.

    Pressure-Cooker Emergency Crises Get High-Tech Solution From Vancouver Startup

    California Mother Takes Fight To Federal Court To Have Brain-Dead Daughter Declared Alive

    California Mother Takes Fight To Federal Court To Have Brain-Dead Daughter Declared Alive
    Lawyers for the mother of 13-year-old Jahi McMath filed a lawsuit in San Francisco federal court asking that the girl be declared alive after state courts have refused to rescind the teen's death certificate.

    California Mother Takes Fight To Federal Court To Have Brain-Dead Daughter Declared Alive