The Daily Courier

NDP hikes welfare, disability payments

- By The Canadian Press

Brad Bennett out as chairman of BC Hydro as New Democrats put stamp on government

VICTORIA — British Columbia Premier John Horgan is making good on his campaign pledge to hike income assistance and disability rates by $100 a month.

The policy takes effect Sept. 20 and will be the first time the welfare rate has increased in a decade.

“Raising the rates is only the beginning,” Horgan said in a statement Thursday. “Our government is committed to bring forward a comprehens­ive poverty-reduction plan to lift children and families out of poverty.”

The rate hike means a single person on income assistance will be eligible for up to $710 per month, while someone on disability support can receive up to $1,133.

The increase will catapult B.C. from last to third place in the country when it comes to assistance rates, Horgan added.

The previous Liberal government froze income assistance for 10 years, but made a U-turn in last month’s throne speech by promising a $100 jump in monthly rates, adopting a key promise from the NDP’s election platform.

The revamped throne speech failed to garner enough support to keep the Liberals in power.

The NDP was sworn into government this week holding a minority of seats in the legislatur­e but supported by the Green party’s three elected members, who hold the balance of power in the wake of the May 9 election. It’s the first time the NDP has been in power in B.C. since 2001.

Horgan also moved quickly to put a New Democratic Party stamp on the province’s Crown corporatio­ns and government organizati­ons by announcing four high-profile appointmen­ts.

Joy MacPhail, who is the former NDP finance minister, deputy premier and health minister, is the new chair of the Insurance Corp. of B.C., while one of its director’s seats will be filled by Cathy McLay, chief financial officer and executive vice-president of TransLink.

Kenneth Peterson, former chief executive officer of BC Hydro subsidiary Powerex Corp., is the new chairman of BC Hydro, replacing Brad Bennett, who was a key player in former premier Christy Clark’s re-election campaign.

Cassie Doyle, a deputy minister with both the federal and provincial government­s, is the new chair of the BC Housing Management Commission, which develops, manages and administer­s subsidized housing in the province.

The Liberals were not immediatel­y available to comment.

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