Medicine Hat News

Advocates say new disability benefit still leaves people in poverty

-

A new disability benefit that was supposed to be a historic move to lift people out of poverty turned out to be a disappoint­ment in the federal budget, advocates say.

“My heart breaks for people who are waiting for this benefit as a lifeline,” Rabia Khedr, national director of Disability Without Poverty, said in an interview on Wednesday.

“This was hope. This was the light at the end of the tunnel. People were hanging on saying, ‘OK, I don’t have to access medical assistance in dying if this benefit comes through.”’

The Canada Disability Benefit, announced in Tuesday’s budget, will provide a maximum of $2,400 a year or $200 a month - for lowincome people with disabiliti­es starting in July 2025.

About 600,000 people between the ages of 18 and 64 are expected to receive the money, which is “intended to supplement, not replace, existing provincial and territoria­l income support measures,” the budget says.

But there are more than 1.5 million people with disabiliti­es living well below the poverty line and the equivalent of about $6 a day falls far short of what they need, Khedr said.

The Canada Disability Benefit Act became law on June 22, 2023, with the stated intent of creating a benefit to “reduce poverty and support the financial security of working-age people with disabiliti­es,” according to the Government of Canada website.

“We were very excited. It was a tremendous milestone,” Khedr said.

“We thought we were on the brink of making history, creating systems change. Although it was framework legislatio­n, we had faith in the system that we would establish a robust benefit that would end disability poverty in this country.”

But in practice, the benefit only meets the spirit of the legislatio­n “very nominally,” she said, and will meet the needs of “very few.”

A November report by the Office of the Parliament­ary Budget Officer estimating the costs of the benefit said that, based on what people with disabiliti­es receive from provincial and territoria­l income assistance programs, it would take up to $14,356 a year per person to bring them up to the poverty line.

It also noted that the national benefit amount could go up to $22,701 a year to take into account the “additional costs associated with living with a disability.”

A benefit of $2,400 a year is “wholly inadequate” to help people who need disability income support to get out of poverty, said Neil Hetheringt­on, CEO of the

Daily Bread Food Bank.

“What the government has signalled here is that they are content with charities like the Daily Bread Food Bank feeding individual­s whose right to food is not being realized,” he said.

“They’re content with charity making up the difference.”

The federal budget allocation for the Canada Disability Benefit is $6.1 billion over six years, then $1.4 billion per year after that.

That includes the cost of working with health-care staff and tax profession­als to do the paperwork needed for the disability tax credit certificat­e that would make people eligible for the benefit. Supplement, but we need to get this in people’s pockets as soon as possible because we know every dollar counts, especially now.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada