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Archive for the ‘Poverty’ Category

CRA poll says Liberals steady on PEI

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Conservative Bagnall sees gains for Tories and weakness in Ghiz as leader

Liberals have double lead over Tories in decided voters (chart NJN Network)

The September 2, 2010 CRA poll says the Liberals are steady in voter support on Prince Edward Island.

CRA disguise this with mumbo jumbo about “over six in ten (62%, compared with 64% in May 2010) Islanders offer a positive assessment of the performance of the Liberal government.”

Jim Bagnall, interim leader of the PEI Progressive Conservatives, doesn’t agree.

“This government has put out over 60 press releases in the past month,” said Bagnall. “They’ve spent thousands of dollars hiring additional communications people; they are constantly revamping and developing fancy web sites to promote themselves; they’ve put out glossy document, after glossy document, yet their support is going down. The Progressive Conservative party hasn’t had a permanent leader since 2007, we have only three MLAs and yet our support has been increasing.”   Read the rest of this entry »

Disability Community Needs PALS in 2011

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Scrapped mandatory census cuts even deeper for disability advocacy group

Laurie Beachell, national co-ordinator of the Council of Canadians with Disabilities

Council of Canadians with Disabilities – Statistics Canada’s Participation and Activity Limitation Survey (PALS) is the most important and comprehensive source of disability statistics in Canada and is seen as a best practice model internationally. CCD is concerned that Human Resources Skills Development Canada (HRSDC) has not yet committed funding for a PALS for the 2011 census.

It is crucial that PALS continue so that governments and community have the information and research needed to develop good policy and programs. It should be noted that upon ratification of the UN Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities Canada will be obligated to collect data on the socioeconomic status of persons with disabilities.

PALS and its predecessor HALS have been, and remain, extremely valuable survey tools. No other survey provides the range and depth of statistically reliable information about:

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You are one paycheck away from poverty

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Being on social assistance is often the result of mid-life disability over which people have no control

A recent Guardian Commentary resurrected some of the negative stereotypes of the past, quoting,

“Social Services, on the other hand, deals with the failures and fall-outs from all other social systems, beginning with dysfunctional families and going on to where health, education, attorney general (corrections), and community services have failed.”

In one sentence, the writer characterized those on social services as “failures”. “fall-outs”, “dysfunctional”, and rejects from prison. What is he thinking?

This is so far from the truth it is an affront to people who need social assistance to survive. For PEI’s disability community, social assistance is often the only way they survive from month to month. The problem exists across Canada and only varies in severity by Province.

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Ontario tries to hide welfare reform report

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Fix welfare rules, panel urges province

Christine Watts, a 51-year-old single mom on disability welfare, was caught in a welfare rules nightmare and penalized when she attempted to collect enough money to pay an unexpected hydro bill. VINCE TALOTTA/TORONTO STAR

Laurie Monsebraaten, Social Justice Reporter, Toronto Star

Christine Watts was shocked in June when a truck pulled into her yard and threatened to disconnect her hydro. The 51-year-old Cobourg-area woman had no idea she owed $1,100 from an equal-billing underpayment for the past year.

And as a survivor of childhood sexual abuse who lives on provincial disability support and a part-time job at her local library, she had no way to pay.

Community agencies and family helped Watts cover all but $240 of the outstanding bill. But she was still short. So her employer agreed to loan her the money and deduct $80 from her monthly earnings of just under $300 for the next three months.

But under Ontario’s mind-numbingly complicated welfare rules, Watts’ loan is considered income. And under the rules, every dollar earned by someone on welfare triggers a 50-cent cut in provincial support.  Read the rest of this entry »

Written by Byline

August 19th, 2010 at 7:09 pm

Should we give money to panhandlers?

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Alberta government’s new plan to discourage people from giving money to panhandlers and give to agencies instead

Anti-panhandling poster, Calgary Downtown Association

by Stephen Gaetz, Homeless Hub

The Government of Alberta has announced its intention to put forward a plan that encourages people to refrain from giving money to panhandlers, and instead to give those resources to agencies serving people who are homeless.

While many people may be annoyed at the sight of panhandlers, we need to dig a little deeper to understand what is driving this initiative. At the root of many people’s negative responses to panhandling are prejudices about homeless people, and why they panhandle in the first place. Is this same prejudice driving government policy?

The Alberta Minister of Housing and Urban Affairs Jonathan Denis says: “Most people think if they are giving to panhandlers they are helping the problem, but they are hurting the problem. Almost 80% of money going to panhandlers goes to negative habits — drugs, alcohol, gambling — anything that can be destructive.”  Read the rest of this entry »

Written by Byline

August 18th, 2010 at 10:50 am

Posted in Canada,Poverty

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Welfare income for disabled on PEI falls

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Disabled on PEI living on welfare at 57% of the poverty line

After tax LICO for person with disability on PEI

The National Council of Welfare has published statistics that show people with disabilities on PEI are living 43% below the LICO poverty line (or low-income cut-off).

People with disabilities were receiving almost 90% of the assistance they needed in 1992. Reforms to the welfare system on PEI hit the disabled hard and their situation deteriorated significantly since then.

Since 2003 the disabled have been living at 57% of the after-tax LICO.

The majority of Islanders on welfare are in that situation because they can’t find employment due to their disabilities.   Read the rest of this entry »

Harper’s attack on the census: bad news for the poor

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Scrapping census will allow Harper Conservatives to shape policies that make the rich richer

Linda McQuaig, writer and social commentator

By Linda McQuaig, Rabble.ca – We hear a great deal about the lives of the rich, much of it sympathetic and often fawning.

Even Conrad Black, despite his history of anti-Canadian outbursts, is treated almost fondly by commentators who generally have a hard-hearted, tough-on-crime attitude toward less well-heeled felons.

The poor rarely get such sympathetic attention; indeed they rarely get much attention at all. And they’re soon to get even less.

That is the real reason for the Harper government’s decision to scrap the long-form census matters, and why the debate over it is more than a bizarre obsession with statistics in this overheated summer.  Read the rest of this entry »

Harper Government makes direct attack on Canada’s disabled

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Cancellation of PALS 2011 will set back the process of providing human rights to 4 million Canadians with disabilities

Prime Minister Stephen Harper getting ready to kick cripples

PRLog – Losing PALS 2011 is a major blow to Canadians living with disabilities. It can only indicate that Prime Minister Harper intends to dismantle the existing supports for Canada’s disabled.

What kind of a bully picks on cripples?

The long-form census controversy is stirring many Canadians. The Globe and Mail reported a small part of the cancellation that will hurt the 4 million Canadians living with Disabilities. Scrapped mandatory census cuts even deeper for disability advocacy group

The Participation and Activity Limitation Survey known as PALS has a long, wordy name that belies its importance.

It is a comprehensive profile of the 4 million Canadians living with disabilities: who they are by age, sex, province, by disability, income level, etc. It also tells us what they need which is vital in setting effective social policy. Statistics Canada issues the report every 5 years.   Read the rest of this entry »

20th Annivesary of the Americans With Disabilities Act

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54 million Americans have a disability and are protected by the ADA, 4 million Canadians are still waiting

President Bush signed the ADA into law

PRLog - The civil rights of Americans living with disabilities were passed into law 20 years ago on July 20, 1990 by President George Bush Sr in the Americans with Disabilities Act.

The law was meant to ensure that people with disabilities would not be discriminated in their employment, government services, housing and in the community. It granted them rights similar to the Civil Rights Act.

During the intervening years, the US Courts narrowly restricted the application of the ADA. President George Bush Jr. pushed through Congress and the Senate 1,100 pages of amendments to the ADA to ensure the law did protect them. The ADA Amended was signed by President Obama in 2009.   Read the rest of this entry »

Scrapped mandatory census cuts even deeper for disability advocacy group

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Disability advocacy groups have major challenge ahead following cuts to the census and StatsCan’s disability survey

image: Abilities.ca

Campbell Clark, Globe and Mail

Making the long-form census voluntary instead of mandatory is not the first change to the way Statistics Canada collects data since the Conservatives took office. Several surveys have been discontinued.

The Participation and Activity Limitation Survey, Statscan’s major data collection on individuals with disabilities, was cut by the government department that paid for it, Human Resources and Skills Development Canada.

The Harper government has told advocacy groups a census-related survey that gathers statistics about disabilities will eventually be replaced by a database culled from tax information, welfare rolls and similar databanks – but there’s skepticism about whether that information will be as reliable.

“We’ve got a huge challenge here. We had something that was working,” said Laurie Beachell, national co-ordinator of the Council of Canadians with Disabilities. The government has promised the new database will provide information more often than PALS, which was conducted every five years, with the next one scheduled for 2011. “We don’t know how reliable it will be yet,” Mr. Beachell said.  Read the rest of this entry »

Vancouver police abuse disabled woman

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What’s worse, the cop who pushes Sandy to the ground once or Canadian society keeps her on the ground for her whole life?

In June a woman with a disability was pushed to the street in Vancouver by a police officer. He walked away without helping her up.

While the Vancouver police department claims the incident was under investigation, the officers are still on the beat.  We expect some official response that exonerates the officers will appear many months from now.

It’s clear from the video the woman has a disability. She has Cerebral Palsy (CP) which gives her a distinct walking pattern and affects her speech. She may sound intoxicated however anyone who has experience with CP can easily spot the symptoms.   Read the rest of this entry »

Housing is a human right

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I am not a Lawyer…

By Bob Wood, righttohousing

But I’ve been around the housing field for a while and I remember this line:

“All Canadians have the right to adequate housing.”

That is what a Liberal Party Task Force headed up by former Prime Minster Paul Martin said in 1990.

Martin, who left politics in 2008, is in the news again. The new coalition government in the United Kingdom apparently wants to pick the former Finance’s Minister’s brain in order to figure out how to solve their debt/deficit problem.

They’ve got lots of problems in the U.K. that need fixing but I hope when David Cameron’s policy peeps get to talking with Mr Martin they try to connect the dots of deficit reduction strategies and commitments to people’s rights.   Read the rest of this entry »

Written by Byline

June 30th, 2010 at 4:32 am

Minister Doug Currie negotiating new funding formula with Ottawa

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Seniors and Social Services Minister Doug Currie, Statistics Canada unreliable

Seniors and Social Services Minister Doug Currie, Statistics Canada unreliable

Previous reliance on Statistics Canada appears to be negotiable

Is the Province negotiating a new funding formula with the Federal government that excludes Statistics Canada?

Sharon Cameron, Deputy Minister of Seniors and Social services said the numbers from Statistics Canada are not reliable.

“You can’t trust Statistics Canada to get it right,” she said in a telephone interview.

“There numbers are wrong,” she added. “For instance, Statistics Canada tells us PEI doesn’t have any poverty above 5%. We know we have poverty higher than that.”

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