CTV News
Click the link to watch the video clip.
CTV News
Click the link to watch the video clip.
CTV News
Click the link to watch the video clip.
by: Leah Germain
Edmonton’s child poverty rate is the highest in the province according to a new report, with one in six local children living in poverty.
“It is partly because we are a little bit of a magnet, particularly we have more recent immigrants in Edmonton you tend to earn lower incomes and tend to live in poverty. We (also) have the highest aboriginal population in the province,” said John Kolkman, research coordinator for Edmonton Social Planning Council.
The “From Words to Action” report found that in 2011 one in 10 children – approximately 84,000 – were living in poverty in Alberta.
“In the province of Alberta, the highest rates of child poverty, even though it does fluctuate from year to year are within the City of Edmonton,” said Kolkman. The report was co-authored by Public Interest Alberta, Edmonton Social Planning Council and the Alberta College of Social Workers.
by: Canadian Press, The Globe and Mail
A report says more than 10 per cent of Alberta children were living in poverty in 2011. The authors of the report are urging Premier Alison Redford to come through on an election promise to eliminate child poverty by 2017.
The report says there were 84,000 children whose families were below the low-income measure after taxes.
The survey was done by Public Interest Alberta, the Edmonton Social Planning Council and the Alberta College of Social Workers.
The report also says that almost 60 per cent of kids in poverty had at least one parent working full-time.
They say that won’t be achieved unless the government invests in social programs and public services to support families in need.
According to UNICEF estimates from 2012, Canada’s national child poverty rate is 14 per cent, ranking 24th out of 35 industrialized countries.
Another report released Tuesday by the B.C. child and youth advocacy group First Call said B.C.’s child poverty rate is 18.6 per cent. Manitoba’s rate, the second-highest in the country, stands at 17.3 per cent.
by: Jason Van Rassel, Calgary Herald
The provincial government’s pledge to eliminate child poverty is being put to the test in a report out Tuesday that recommends an additional $1 billion in program spending aimed at helping the working poor.
Statistics published by Public Interest Alberta estimate there were 84,000 children living in poverty in Alberta in 2011, the last year for which data are available.
The number is actually down from 91,000 the year before, but one of the study’s authors said the reduction has more to do with an overall improvement in the economy than any action by the provincial government.
“You can’t eliminate child poverty in this province without actually investing,” said Bill Moore-Kilgannon of Public Interest Alberta, which put together the report with the Alberta College of Social Workers and the Edmonton Social Planning Council.
Having a job isn’t a panacea for poverty, Moore-Kilgannon said, because so many among Alberta’s poor have jobs.
Statistics Canada data from 2011 estimated nearly 60 per cent of children in poverty lived in a household where one or more adults was working full time for the entire year.
“The reality for people is poverty is a divorce away, poverty is a workplace accident away,” Moore-Kilgannon sad.
The report arrived at its poverty numbers using a benchmark called the low income measure after tax. Under that standard, a family of four earning approximately $40,000 or less in Alberta, after taxes, would be considered poor. A single person would make less than $20,000.
A key recommendation of the report is the introduction of a provincial child tax benefit. A monthly benefit of $1,200 per child, which could be adjusted according to a family’s level of need, would cost approximately $200 million, Moore-Kilgannon said.
The recommendation could be implemented relatively cheaply, Moore-Kilgannon added, by distributing it monthly to coincide with the federal child tax benefit.
“That would keep administrative costs low,” he said.
The report also recommends raising Alberta’s minimum wage from the current $9.95 – the lowest in Canada – to $13 an hour with benefits or $14,50 [sic] without.
Premier Alison Redford promised in the 2012 election campaign to eliminate child poverty by 2017 and it’s time for the government to begin delivering, Moore-Kilgannon said.
The provincial government is currently running a deficit that it estimates between $1.2 and $2 billion, but Moore-Kilgannon said the changes recommended in his report are affordable with changes to the province’s tax regime.
“There are ways, very clearly, we can pay for it,” he said.
The report advocates scrapping the province’s flat personal income tax rate of 10 per cent in favour of a progressive regime that would tax high-income earners at a higher rate.
Adopting Saskatchewan’s 15 per cent tax rate for all personal income over $122,589 would net the provincial government more than $1 billion in additional revenue, the report says.
Bringing in B.C.’s personal income tax rate of 14.7 per cent on all income over $104,754 would bring the province even more, the report adds.
Using that added revenue to pay for the social spending recommended by the report would be a concrete step toward lifting people out of poverty — and cutting the long-term costs to society, Moore-Kilgannon said.
The government is slated to release its poverty reduction plan early next year.
“We want to see real action – not just words,” Moore-Kilgannon said.
Media Release
November 26, 2013
Public Interest Alberta, the Edmonton Social Planning Council and the Alberta College of Social Workers, released a new report today, entitled From Words to Action: Alberta Can Afford a Real Poverty Reduction Strategy.
The report shows that despite an improving economy, in 2011 there were 84,000 children, 29,800 of who were under the age of 6, living below the low-income measure (LIM- After Tax).
“Premier Redford’s 2012 election promise to eliminate child poverty by 2017 will not be achieved unless the words in the government’s soon to be released poverty reduction strategy, will be backed up with real action and investment in programs that prevent, reduce and ultimately eliminate poverty,” says Bill Moore-Kilgannon, Executive Director of Public Interest Alberta. “Social programs and public services are instrumental in supporting families, and the government will certainly not eliminate child poverty unless it stops cutting budgets and starts investing in real solutions.”
“Given that an all time record 59.2 per cent of children in poverty had at least one parent working full-time, full year, we propose a number of recommendations that would reduce poverty among working poor families including; a provincial child tax benefit, increasing the minimum wage and a living wage policy for contracted services,” says John Kolkman, Research Coordinator, Edmonton Social Planning Council. “The report shows that inequality is growing rapidly in Alberta so unless the government commits to targeted investments to support those who are not benefiting from our strong economy, their poverty reduction will not succeed.”
“The recommendations we have identified in this report would go a long way to reaching the target of eliminating child and family poverty, and our proposed $1 billion in investments is only a fraction of the costs of poverty to people’s lives and our economy,” says Lori Sigurdson, Professional Affairs Manager and Chairperson of Public Interest Alberta’s Human Services and Poverty Task Force. “In a province that collects $10.6 billion less in taxation than the next lowest taxed province, we outline how the government could raise from $1.2 – $2.0 billion by establishing a progressive tax and increase corporate taxes. We are calling upon Albertans to encourage the government to invest in a real strategy so that children and families are supported to reach their full potential. Now, this is a commitment worth making!” To download a copy of the report, go to www.pialberta.org or www.edmontonsocialplanning.ca The provincial report is being released on the same day as a national report by Campaign 2000 and other provincial reports on the state of child and family poverty across the country. Go to www.campaign2000.ca to see the reports.
-30-
The report is being released at 2 media conferences at 10:30 AM, November 26th:
Both venues will have certain children in programs that can be filmed and have their pictures taken.
To view the entire document CLICK Here.
Media Contacts: