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Thursday December 4th 2008
PovNet NewsBC municipal election resourcesOctober 27, 2008 - 1:39pm
The BC Municipal elections are taking place in towns and cities across BC on November 15th, 2008. ( categories: News | British Columbia | Government Policy )
Toronto has half of Ontario's children living in povertyDecember 4, 2008 - 7:57am
GTA Children’s Aid Societies and the Social Planning Network released a report on child poverty that shows a huge increase in the number of children living in poverty. The report shows that lack of affordable housing is one of the most significant barriers to breaking the cycle of poverty. “Greater Trouble in Greater Toronto, Child Poverty in the GTA” reveals that 50 per cent of Ontario’s children in poverty now live in the GTA, up from 44 per cent in 1997. In the City of Toronto, all growth in the number of children living in poverty since 1997 occurred in the inner suburbs, where abysmally high rates of child poverty now surpass those of downtown. ( categories: News | Ontario | Children/Youth | Poverty Research )
US activists moving homeless into foreclosed homesDecember 2, 2008 - 12:06pm
A Miami activist organization, Take Back the Land, has started moving in homeless individuals and families into empty foreclosed homes. Take Back the Land asserts: "that it is immoral to maintain vacant homes for the purpose of profits in the future, while human beings are forced to live on the street today. The madness of such a policy is only compounded when one considers the owners of these vacant homes are not other people, but banks, the same banks receiving billions of dollars in bailouts without having to trade in the foreclosed homes for use by some of the people financing the bailouts. Additional government resources, including police and other government agencies, should not be used to evict low income people from homes in order to maintain vacant structures for bailed out banks to profit from some time in the future." ( categories: News | United States | Homelessness | Housing )
Poverty reduction consultation in New BrunswickDecember 2, 2008 - 11:21am
The New Brunswick government has launched a year long consultation for New Brunswickers, community organizations, business, and the government to come together to create a long-term plan to reduce poverty in the province. One out of every eight New Brunswickers lives in poverty, one in six children in New Brunswick lives in poverty and more then 45% of single mothers live in poverty. Individuals and organizations are invited to take part. They may participate in the various sessions to debate how to reduce poverty; to determine how to implement actions; and to decide how the plan will be monitored. They may forward suggestions by using e-mail, fax, regular mail, or through the website, http://www.gnb.ca/poverty. ( categories: News | New Brunswick | Government Policy )
Links between pollution and poverty in southern OntarioDecember 2, 2008 - 11:01am
People living in poverty in the Great Lakes area may be experiencing a higher level of air pollution in their communities, according to a study released by the Pollution Watch project. The study mapped air release data of toxic pollutants and criteria air contaminants from the federal government’s National Pollutant Release Inventory (2005 data), and income data from Statistics Canada. It looked at the links between pollution and poverty on a regional basis and at a neighbourhood level in the city of Toronto. ( categories: News | Ontario | Québec | Bilingual | Poverty Research )
The cost of poverty in OntarioNovember 24, 2008 - 11:33am
The Ontario Association of Food Banks has released an important and timely new report on the economic cost of poverty in Ontario. This is a first for Ontario and possibly for any Canadian jurisdiction, to put a price tag on the cost of poverty. The report finds that the economic cost of poverty in Ontario comes to $32 to $38 billion per year (5.5 to 6.6% of provincial GDP). The report emerges just a couple of weeks in advance of the highly anticipated release of the Ontario government's action strategy on poverty. ( categories: News | Ontario | Foodbanks & Food | Poverty Research )
Nunuvut's declining social housing fundingNovember 23, 2008 - 7:59pm
A report released to the CBC adds to the concerns over Nunuvut's housing stock by claiming that there will a $155 million dollar funding shortfall for social housing in thirty years. According to the report, social housing accounts for 73 per cent of Nunavut's overall rental housing stock and it is already overcrowded and in need of repair and upgrade. Nunuvut signed an agreement with the Canadian Mortgage and Housing Corp. in the late 1990's that has the territory receiving declining social housing funding until 2037. ( categories: News | Nunavut | Housing )
1 in 9 children in Canada live in povertyNovember 22, 2008 - 7:18pm
Campaign 2000 has released the 2008 Report Card on Child and Family Poverty, revealing that 19 years after the 1989 resolution that Canada would resolve child poverty by 2000, one in nine children across the country still live in poverty. The report also shows:
( categories: Featured | News | Canada | Children/Youth | Poverty Research )
1 in 10 children in poverty in AlbertaNovember 22, 2008 - 6:53pm
The Edmonton Social Planning Council released a report that shows 1 in 10 children in Alberta live in poverty and this increases to 1 in 8 children in Calgary, 1 in 6 in Edmonton. Children with lone parents, recent immigrants and people of colour and aboriginal children are most likely to live in poverty in the province. ( categories: News | Alberta | Children/Youth | Poverty Research )
BC highest child poverty in CanadaNovember 22, 2008 - 6:35pm
A report issued by First Call, a BC child and youth advocate coalition says that:
The report recommends that the BC and federal government need to: raise the minimum wate to $10.76, abolish the training wage, raise welfare rates, restore welfare earnings exemptions, create universal access to child care, build more social housing, restore the cuts made to Employment Insurance, and cover prescription drugs and dental care. ( categories: News | British Columbia | Children/Youth | Poverty Research )
Vancouver's new mayor vows to tackle homelessnessNovember 17, 2008 - 9:53am
The left-of-centre party, Vision Vancouver has won the Vancouver's civil election by a landslide with the promise of ending homelessness. Mayor-elect Gregor Robertson has pledged to solve homelessness by 2015. "My first order of business is to call an emergency task force on homelessness and to focus on how we get people off the street as quickly as possible in to temporary housing or shelter," said Robertson. ( categories: News | British Columbia | Government Policy | Homelessness )
Saskatchewan report recommends poverty reduction for better healthNovember 17, 2008 - 9:13am
A report by the Saskatoon Health Region looks at poverty-reduction policy and programs in other places to determine how Saskatchewan could lift people out of poverty and reduce the health gap between the rich and poor. The report makes forty-six recommendations and how they were implemented in other jursediction including:
( categories: News | Saskatchewan | Health | Poverty Research )
Homelessness buried in Vancouver muncipal electionsNovember 15, 2008 - 8:49am
In today's Vancouver civil election, the issues of homelessness and social housing are being buried beneath the controversy around a leak of $100 million dollar loan to the financers of the Vancouver Olympic Village. ( categories: News | British Columbia | Government Policy | Homelessness )
Two percent welfare increase in OntarioNovember 4, 2008 - 5:49pm
A promised two percent raise in welfare rates in Ontario will kick in for December cheques but according to an article in The Star this will boost payments to a level recommended in 1988. The two percent increase gives single people only $5 more to spend on basic necessities. ( categories: News | Ontario | Welfare )
More responses to BC court homeless camp rulingNovember 4, 2008 - 5:43pm
( categories: Featured | News | British Columbia | Homelessness )
Demands of homeless campers met in VancouverNovember 4, 2008 - 5:19pm
On Halloween, the Downtown Eastside Resident's Association supported a group of homeless campers who had had their camp torn down by the city of Vancouver. The group had lived in tents on the site for several months. The campers went back to the site after some confrontation with the city, by the evening all the campers were given rooms with new beds at the Gastown Hotel. ( categories: News | British Columbia | Homelessness )
BC carbon tax will impact poorNovember 4, 2008 - 2:42pm
A new report by the Canadian Centre for Policy Alternatives (CCPA) analyzes BC's carbon tax for different income levels and finds that the government needs to change the tax in order to ensure people in different income groups pay a fair share. ( categories: News | British Columbia | Government Policy | Poverty Research )
Anti-poverty during the economic crisisNovember 4, 2008 - 2:08pm
Much of what is being said about the global economic crisis is coming from above -- from government leaders, the heads of banks and financial institutions -- from those who helped create the crisis. But it will likely be the poor and working poor who be most effected by the crisis. The following stories talk about how it is even more important now for national and international governments to focus on poverty. ( categories: Featured | News | British Columbia | Government Policy | Poverty Research )
Poverty linked to poor health in TorontoOctober 28, 2008 - 8:39am
A new report from Toronto Public Health links health and income, and shows that people with low income experience greater risk of illness, higher rates of disease and death at an earlier age than people with higher income. The report shows the relationship between income and health in Toronto is not just about the extremes of wealth and poverty. Most of the indicators show a gradient of health relative to income such that health status improves through each income increment. ( categories: News | Ontario | Health | Homelessness )
Canada not living up to UN treaty on women's rightsOctober 27, 2008 - 6:56pm
Twenty-five years ago, Canada was among the first countries to sign the United Nations Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination Against Women (CEDAW) treaty. The Canadian Feminist Alliance for International Action (FAFIA) watched as the UN CEDEW Committee in Geneva grilled the Canadian government on Canada's failure to live up to the treaty. Some of the issues the committee brought up were domestic violence and child custody; shelters for victims of domestic violence; resident permits for victims of trafficking; co-incarceration of young women and young men; social assistance; suicide rates among Aboriginal youth; child death among Aboriginal people; male involvement in the defense of women’s rights; missing murdered Aboriginal women; HIV and AIDS among Aboriginal women; representation of women in the workplace; and availability of legal aid. ( categories: News | Canada | International | Women )
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"We can all retire when our phones quit ringing and people quit needing help."
Cecile Guay, Advocate Dawson Creek, BC Search PovNetPovNet Hint!If you would like to search news, online resources, links, gov't info and applications/forms by region as well as topic, please use our search pages. |