Friday, December 26, 2025
ADVT 
National

B.C.'s Poverty Reduction Plan Seeks Solutions From Across Government: Minister

The Canadian Press, 18 Mar, 2019 08:21 PM

    SURREY, B.C. — The British Columbia government has released guidelines it says will lead it toward the goal of reducing the province's overall poverty rate by 25 per cent and child poverty by 50 per cent within the next five years.


    Shane Simpson, the minister of social development and poverty reduction, says the province's first-ever poverty reduction strategy called TogetherBC takes an approach that involves all of the government to assist the 557,000 people who are living in poverty.


    He says TogetherBC's programs, policies and initiatives tie together investments launched in the fall of 2017 and are being implemented over three budgets.


    He says they include a focus on safe and affordable housing, cutting child-care costs for low-income families, and raising income and disability assistance rates.


    Simpson says his ministry alone will offer more than $800 million in support to people by 2022 and while those programs and other plans won't end poverty, the NDP government is confident the strategy will help some of B.C.'s poorest.


    Simpson made the comments today flanked by several anti-poverty and social service experts at a child care resource centre in Surrey.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Stabbed Delta, B.C. Cop Who Tackled Knife-Wielding Man Called Hero By Police Chief

    An off-duty British Columbia police officer who was stabbed several times in the stomach while picking up his children outside an elementary school is being called a hero by his police chief.  

    Stabbed Delta, B.C. Cop Who Tackled Knife-Wielding Man Called Hero By Police Chief

    Alberta To Ban Seclusion Or Time-Out Rooms For Students In Schools

    Alberta To Ban Seclusion Or Time-Out Rooms For Students In Schools
    EDMONTON — Alberta Education Minister David Eggen says the province will ban the use of seclusion or time-out rooms for students in schools.    

    Alberta To Ban Seclusion Or Time-Out Rooms For Students In Schools

    NEB Suggests Noise Reduction For Ferries And Other Vessels In B.C.'s Salish Sea

    NEB Suggests Noise Reduction For Ferries And Other Vessels In B.C.'s Salish Sea
    A reconsidered National Energy Board report endorsing the expansion of the Trans Mountain pipeline suggests potential limits on whale-watching boats and noise reduction efforts for ferries that ply British Columbia's Salish Sea.

    NEB Suggests Noise Reduction For Ferries And Other Vessels In B.C.'s Salish Sea

    National Energy Board Gives Trans Mountain Pipeline Expansion Its Endorsement

    National Energy Board Gives Trans Mountain Pipeline Expansion Its Endorsement
    The National Energy Board has endorsed an expansion of the Trans Mountain pipeline following a reconsideration of its impact on marine life off the B.C. coast.

    National Energy Board Gives Trans Mountain Pipeline Expansion Its Endorsement

    Funeral Plans Announced For Seven Syrian Children Killed In Halifax Fire

    HALIFAX — The funeral for seven Syrian children who died in a fast-moving Halifax house fire will be held on Saturday, with an open invitation to the community that has rallied around the family.

    Funeral Plans Announced For Seven Syrian Children Killed In Halifax Fire

    Students With ADHD Less Likely To Enrol In Post-Secondary Education, Study Says

    Students With ADHD Less Likely To Enrol In Post-Secondary Education, Study Says
    The gap suggests teachers need better training in how to work with students whose behaviour can come off as disruptive and who might seem uninterested in their studies, advocates say.

    Students With ADHD Less Likely To Enrol In Post-Secondary Education, Study Says